When a massive amount of people start canceling their Paramount+ subscriptions over it, the segment will run.
That would require a massive amount of people to actually subscribe to Paramount+ in the first place.
When a massive amount of people start canceling their Paramount+ subscriptions over it, the segment will run.
This is long, but Brian Stelter's "Reliable Sources" newsletter this morning has a pretty good timeline:
I always like Brian's reporting. It didn't say when the ask was made to the white house for comment.
I disagree that this is giving the white house a kill switch.
I think any time you put Stephen Miller on the air helps people decide how they really feel about this administration. He has a lot more to do with what's happening than the president. Make him the face of this government, not the president.
That doesn't matter. I can tell you from having been held to CBS News Standards and Practices that the request for comment comes at the point where you know what the story will say. You're offering them the chance to air their side of the story.
Refusing to air a story because one party was offered time to comment and refused or didn't respond is absolutely how you kill a story---which is why solid journalistic outlets don't do that.
I think that's why you don't see Stephen a lot.
It is easy to speculate the other timeline. I expect 60 Minutes will be doing a lot more soft features in the future and any story critical of the regime will die before the reporter finishes the initial pitch.
Aren't you the person who told me they eliminated CBS News S&P?
Bari Weiss is new to TV. She doesn't know any of the procedures, but she has the job & the responsibilities. So now she knows what happens when you do something like this. I'm more interested in seeing what happens next. People shouldn't quit. They need to keep fighting.
Personally I think that's a mistake. His views are not very popular with the public.
From the day this was announced, you've made it sound like the problem with Bari is a lack of broadcast experience. I'll state it bluntly. She was hand-picked by the Ellisons specifically to undo what CBS News is all about---to remove a thorn from Trump's paw.
Which is why the White House doesn't make him available very often.
Sy Sims has been dead for a long time (like 16 years). Nowadays, it would have been more accurate to write, "An 'educated*' consumer is our biggest patsy."They have lots of choices. They also vote. They need to see how their vote is affecting their information. An educated consumer is our best customer.
Did you read the story I linked in post 48? The white house thinks he's great on TV. They've been pushing him on CNN:
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CNN Blows Up Stephen Miller’s Claim He’s Banned From Network
The network said it would welcome the top White House aide “as the news warrants.”www.thedailybeast.com
Put him on, let him talk about how great it is to send US citizens to foreign prisons.
They just did. We know…what she did was perfectly fine and perfectly normal, just like the litany of other decisions at the behest of the regime. She’s learning. She’s new. It’s no biggie. We don’t know the exact second everything happened (despite clear history of how such stories are handled). Dear lord. The excuse-making for every single way the broadcast media cowers to avoid offending the toddler and his minions borders on comical.If they blow up CBS News, that's just another log on the fire with CPB, USAID, USAGM, and DOE.
CNN. 😆😆😆😆😆😆😆 The network that feeds viewers a steady diet of Scott Jennings? That CNN? It’s become Fox News lite.Did you read the story I linked in post 48? The white house thinks he's great on TV. They've been pushing him on CNN:
Put him on what? CNN? CBS? Both have decided that pressing and calling out evasiveness are no-nos. He’s not going to answer a question, he’s going to jump to some other BS about Biden or whatever other boogeyman.Put him on, let him talk about how great it is to send US citizens to foreign prisons.
In ordinary times, I would agree with you, but these aren't ordinary times. Weiss has a history, the current administration has a history, and key business moves involving CBS depend on a favorable response by the current administration. In other words, there's a lot of context here. Absent that context, many of the things Weiss is saying sound reasonable. But when you look at the practical effect, her moves are disturbing.Bari Weiss had a call with show staff this morning where she elaborated on her decision:
Personally I don't have a problem with anything she's saying. Anytime you have a change in management, there will be these kinds of disputes. I've certainly engaged in a few myself. I've seen pieces on 60 Minutes where I felt I still had unanswered questions. In other words, it felt incomplete. That sounds like the problem here. If the producers couldn't get a response from the white house, maybe Bari can.
