• Washington
  • Wall Street
  • A.I.
  • Hollywood
  • Media
  • Fashion
  • Sports
  • Art
  • Join Puck Newsletters What is puck? Authors Podcasts Gift Puck Careers Events
  • Join Puck

    Directly Supporting Authors

    A new economic model in which writers are also partners in the business.

    Personalized Subscriptions

    Customize your settings to receive the newsletters you want from the authors you follow.

    Stay in the Know

    Connect directly with Puck talent through email and exclusive events.

  • What is puck? Newsletters Authors Podcasts Events Gift Puck Careers

Jun 3, 2026

In The Room
Range Rover
Dylan Byers Dylan Byers

Greetings from Los Angeles, and welcome back to In the Room. Go Knicks!


In tonight’s edition, fresh reporting on the Scott Pelley imbroglio at 60 Minutes, and the cascading second- and third-order effects for Bari Weiss and Nick Bilton as they try to steer their way out of this latest conflagration. Meanwhile, David Ellison and the Paramount brass are still searching for a seasoned operator who can restore order before Bari brings this circus to CNN.

🎙️ Plus, shortly before all the shit hit the fan, I joined my partner Peter Hamby on Puck’s flagship podcast, The Powers That Be, to assess the drama emanating out of 60 Minutes and the broader existential challenges that Bari and Nick face as they seek to overhaul CBS News. Follow The Powers That Be on YouTube, Apple, Spotify, or wherever you prefer to listen (or watch).

📣 Reminder: The Wednesday issue of In the Room will soon be exclusive to Puck’s Inner Circle tier. Don’t forget to upgrade your subscription for access to all of Puck’s most exclusive insider reporting, including our sister publication, Air Mail. It is well worth it, and you can afford it. Join here.

Also mentioned in this issue: Barry Diller, Robert Allbritton, George Cheeks, Nik Deogun, Gerry Cardinale, Noah Oppenheim, Bill Whitaker, Lesley Stahl, Tom Cibrowski, Anderson Cooper, Sharyn Alfonsi, Cecilia Vega, Dovid Efune, David Rhodes, Mark Thompson, Matthew Hiltzik, Heather Riley, Ali Zelenko, Jeremy Adler, and many more…

 

Open Tab

  • Barry in Vegas: As you know, Barry Diller’s People Inc. has offered to take over MGM Resorts in a deal that would value the casino group at $12.4 billion. Barry’s company already owns a 26 percent stake, and I was intrigued by his rationale for buying the rest. In a letter, he said MGM “represented a rare kind of business: one with real world assets that AI cannot easily replicate or disintermediate and exceptional digital growth opportunities.” All true, though one wonders how he balances that opportunity against the vulnerabilities in regard to the rise of online sports betting and prediction markets. Anyway, fun to see Barry isn’t slowing down in what must now be his sixth or seventh act.

A MESSAGE FROM OUR SPONSOR

Range Rover
Range Rover

PEERLESS REFINEMENT

 

With a powerful presence and an endless array of personalized touches, the Range Rover epitomizes modern luxury.


EXPLORE

  • Star out of reach: Robert Allbritton will have to find another title for his Washington media startup. This week, a federal judge blocked his plan to rebrand NOTUS as “The Star” in response to a lawsuit from New York Sun proprietor Dovid Efune, who actually owns the trademark to The Washington Star. As I noted last week, Dovid is now reviving the Star itself, which will give Robert a newspaper war—albeit not the one he hoped to have with The Washington Post.
  • And finally…: The White House Correspondents’ Association has rescheduled the Correspondents’ Dinner for July 24, at the Waldorf Astoria. President Trump said he will attend, but will anyone else?

And now, the main event…

The ‘60 Minutes’ Adult Daycare Era

The 60 Minutes Adult Daycare Era

Bari Weiss’s takeover of CBS News, just eight months ago, has somehow already produced a decade’s worth of mess, reaching embarrassing new lows with Scott Pelley’s self-mythologizing tantrum and subsequent firing. How long before David Ellison sends in a pro to clean up after her?

Dylan Byers Dylan Byers

On Tuesday at 5 p.m., Bari Weiss, CBS News president Tom Cibrowski, and newbie 60 Minutes executive producer Nick Bilton summoned Scott Pelley to a meeting in Tom’s office on the executive floor at West 57th Street. A day earlier, in Nick’s first 60 Minutes staff meeting, Scott had taken his new boss to task over his “slender qualifications,” pressed him to explain why several of the show’s top producers and correspondents had recently been fired, and accused Bari of “murdering” the storied newsmagazine. In many professions, of course, such open defiance might have been grounds for immediate termination. The journalism business, which is built on gilded talent contracts, professional (and often performative) interrogation, institutional egos, and an enduring mythology around the truth, has long afforded its marquee stars a wider berth for insubordination.

