That takes years---decades. The attacks won't wait until they're ready. The attacks are happening now.
It didn't take Bari Weiss decades. It's a different time. A company can grow to be worth a trillion dollars in a few years.
That takes years---decades. The attacks won't wait until they're ready. The attacks are happening now.
It didn't take Bari Weiss decades. It's a different time. A company can grow to be worth a trillion dollars in a few years.
What this administration is doing with regard to the media (as well as others) is finding the owners' weak spots and then pressing as hard as he can. The weak spot at CBS wasn't the journalists who were properly doing their jobs; rather, it was with the desire of the owner to sell the network and the greed of a buyer, an ally of the current U.S. President, who wanted to control as much of the U.S. media as possible, even though it was possible that it meant violations of the Sherman and Clayton Antitrust laws.
Yes, I'm aware of the view expressed by some members of the public that the journalists caved, and you are correct to point out that it was their employers who caved, not the journalists. The only real response is for those journalists who were laid off for standing up to the current commander-in-chief to tell their stories both online and to that part of the U.S., and now world, media that remains free from his influence. I wish I had a better answer...
I was no fan of Sumner Redstone, and I wonder how much backbone he would have had to support his journalists had he still been alive. But Sumner was a cantankerous old coot, so it's possible he'd have fought Trump to the gates of hell just to spite him.The only recourse they have is to try to find employment with another outlet that will stand by their work. Or to create one of their own, though they lose the reach of a CBS News.
The point is, it was unnecessary. As Ted says, it was driven by Shari's desire to get the sale done quickly. If CBS had been in the hands of an owner who had no intention to sell, there would have been every incentive to stand by the story and let Trump get laughed out of court.
Contrasting opinion for BigA: you and I have argued, disagreed and occasionally even agreed over the years, but I have never blocked you.I have blocked you and unblocked you more than a few times over the years, BigA, but if you're going to be so naive as to suggest that thousands of journalists should just hang a shingle and start their own things, and everything will be okay because someday they'll be able to fight the bad guys, I'm gonna block you again, and it won't be temporary.
It’s hard for me to resist the pull of historical knowledge about the J-school. I’ll try to limit that as I try to add some context. If I’m reading your timeline correctly, you got there before Roy Fisher arrived as dean and set about to revamp the practice-oriented parts of the curriculum. Before that, news-editorial ruled and broadcast wasn’t treated as the priority it would become later. In particular, the University milked KOMU for all the cash it was worth; KBIA didn’t exist yet, with radio news practice being done through KFRU. There also seemed to be less of a split between academic-oriented faculty and practice-oriented faculty. I saw more of a split during my time. In recent years, looking at it very much as an outsider, I think there’s less of a split now, and definitely much less hostility between those favoring the academic perspective and those favoring the practice-oriented approach.I graduated from the University of Missouri School of Journalism more than a decade before Stacey Woelfel arrived there. I can attest there were dreams like his floating around the Broadcast program even before I got there. (The idea for an hour-long nightly newscast probably goes back to September 1963, when CBS pioneered the 30-minute nightly newscast.) My wish list would be entirely different.
To be candid, I find this statement hard to understand. Particularly in a time when governmental functions are increasingly politicized, how can you not cover politics? The history of journalism in the United States is rooted in politics. Somebody’s got to be out there to challenge politicians on their horseshit, regardless of political orientation.Finally, and I can't emphasize this enough, the only way to end accusations of bias in network news is to end coverage of political issues. Any news organization that bends every time a President criticizes it is going to end up with watered down coverage that neither informs the viewers nor pleases the critics. You don't need to bring in an executive editor or ombudsman to second-guess every story.
I have blocked you and unblocked you more than a few times over the years, BigA, but if you're going to be so naive as to suggest that thousands of journalists should just hang a shingle and start their own things, and everything will be okay because someday they'll be able to fight the bad guys, I'm gonna block you again, and it won't be temporary.
The networks actually used to have something like this. NBC, CBS, and ABC all had a five-minute newscast each weekday. Usually, Douglas Edwards anchored the CBS 5-minute cast; Marlene Sanders did the one for ABC.I agree with crainbelo that a long-form newscast would probably work better in the late-night slot. My revolutionary idea is to end the 30-minute early evening newscast and replace it with 5-minute headlines (or single stories that last five minutes depending on the day's news) throughout the day. Local stations could integrate those directly into their midday and afternoon newscasts.
