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"Newsroom culture clash" at CBS News

Elon's takeover of Twitter/X, you could see the changes relatively quickly.
That is because he was politically motivated and answered to nobody. Stations owned by public corporations answer to shareholders and react differently.
 
Why is it that many here on RD expect changes to be almost instant and total? In many instances, they are the opposite with slow transformations.
To start, you could ask yourself why Bari Weiss expects changes to happen quickly (emphasis mine):

“Our industry has changed more in the last decade than in the last 150 years, and the transformation isn’t over yet. Far from it,” Weiss said at the Jan. 27 {"town hall"} meeting. “It’s almost impossible to conceive of how fast things will move from here.”

Source:

To start, CBS is buying out about 25% of its newsroom. All these things take considerable time.
I happen to agree with you there; the "move fast and break things" mindset meets legacy organization with plenty of defense mechanisms. Make sure you have a good supply of popcorn!
 
To start, you could ask yourself why Bari Weiss expects changes to happen quickly (emphasis mine):

“Our industry has changed more in the last decade than in the last 150 years, and the transformation isn’t over yet. Far from it,” Weiss said at the Jan. 27 {"town hall"} meeting. “It’s almost impossible to conceive of how fast things will move from here.”

Source:


I happen to agree with you there; the "move fast and break things" mindset meets legacy organization with plenty of defense mechanisms. Make sure you have a good supply of popcorn!
That seems to happen a lot in media. The original plan gets watered down or barely materialize before they get halted a lot of times. The channel Cartoon Network was planning to become a "broad" entertainment channel a few years ago, and those plans got scrapped soon after; now they ended up giving a lot more time to Adult Swim instead. Usually they have to "read the room" to make a change, or just stick to what they know works at least okay.
 
Oh, I anticipate there will be all sorts of unexpected consequences.


The 80s were full of tumult at CBS New from the retirement of Cronkite and Bill Paley to the hostile takeover attempt by Ted Turner to the return by Paley and the arrival of Tisch. This period has a lot in common with that. We're in the very early stages.

If Ellison fails in his attempt to get WBD, there will be a completely different set of consequences.
 
The 80s were full of tumult at CBS New from the retirement of Cronkite and Bill Paley to the hostile takeover attempt by Ted Turner to the return by Paley and the arrival of Tisch. This period has a lot in common with that. We're in the very early stages.

What is new, though, are the political implications. For example, no one assumed that Larry Tisch had any particular political alignment.
 
To start, you could ask yourself why Bari Weiss expects changes to happen quickly (emphasis mine):

“Our industry has changed more in the last decade than in the last 150 years, and the transformation isn’t over yet. Far from it,” Weiss said at the Jan. 27 {"town hall"} meeting. “It’s almost impossible to conceive of how fast things will move from here.”
To me, the statement in bold type indicates change in the entire communications, news and entertainment industries... and not specifically CBS.

The point may be that it took over a decade from the time music and talk were first possible to when radio became viable and started to enter most homes in the 1921-1922 period. Or the roughly quarter century it took FM to be found in many homes while becoming economically viable.
 
To me, the statement in bold type indicates change in the entire communications, news and entertainment industries... and not specifically CBS.

I suppose you could interpret it that way, but I was keeping in mind the context in which she made that statement: an all-hands meeting of employees, communicating what she wanted from them and how fast she wanted it. It didn't sound like a broader sociological statement to me.
 
But the Ted Turner thing was political. He was saying that CBS was too New Yawk and too liberal, and he was from Georgia. He would fix that.
But I don't recall that he had any particular alignment with political actors, that it was one of those more general quasi-populist outbursts that comes along every so often. My impression about Turner's bid was that it was motivated by pique over an earlier lowball offer for TBS more than anything else.
 
But I don't recall that he had any particular alignment with political actors, that it was one of those more general quasi-populist outbursts that comes along every so often. My impression about Turner's bid was that it was motivated by pique over an earlier lowball offer for TBS more than anything else.

Read this story. He wanted to fix the liberal bias of CBS News. He talked to Jesse Helms:

 
Read this story. He wanted to fix the liberal bias of CBS News. He talked to Jesse Helms:

Oh, the irony.

Of course, he may have been casting about for support wherever he could find it. CBS did seem to have a special paranoia about him, going deep into debt to fight him off, which opened the door for Larry Tisch. CBS also had to raise money by selling KMOX-TV in St. Louis as a result of the added indebtedness.
 
which opened the door for Larry Tisch. CBS also had to raise money by selling KMOX-TV in St. Louis as a result of the added indebtedness.

Tisch also fired 250 staffers at CBS News and cut $30 million from their budget. So life wasn't great under Tisch.

The Tisch era at CBS was marked by relentless cost-cutting: Tisch fired 230 out of 1,200 news employees and cut $30 million from the news division's budget.[1] CBS divested itself of non-broadcast assets.

Among those non-broadcast assets was Columbia Records, which he sold to Sony. You can trace the beginning of the end for CBS News to the 80s.
 
Tisch also fired 250 staffers at CBS News and cut $30 million from their budget. So life wasn't great under Tisch.
That was on top of Tom Wyman's layoffs, if I recall correctly.

All of that was a shock to the preppy culture of CBS. While I admire much of what CBS News has done, it was a place dominated by a particular type of person. It was amazing that Dan Rather ever got as far as he did there. Not because of ability, of which he had plenty, but because he had more rough edges than the Ivy Leaguers (or Ivy-Leaguer-wannabes) normally encountered.
Among those non-broadcast assets was Columbia Records, which he sold to Sony. You can trace the beginning of the end for CBS News to the 80s.
Yes. Entire books were written about it.
 
The traditional media reported on the current president's issues for ten years.
They largest entities have and continue to sanewash and downplay, if not outright ignore, said “issues.”
The people elected him twice anyway.
One of those was the legacy of the inane electoral college. Let’s not pretend that didn’t happen.
That shows the power of traditional media. Perhaps it doesn't have the influence you & others think it has.
So…bowing even further to kiss the ring is the answer.
 
And they want to see improved ratings as that is the only way to improve revenue.
And capitulation to a tyrant to gain favorable business outcomes is not remotely part of it. Hey….want to buy a bridge? I’ve got a great one to sell.
That is different as Russia is a controlled economy with a virtual dictator.
When the government and industry are so thoroughly intertwined as to be indistinguishable, which controls what becomes a moot point. They are all one entity. That became true in Russia and now has become true here, as businesses have taken over the federal government. And in both cases, led by a dictator. Russia is merely a bit further down the road.
 
That became true in Russia and now has become true here, as businesses have taken over the federal government.

The government sees it the other way around. The government is using taxpayer money to buy stock or interest in companies such as Intel.


Some would call this socialism or national socialism. Once again, there is no congressional oversight of anything.

The media has reported this, reporters have asked the president and his spokesman about it, and everybody knows.


This is not a media problem, and there's nothing the media can do about it except let people know it's happening.
 


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