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"Newsroom culture clash" at CBS News

Apparently Bari Weiss wasn't the first to censor a piece at CBS News:


We're assuming her recollection of this incident is factual.
The article in question came from the time the Redstones were running Paramount and the priorities of that time related to how to cover the Musk story about running X.
 
Apparently Bari Weiss wasn't the first to censor a piece at CBS News:


We're assuming her recollection of this incident is factual.
She says she didn't go back to Musk with the demand from CBS News that it be a taped interview instead of live, which is on her.
 
She says she didn't go back to Musk with the demand from CBS News that it be a taped interview instead of live, which is on her.

I'm assuming it's the Catherine Herridge thing. She talked about it more than a year ago:


And look, it absolutely DOES matter whether it's live or not (I did TV news interviews every day for 30 years and radio interviews for 10 more years after that---until two years ago this month).

There are people that you can trust with a live shot. A ketamine addict who's blowing up the conventions of social media and speech ain't one of them.

Herridge quoted CBS brass as saying "We don't know what he's going to say." She'd like you to think that means in terms of a message or opinion.

I promise you what they meant was "We don't know what anti-semitic rant he's likely to go on, who he'll personally slander, which of the words the FCC says we can't say he will say and whether he'll be in some altered state."

There is nothing objectionable about editing a newsmaker interview for time, context and clarity. That, most often, provides better insights into a topic. And at the time of the Herridge/Musk thing, CBS News had a Standards and Practices unit with stringent rules about editing.

Until fairly recently, there was only ONE person who could insist that you take them live, and that was the President of the United States. In the last 20 years, even that has become negotiable. The networks are more willing to say "no" to a sitting president.
 
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On his first day as CBS Evening News anchor, Tony Dokoupil is set to take a private plane to Miami so he can go jet skiing with DJ Khaled and play soccer with David Beckham while Bari Weiss tags along with a cadre of armed bodyguards. :ROFLMAO:

 
On his first day as CBS Evening News anchor, Tony Dokoupil is set to take a private plane to Miami so he can go jet skiing with DJ Khaled and play soccer with David Beckham while Bari Weiss tags along with a cadre of armed bodyguards. :ROFLMAO:


If KFC were from Japan instead of Kentucky, it would be....
 
On his first day as CBS Evening News anchor, Tony Dokoupil is set to take a private plane to Miami so he can go jet skiing with DJ Khaled and play soccer with David Beckham while Bari Weiss tags along with a cadre of armed bodyguards. :ROFLMAO:


Well, that should put the end to any credibility that Mr. Dokoupil has of being "one of us."
 
Well, that should put the end to any credibility that Mr. Dokupil has of being "one of us."

From a propaganda standpoint, a real tour of the country poses problems for Bari, the Ellisons and Trump. A real "man of the people" tour would have Tony with farmers in the heartland. But then tariffs come into play.

So Bari opts for making it look like everyone is doing well---what's your problem?---and since it's going to be a party, invites herself.
Charles Kuralt is a fading memory.

 
Apparently Bari Weiss wasn't the first to censor a piece at CBS News:


We're assuming her recollection of this incident is factual.
CBS News declining the dubious privilege of giving Elon Musk a live platform to say whatever he wants is hardly censorship -- it is showing editorial judgement.
 
CBS News declining the dubious privilege of giving Elon Musk a live platform to say whatever he wants is hardly censorship -- it is showing editorial judgement.
Precisely. Moreover, it was not a completed and vetted piece. They weren’t denying an interview opportunity, simply a live vs. recorded interview.
 
I got an item from the CBS Evening News in my Facebook news feed today. It was a mission statement of sorts, presented as a series of promises/talking points/boasts.