I don’t know what happened to these newscasts or the justification for ending them.
As I recall, the 5-minute casts were usually at a time when local newsrooms were busy putting together their early evening newscasts. It wouldn’t have been convenient for most affiliates to pre-empt just for five minutes. Remember that turning a live camera on in those days required some planning; otherwise, you’d get a slide show with a voice over. So the network helped fill the gap, because who wanted to see a slide show? As I recall, CBS’s version came down the line at 10:55 am Central; ABC at 1:25 pm Central; NBC at 3:25 pm Central. These times may have shifted around from year to year. I do remember affiliates that didn’t carry them, usually because they weren’t carrying the adjacent network programming either. This might have been more notable in the Mountain time zone where schedules could get really weird. It’s worth looking into further.I think they were something the nets did before cable news. It's something that's usually done as a network service for affiliates. If affiliates would rather use the time for something local, such as more spots, then I can see them choosing at first not to run them.
As I recall, the 5-minute casts were usually at a time when local newsrooms were busy putting together their early evening newscasts. It wouldn’t have been convenient for most affiliates to pre-empt just for five minutes.
But a free standing newscast in the middle of the day that isn't in some way connected to something sounds like inefficient scheduling to me.
My understanding is that it was a place to put Edwards after he had fallen out of favor due to Cronkite’s rise.You mention Douglas Edwards, and he may have been riding out his contract this way.
I wasn't suggesting news organizations not cover politics, I was saying that covering politics is going to annoy someone in power. It comes with the territory, on every beat from the local school board to the White House. If you can't take the criticism, then don't cover politics.To be candid, I find this statement hard to understand. Particularly in a time when governmental functions are increasingly politicized, how can you not cover politics? The history of journalism in the United States is rooted in politics. Somebody’s got to be out there to challenge politicians on their horseshit, regardless of political orientation.
I think the way to do that is to strike the best you can...for example, when people canceled Hulu/Disney+, it got that company to listen.Let me add that I don't think "everything will be OK." I really expect things to get worse before they get better. Looking at the history, there's really no guarantee that anything anyone does will fix this situation. The people at the Washington Post thought they were OK when Bezos bought them. Then he surprised them. There is no benevolent dictator. That's a contradiction.
I don't feel my views are naive. I think they're realistic. People have to fight. As the president once told his supporters, if you don't fight, you won't have a country. That applies to the other side as well. So far the administration has only targeted companies. Not individuals. We'll see how that goes.
There are growing concerns within CBS News that Bari Weiss could gut or even disband the network’s Standards and Practices team, with multiple sources telling The Independent that the new editor-in-chief has complained that the unit has “too much power” and she doesn’t see the point of keeping it around.
Today: Bari Weiss considering shutting down CBS News' Standards and Practices Department:
Yep, let's eliminate all the guardrails and protections. It was standards & practices that shut down the Smothers Brothers show in the 60s because it was against the war. They told the Rolling Stones to change the words to Lets Spend the Night Together. Of course nobody remembers that.
Yes they have too much power. So does the person with the title editor in chief.
Today: Bari Weiss considering shutting down CBS News' Standards and Practices Department:
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Bari Weiss wants to take down ‘too much power’ CBS News Standards unit: sources
EXCLUSIVE: Internal rumblings within the newsroom come after the S&P head resigned and the network disbanded its vaunted Race and Culture unit.www.independent.co.uk
The CBS News Standards and Practices manual has been updated many times over the years to account for changes in tech, but the fundamentals remain. This is the only complete manual I can find online, dating to 1976. It is essentially what I was given at my first television news job, the CBS affiliate in Reno, in 1981:
Tech scion David Ellison marked his 96th day running Paramount by disclosing an upbeat financial outlook for next year and a plan to reduce an additional 1,600 workers.
Monday’s conference call with analysts was the first time Ellison, Paramount’s chairman and chief executive, directly addressed Wall Street after merging his production company, Skydance Media, with Paramount in August — an $8-billion deal that ushered the Redstone family from the entertainment stage.
One of Ellison’s top priorities will be to reverse decades of under-investment in programming. Paramount plans to increase content spending by $1.5 billion next year, including nearly doubling the number of movies that it releases. The Melrose Avenue studio intends to boost output from eight releases to 15 that are planned for next year.