At the start of Tuesday’s meeting, Tom told Scott that his actions had been “unacceptable” and that the network could fire him “for cause,” four sources with knowledge of the exchange told me. But, Tom continued, Scott had a long history and distinguished legacy at the network, and the executives wanted to have a conversation about how to get things back on track.

Scott did not put much stock in that claim. In a subsequent statement, he accused Bari and Tom of being “openly hostile from the start” and claimed they’d made no offer to find “a way back.” From there, all sources agree, Scott repeatedly pressed Bari to explain the recent firings, Bari repeatedly deflected, and after about 10 minutes, Tom brought the meeting to an end, twice telling Scott: “This conversation is over,” and then showing him the door.

A MESSAGE FROM OUR SPONSOR

Range Rover
Range Rover

PEERLESS REFINEMENT

 

With a powerful presence and an endless array of personalized touches, the Range Rover epitomizes modern luxury.


EXPLORE

Scott left the room with the impression that he would be fired in a matter of minutes, sources close to him said. Instead, Bari and the team stayed in the office for another four hours chewing on Joe’s Pizza and deliberating with legal counsel, press relations, and Paramount executives, including owner David Ellison and TV chairman George Cheeks, about how to handle his termination—and, as importantly, what the messaging should be. In their view, Scott’s main objective had been to cast himself as a martyr fighting against the destruction of America’s most celebrated TV news brand. A bland, diplomatic statement about his resignation might have de-escalated the situation, according to the collective wisdom of this crowd, but it also would have meant ceding the narrative.

Instead, Bari and her team responded emotionally, and with force—essentially reciprocating Pelley’s middle finger with a fuck-you burger and eat-shit fries Happy Meal of their own. In a letter to Scott, Nick accused the veteran newsman of an “ambush.” Scott, Nick said, had refused overtures and an invitation to dinner, opting instead to “hijack” the Monday meeting in a “performative display of hostility.” Far from acting as 60 Minutes’ savior, Nick cast Scott as its enemy. “Your antipathy to the future of the show has come through loud and clear,” Nick said. “I therefore write on behalf of CBS News to inform you that your employment with CBS is terminated for cause effective immediately.” Soon after, the letter found its way to me, the Times, et al., and every corner of the social media discourse.

The response predictably broke along party lines. Scott was lionized by many fellow journalists and the progressive crowd, most of whom saw his plight as the latest evidence of a broader, Trump-coded desecration of the American news media. Scott played up this theme by alleging that management had “instructed me to inject falsehoods and bias into a politically sensitive story,” and to “include assertions that are unverified.” Meanwhile, a chorus of X-happy conservatives mocked his theatrics, championed Bari for taking a scalp, and celebrated the network’s long overdue course correction. In the X era, such responses are entirely bankable.

Inside the building, however, the problems metastasized. At the network level, Bari and Nick are still waiting to see whether 60 correspondents Bill Whitaker and Lesley Stahl will follow Scott to the exit. As of Wednesday night, neither has made a decision, I’m told. But on the heels of Anderson Cooper’s departure last month and the firings of Sharyn Alfonsi and Cecilia Vega last week, their resignations would leave 60 with just one full-time correspondent, Jon Wertheim, who is merely the sports guy anyway. In the meantime, Bari and Nick have been scrambling to identify new talent to bring on board in order to start preparing the show for its earlier-than-usual debut on September 13, which is just 100 days away. Needless to say, this week’s events have complicated the recruitment effort. “Who would want to go work for 60 Minutes right now?” asked one talent agent who has received overtures from the network.

Too Scott to Handle

Meanwhile, at the Paramount level, the Pelley drama has amplified preexisting concerns over Bari’s ability to handle the full demands of her job at CBS News, let alone a similar post-acquisition assignment at CNN. In eight months, she has presided over a string of high-profile controversies and unfortunate but enduring humiliations while failing to lift ratings—especially at Evening News, which remains mired below 4 million viewers. Meanwhile, her own struggles have been fodder for an unending deluge of negative press.