Yep. Me too. They've replaced the 38-page CBS News Standards and Practices manual with "Five Guiding Principles":

  1. We work for you. That means you come first. Not our advertisers. Not politicians. Not corporate interests, including the corporate owners of CBS News.
  2. We report on the world as it is. We’ll be honest and direct with you. That means no weasel words or padded landings. We’ll tell you what we know, when we know it. Well update our reporting when we uncover new facts. And we’ll admit when we get it wrong.
  3. We respect you. We believe that our fellow Americans are smart and discerning. It’s our job to present you with the fullest picture — and the strongest voices on all sides of an issue. We trust you to make up your own minds, and to make the decisions that are best for you, your families and your communities.
  4. We love America. And we make no apologies for saying so. Our foundational values of liberty, equality and the rule of law make us the last best hope on Earth. We also believe in Franklin’s famous line about America as a republic — if we can keep it. We aim to do our part every night: One way to think about our show is as a daily conversation about exactly where we are as a country and where we are going.
  5. We respect tradition, but we also believe in the future. We embrace the tools that allow us to reach you where you are. Some of you will watch this show on linear television. Others will increasingly watch it on social media. What we can guarantee is that the tools will continue to change — but some things never will. One of those things is honest journalism.

Old TV journalist observation: The entire structure and writing style is cribbed from Chevy's print ads for the launch of the Vega 56 years ago:

YCD8_031_b5911601-2c10-4bfe-bf89-a699dee8e057.jpg

And we all know how the Vega turned out.
 
One was simply "We love America." Implying, then, that Murrow and Cronkite didn't? How very Joe McCarthy of CBS!

Sorry. I don't get that at all. Both Murrow and Cronkite were forced out of their roles at CBS News in controversial ways. The Murrow story was depicted by George Clooney in "Good Night & Good Luck." The Cronkite story was less celebrated. But he was forced out of his role as anchor by Dan Rather. Of course years later Rather himself was forced out in a controversial way,

So if there is a history and tradition at CBS News, it is in forcing out celebrated journalists in controversial ways. To me, this just follows a long established company transition. I'm not sure if John Dickerson is a name people will defend in the same way as they did Murrow & Cronkite.
 
From a propaganda standpoint, a real tour of the country poses problems for Bari, the Ellisons and Trump. A real "man of the people" tour would have Tony with farmers in the heartland. But then tariffs come into play.

So Bari opts for making it look like everyone is doing well---what's your problem?---and since it's going to be a party, invites herself.
Charles Kuralt is a fading memory.
Steve Hartman is doing something similar.
 
Yep. Me too. They've replaced the 38-page CBS News Standards and Practices manual with "Five Guiding Principles":



Old TV journalist observation: The entire structure and writing style is cribbed from Chevy's print ads for the launch of the Vega 56 years ago:

View attachment 11155

And we all know how the Vega turned out.

Those five guiding principles are, what one of my former communications professors at LMU would call, "glittering generalities." They look nice on paper (and some of them are legitimate targets to hit) but without a road map to get there, that's all they are. Also, given who Miss Weiss is actually answering to (they're lying about the corporate part in that first principle), I really don't see CBS getting anywhere near those targets, even if (as TheBigA is hoping) ratings actually do improve.
 
Sorry. I don't get that at all. Both Murrow and Cronkite were forced out of their roles at CBS News in controversial ways. The Murrow story was depicted by George Clooney in "Good Night & Good Luck." The Cronkite story was less celebrated. But he was forced out of his role as anchor by Dan Rather. Of course years later Rather himself was forced out in a controversial way,

So if there is a history and tradition at CBS News, it is in forcing out celebrated journalists in controversial ways. To me, this just follows a long established company transition. I'm not sure if John Dickerson is a name people will defend in the same way as they did Murrow & Cronkite.
True and it sounds like a sneak preview on what happens when Sharyn Alfonsi, Tanya Simon and crew that were with them at the CECOT story are forced out because of Weiss and Ellisons role in their decision process.


Yes and Tanya Simon actually approved the CECOT story in some of the articles because she's the Executive Producer and director at 60 Minutes. We shall see if she gets removed due to Weiss and Ellisons role in overturning Tanya Simon approval to run that story.
 


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