Definitely she has come into the job with a lot of suspicion from the staff. Moreover, 60 Minutes has been famously independent of the rest of the organization, and blow-ups over editorial content and control have been a regular feature of CBS News since the 19th century. Clearly, some of the staff believes she's acting in bad faith.This is a great explanation, and perhaps the staff isn't used to having this level of management. What I noticed is that all of the corporate CBS people are all deferring all questions to Bari. And she's been very accessible for comment. This is what she signed up for. She talked about it in her call, talking about "trust for each other." That doesn't appear to exist right now. So she has a lot of personal work to do. To me, she has to show how her involvement make the piece better. That's how she earns trust of her staff.
Exactly.It is an impossible standard to wait until the federal government comments on camera. They will simply run out the clock under that scenario.
It feels like a rookie mistake but, again, due to the circumstances under which she came to the post, no one's going to give her any slack. And it's a really bad rookie mistake. What she's really done is give the story legs. Now everyone's talking about it. The Streisand Effect lives. Weiss knows how to promote herself, but that's backfired here.In one timeline, this makes Weiss look indecisive. The story preceded her arrival of course, but other media accounts indicate she screened it personally. Legal signed off. Standards approved it. The marketing team promoted it on air for two days. Then she decided to hold the story?
Does Weiss not know the history of CBS News? That place has had more leaks than a roof after a hailstorm. The internal politics of the place have been notoriously rough for decades. Entire books have been written about it. She should have been prepared for it.But it means Weiss is at odds with her own producers and editors in a very visceral way. "People are threatening to quit over this," one of the CBS sources told me.
On this morning's 9 a.m. editorial call, Weiss seemed frustrated about the leaking. "The only newsroom I'm interested in running is one in which we are able to have contentious disagreements about the thorniest editorial matters with respect, and, crucially, where we assume the best intent of our colleagues. Anything else is absolutely unacceptable," she said, according to CBS.
As @TheRob says, this is a pocket veto. As long as reasonable efforts have been made to get those comments, it's perfectly good journalistic practice to run without any response as long as there's a disclaimer that there were attempts to get it and comment was refused or there was otherwise no response."I held a 60 Minutes story because it was not ready," she continued. "While the story presented powerful testimony of torture at CECOT, it did not advance the ball — the Times and other outlets have previously done similar work. The public knows that Venezuelans have been subjected to horrific treatment at this prison. To run a story on this subject two months later, we need to do more. And this is '60 Minutes.' We need to be able to get the principals on the record and on camera."
Because of Weiss' history and the way she was installed in her job, it's hard to believe she's acting in good faith.
People may quit over it...and maybe that's what Weiss really wants as she attempts to exert control to steer the organization in the ideological direction that, it's widely perceived, she was brought in to institute.
Well, I mean if you're looking to RadioDiscussions for practical solutions, I think you're going to be disappointed.Whether she is or not, there's nothing you or I can do about it. This is for the staff to deal with. As I said, what happens next is more important than what just happened.
And I think that's why you don't see Stephen a lot
You (BigA) are missing the point. You don't see Stephen Miller a lot is because they all know he's detestable. He's the slimiest reptile in an administration of reptiles. His presence in a story instantly biases viewers/listeners against whatever position or action this administration is trying to do in our name.Personally I think that's a mistake. His views are not very popular with the public.
I think it's both, plus a lack of management/leadership experience. But it's equally likely that she was brought in to destroy the place as it was that she was brought in to run it.From the day this was announced, you've made it sound like the problem with Bari is a lack of broadcast experience. I'll state it bluntly. She was hand-picked by the Ellisons specifically to undo what CBS News is all about---to remove a thorn from Trump's paw.
You (BigA) are missing the point. You don't see Stephen Miller a lot is because they all know he's detestable. He's the slimiest reptile in an administration of reptiles. His presence in a story instantly biases viewers/listeners against whatever position or action this administration is trying to do in our name.