Last month, I reported that Paramount brass had held informal discussions about bringing in a seasoned executive who could manage the operations side of the combined CBS News and CNN business, leaving Bari to focus on a cross-platform editorial mandate. Ostensibly, this is similar to the role that Cibrowski has at CBS News, though Paramount leadership does not see him as a viable candidate for the expanded remit. Perhaps the current shitshow at CBS News supports that thesis; on the other hand, one has to wonder how much worse this might have gotten if Tom weren’t in the building.

In any event, these discussions are ongoing, and David and his team still believe that Bari will need the additional support of this as-yet-unnamed executive. In the past, Bari has expressed interest in bringing former NBC News president Noah Oppenheim into the fold. David himself recently met with Noah, I’m told, spurring a rumor among some insiders that he was in line for the position. Sources said the two mainly discussed film and television deals between Paramount and Prologue, Noah’s independent production studio and a portfolio company at Gerry Cardinale’s RedBird—which, in turn, is a partner in David’s Paramount investment. (RedBird is also an investor in Puck.) As I’ve reported before, sources have also floated former CBS News president David Rhodes and current CNN C.E.O. Mark Thompson as a fit for the role. A Paramount spokesperson declined to comment.

While the Paramount brass deliberates over her future, Bari has been trying to improve her own press. To date, her public relations have been handled by a motley crew of comms professionals, including her recently appointed comms chief Jeremy Adler and three separate outside contractors—Ali Zelenko, Heather Riley, and Matthew Hiltzik—to say nothing of the comms chiefs above them at CBS and Paramount. That’s a lot of cooks in one kitchen. Nevertheless, in recent weeks, I’m told, Bari also enlisted Nik Deogun, the Brunswick executive who handled Bob Chapek’s ill-fated tour through Disney, to provide additional help for Nick as he takes the helm at 60 Minutes. (Nik had already been working with Paramount on the WBD merger, but I’m told that Bari made the decision to bring him in at CBS News.) Alas, as many inside the building told me this week—and as you’ve probably surmised by now—Bari’s problems aren’t a communications issue. 

The Grill Room with Dylan Byers & Julia Alexander

Finally, a media podcast about what’s actually happening in the media—not the oversanitized, legal-and-standards-approved version you read online. Join Dylan Byers, Puck’s veteran media reporter, and Julia Alexander, a longtime media analyst, as they sit down with TV personalities, moguls, pundits, and industry executives for raw, honest, sometimes salacious conversations about the business of media and its biggest egos. New episodes publish every Tuesday and Friday.

The Varsity

A professional-grade rundown on the business of sports from John Ourand, the industry’s preeminent journalist, covering the leagues, players, agencies, media deals, and the egos fueling it all.

Stories
Disney Lawyers at War

Disney Lawyers at War

ERIQ GARDNER

Everlane’s Cautionary Tale

Everlane’s Cautionary Tale

MALIQUE MORRIS

ESPN’s Magnus Opus

ESPN’s Magnus Opus

JOHN OURAND

Puck
Facebook Twitter Instagram LinkedIn

Need help? Review our FAQ page or contact us for assistance. For brand partnerships, email ads@puck.news.

You received this email because you signed up to receive emails from Puck, or as part of your Puck account associated with {{customer.email}}. To stop receiving this newsletter and/or manage all your email preferences, click here.

 

Puck is published by Heat Media LLC. 107 Greenwich St., New York, NY 10006

SEE THE ARCHIVES

SHARE
Try Puck for free

Sign up today to join the inside conversation at the nexus of Wall Street, Washington, A.I., Hollywood, and more.

Already a member? Log In


  • Daily articles and breaking news
  • Personal emails directly from our authors
  • Gift subscriber-only stories to friends & family
  • Unlimited access to archives

  • Exclusive bonus days of select newsletters
  • Exclusive access to Puck merch
  • Early bird access to new editorial and product features
  • Invitations to private conference calls with Puck authors

Exclusive to Inner Circle only



Latest Articles from Media

Bari Weiss
Dylan Byers • June 4, 2026
Bari’s Prison of Her Own Design
After a month of contentious delays, 60 Minutes finally aired its piece on the notorious El Salvador prison CECOT. The “hostage standoff,” as one person put it, ended in an uneasy truce that could have been reached a month ago—and without exposing the distrust and division at Bari Weiss’s CBS News.
Mathias Doepfner
Dylan Byers • June 4, 2026
The Politico Succession Games Begin…
An era at Politico has been ending for the last decade—at least since the departures of Mike and Jim, then Jake and Anna, and, of course, the sale to Axel Springer. But with John Harris ascending to the chairmanship, again, it’s finally Axel’s baby. And Mathias Döpfner may be looking outside the mothership for Harris’s successor.
Tony Dokoupil
Dylan Byers • June 4, 2026
Tony and Bari on the Rocks
The sponcon set dressing at ‘Evening News’ provoked predictable outcry at the House of Bari. But are brand partners in TV news just an inevitability at this point?


