Another matter involves an ongoing investigation into Paramount-owned local TV station WCBS (Channel 2) over
allegations of news distortion, which Carr unilaterally reopened in January after his predecessor,
Jessica Rosenworcel,
declared it to be politically-motivated and closed it without further action.
The news distortion complaint has little to do with the operation of WCBS; instead, it focuses on an interview aired on “60 Minutes” involving former Vice President Kamala Harris in the days leading up to the 2024 Presidential Election. A segment of the interview was edited for time and clarity, but a fuller clip aired earlier in the day on the CBS program “Face the Nation,” which invited the challenge.
WCBS was one of nearly 200 CBS stations and affiliates to air the program. The station is also one of nearly two dozen local TV stations owned by Paramount, meaning it shares common ownership with CBS, even though its editorial operation is separate from that of CBS News and 60 Minutes.
The Paramount-Skydance merger has cleared other regulatory hurdles. But part of the transaction involves the transfer of Paramount’s local TV broadcast licenses to Skydance, which the FCC must approve.