Ben Smith, Justin Smith Semaphor
Dylan Byers • June 4, 2026
Semafornication
Ben and Justin’s recent fundraise at an 8x trailing revenue multiple, which follows David Ellison’s extravagant purchase of The Free Press, suggests we’ve entered a new era of digital media valuations. Unless we’ve just reentered the old one. Anyway, is Punchbowl next in line?
Tony Dokoupil
Dylan Byers • June 4, 2026
The Tony Accords
Tony Dokoupil’s disastrous debut as anchor of CBS Evening News highlights the uncomfortable truth about Bari Weiss’s tenure: While her politics take center stage, it’s her inexperience that’s her real liability.
Jim Steyer
Dylan Byers • June 4, 2026
Common Sense & Sensibility
A candid chat with Common Sense Media founder Jim Steyer on what lies in the hearts of Silicon Valley’s biggest bigwigs and what the A.I. bros are doing to your children. Plus, thoughts on Sundar, Zuck, and his brother Tom’s California gubernatorial bid.


Bari Weiss
Dylan Byers • June 4, 2026
The Weiss Flag
It’s tempting to view Bari Weiss’s first big blunder—pulling a 60 Minutes segment critical of the administration’s deportation efforts—as purely political, which it may have been. But it may have been the product of something more mundane: Bari doesn’t know how to lead a newsroom.


Get access to this story

Enter your email for a free preview of Puck’s full offering, including exclusive articles, private emails from authors, and more.

Verify your email and sign in by clicking the link we just sent.

Already a member? Log In


Start 14 Day Free Trial for Unlimited Access Instead →



Latest Articles from Media

Journalists
Dylan Byers • June 4, 2026
The 2025 Media State of the Union
The inherent tension of the journalist-as-brand model, the continued erosion of institutional authority, the potential for an A.I. newsroom: Industry leaders weighed in on all this and more at a panel this week to unveil the results of our latest Puck–Orchestra survey.
Justin Smith ben smith
Dylan Byers • June 4, 2026
The Gulf of Semafor
As Semafor expands further into the Gulf, it’s becoming clear that Justin Smith and Ben Smith’s media baby is looking a lot more like the former than the latter.
Jim Lanzone Yahoo
Dylan Byers • June 4, 2026
The Lanzone That Time Forgot
Don’t waste your tears on Yahoo, the Internet 1.0 relic that collapsed into Verizon and then the warm embrace of private equity. C.E.O. Jim Lanzone explains how the Apollo-owned company is poised to make the most of its post-search distribution, and why niche is the new scale.


Bari Weiss
Dylan Byers • June 4, 2026
A Weiss Christmas
While The Free Press is flush with holiday spirit, Bari’s job reinventing CBS News is proving more vexing, amid anchor dreams dashed and the age-old challenge of enacting institutional change.
Bari Weiss
Dylan Byers • June 4, 2026
CNN’s Bari Christmas
In the wake of Netflix’s Warner Bros. coup, the folks at CNN are, perhaps naively, looking on the bright side: They may not have to work for Bari Weiss after all. But times in Spinoffville are going to get tough—and fast.
Olivia Nuzzi
Dylan Byers • June 4, 2026
The Nuzzicracker Ballet
The star-crossed saga of Olivia and Ryan continues its salacious, shameful pas de deux—ensnaring not just Vanity Fair’s new editor but further tainting journalism writ large. Even worse, it elides the real question: Why is a certain pathetic world hanging on every word of a jilted lover’s creepy account proffered without editorial oversight?


Hamish McKenzie, Substack
Julia Alexander • June 4, 2026
Substack Entrapment Theory
Google Zero killed the open web, ChatGPT isn’t replacing lost traffic, and superstar talent is a phenomenally difficult business. Digital media companies trying to stay upright are belatedly turning to creator-first subscription platforms in search of sustainable, niche audiences—without realizing that they’ve seen this movie before.
Get access to this story

Enter your email to get access to one article and free previews of our private emails from Puck authors and editors.

OR

Already a Member? Sign in



Latest Articles from Media

Alison Roman
Dylan Byers • June 4, 2026
Roman Holiday
The internet’s favorite food author finds herself at a familiar crossroads for writers who have become brands unto themselves: trying to balance scale, new ventures, and authenticity while keeping a loyal audience fed… in this case literally.
David Zaslav
Dylan Byers • June 4, 2026
Zaz’s Hollywood Endings
With the final bids for Warner Bros. Discovery under careful consideration, David Zaslav’s tenure as an ersatz Hollywood mogul may be coming to an end. Now, it’s all about the numbers, and which suitors have a glide path to regulatory approval. Just which sunset Zaz will ride into is anyone’s guess.
Olivia Nuzzi
Dylan Byers • June 4, 2026
A Brave Nuzzi World
Between the Bravo-ready mess of the Nuzzi-Lizza imbroglio and Michael Wolff’s Epstein deference, it was a monumentally bad week for media ethics. As journalists, even principled ones, become increasingly central characters in the stories themselves, is this kind of spectacle an unavoidable component of a new media world order?


Gerry Cardinale
Dylan Byers • June 4, 2026
The RedBird Balloon
After a second bid to take over The Telegraph met a particularly British brand of resistance, RedBird Capital walked away from the whole ordeal. Now the 170-year-old paper is back to waiting for a Goldilocks buyer.
Jim Bankoff
Dylan Byers • June 4, 2026
The Bankoff Job
Jim Bankoff is considering a spinoff of Vox’s faster-growing podcast network from its legacy publishing business. While it makes economic sense-ish, what does it mean for the future of brands like SB Nation, The Verge, and… ‘New York?’
Stan Duncan
Dylan Byers • June 4, 2026
Stan By Me
A handful of disgruntled employees confronted Stan Duncan, Condé Nast’s H.R. chief, about the company’s decision to shutter Teen Vogue. There was a video, of course, which captures either a noble moment of employee solidarity or a bunch of entitled staffers willfully unaware of Condé’s dwindling fortunes and the realities of the legacy media business. Either way, how far they’ve fallen.


Mark Lazarus
Dylan Byers • June 4, 2026
MS Doom
Spirits are uncharacteristically high at the post-spinoff MS NOW, but this is still a late-stage linear operation that’s shedding (mostly geriatric) viewers at a steady clip. Despite Versant’s money and Rebecca Kutler’s ambitions, is it just a matter of time before the realities of cable’s decline drag them under?


  • Terms
  • Privacy
  • Contact
  • FAQ
  • Careers
© 2026 Heat Media All rights reserved.
Create an account

Already a member? Log In

CREATE AN ACCOUNT with Google
CREATE AN ACCOUNT with Google
OR YOUR EMAIL

OR

Use Email & Password Instead

USE EMAIL & PASSWORD
Password strength:

OR

Use Another Sign-Up Method

Become a member

All of the insider knowledge from our top tier authors, in your inbox.

Create an account

Already a member? Log In

Verify your email!

You should receive a link to log in at .

I DID NOT RECEIVE A LINK

Didn't get an email? Check your spam folder and confirm the spelling of your email, and try again. If you continue to have trouble, reach out to fritz@puck.news.

CREATE AN ACCOUNT with Google
CREATE AN ACCOUNT with Google
CREATE AN ACCOUNT with Apple
CREATE AN ACCOUNT with Apple
OR USE EMAIL & PASSWORD
Password strength:

OR
Log In

Not a member yet? Sign up today

Log in with Google
Log in with Google
Log in with Apple
Log in with Apple
OR USE EMAIL & PASSWORD
Don't have a password or need to reset it?

OR
Verify Account

Verify your email!

You should receive a link to log in at .

I DID NOT RECEIVE A LINK

Didn't get an email? Check your spam folder and confirm the spelling of your email, and try again. If you continue to have trouble, reach out to fritz@puck.news.

YOUR EMAIL

Use a different sign in option instead

Member Exclusive

Get access to this story

Create a free account to preview Puck’s full offering, including exclusive articles, private emails from authors, and more.

Already a member? Sign in

Free article unlocked!

You are logged into a free account as unknown@example.com

ENJOY 1 FREE ARTICLE EACH MONTH

Subscribe today to join the inside conversation at the nexus of Wall Street, Washington, A.I., Hollywood, and more.

START 14-DAY FREE TRIAL

  • Daily articles and breaking news
  • Personal emails directly from our authors
  • Gift subscriber-only stories to friends & family
  • Unlimited access to archives
  • Bookmark articles to create a Reading List
  • Quarterly calls with industry experts from the power corners we cover