Greetings from Los Angeles and welcome back to In the Room. We are
getting to the real marrow of the U.S. Open now, and I welcome your thoughts and observations on the tournament. (As you know, you can always get in touch with me by hitting reply to this email, which I usually use to solicit tips, leads, and scoops.) If you didn’t catch Bob Iger, Adam Silver, and Josh Kushner sitting courtside at the Fritz-Djokovic match, Getty
did. In tonight’s issue, news, notes, and scoops on the David Ellison–Bari Weiss talks, which are quickly progressing toward a deal that will bring The Free Press inside Paramount and proffer the
Millennial provocateur with an influential role at CBS News. Sure, David might be downsizing the news division, but at least he’s keeping things interesting along the way. 🍸 Plus, on the latest edition of The Grill Room, Andrew Rosen, the former Paramount executive and founder of Parqor,
the media insights firm, joined me to break down the divergent digital strategies of The New York Times and ESPN. This one was a real conversation starter at both companies, and I encourage you to give it a listen. Follow The Grill Room on Apple, Spotify, or wherever.
Mentioned in this issue: David Ellison, Bari Weiss, Brendan Carr, David Rhodes, John Malone, Stephen Colbert, Justin Smith, Ben Smith, Jake Sherman, Anna
Palmer, and many more…
Let’s get started…
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What’s a Semafor for?: Semafor co-founder Justin Smith revealed to Adweek today that live events are its “core” business and now account for more than half of the company’s total revenues. I have long made the case that Semafor is really an events company cloaked in the guise of a content business, and this would seem to make that official. (Justin prefers the term “live journalism.”) Smith now plans to expand the business “to the Arabian Gulf
before scaling to Africa, with Asia and Europe on tap,” and will extend the World Economy Summit, Semafor’s would-be Davos competitor, to five days.
- Ben there, done that: On a related note, Semafor co-founder and editor-in-chief Ben Smith is pivoting away from the company’s widely read media newsletter, which he co-authored with Max Tani, and will launch a new D.C.-focused column called “Washington View.” Beyond giving
Ben a chance to return to politics, his true bailiwick, the move also signals a recognition on his and Justin’s part that Semafor’s business needed a little more love in the nation’s capital—that is where the corporate affairs advertising is focused, after all—and that there were better ways for Ben to serve the P&L than by overlaying his wisdom on Max every Sunday night. On a related note, Semafor has also posted job listings for a new Washington editor and Washington economics
correspondent. After a few false starts in the market, is the company trying to help itself to a dose of those Punchbowlbucks?
- Speaking of, two Punchbowl micro-scoops: Tomorrow, Punchbowl co-founders Jake Sherman and Anna Palmer launch their new Fly Out Day podcast, which features weekly interviews with lawmakers and other influential voices in and around Congress. I am told the duo has already sold
out their ad inventory through the end of the year, starting with Meta—a testament to the strength of their business on the Hill—and that their inaugural guest is none other than House Speaker Mike Johnson.
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With Paramount securely in his pocket, David Ellison is on the verge of acquiring
Bari Weiss’s The Free Press and tossing her the keys to CBS News. The deal is on the 1-yard line, I’m told.
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Over the last month, as David Ellison has settled into control
of Paramount, a new conventional wisdom seems to have coalesced around a guy who, by dint of his relative youth and centibillionaire father, might otherwise have been written off as a nepo baby of hyperbolic proportions. David is smart, his friends and fellow executives will assure you. He gets the business. And, most notably, he plays to win—or, as Mark Shapiro put it to me, he is “an assassin when it comes to winning.” But as John
Malone made clear in his recent interview with the Times, all things can be true. Malone, who met with David in Sun Valley, said he found him both “very bright” and “pretty arrogant.” But, in the ultimate benediction, the aging cable cowboy assured all that he would “bet on that guy.” In any case, David has inarguably moved fast since taking the reins of his new media barony—a
notable contrast from the deal’s interminable close. In the span of a few weeks, he reached a $7.7 billion deal for UFC rights, lured the Duffer brothers away from Netflix, struck a distribution agreement with Legendary Pictures, and, this week, greenlit a Call of Duty film after acquiring the rights from Activision. (If you subscribe to my partner Matt’s indispensable What I’m Hearing
email, you saw all these deals coming long before the ink hit the paper.) Even before that, David effectively approved Stephen Colbert’s cancellation and South Park’s $1.5 billion renewal. (Sure, sure, guys, that was all Shari.) Yes, he had a year to plan these moves thanks to Brendan Carr’s meddling, but
the pace of execution does indeed betray a killer instinct. Now, David has made advances on yet another target: an acquisition of The Free Press, the defiantly heterodox news and opinion media entity founded by Bari Weiss. As you know, David has been courting Bari for almost a year, and formally pitched her on acquiring the company at the Allen & Co. conference in July. Those talks have
progressed in recent days, and I am now told that the two sides have agreed in principle to a deal and lawyers are hard at work finalizing a formal agreement. David’s offer for The Free Press is expected to be well above the site’s most recent $100 million valuation, but well below the $200 million figure that was recently floated in the Financial Times. (That was an absurd ask; The Free Press does $15 million in annual subscription
revenue, and Bari’s politically charged content makes it hard to scale the advertising business. Plus, there’s no tech stack—it’s all on Substack.) Either way, it will land Weiss a king’s ransom just a little over five years after her dramatic departure from the Times. The deal is not done yet, of course, but, as a source
with knowledge of the negotiations told me this afternoon, it is “on the 1-yard line.”
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It’s
Not Dan Rather’s Network Anymore…
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As part of the deal, I am told David plans to give Bari a role at CBS News that
would, among other things, task his fellow Millennial with guiding the editorial direction of the division. Bari’s avowedly pro-Israel and anti-woke worldview—not to mention her broadly shit-kicking anti-establishment disposition—would inevitably inspire blowback from various corners of the newsroom, and could dramatically change the editorial posture and reputation of one of the most storied, and certainly self-important, institutions in American journalism. For David, that’s likely
part of the point. On some level, David’s pursuit of The Free Press seems driven by a desire to align his news network with his own politics. How else to explain why the guy who just bought his way into Hollywood moguldom, NFL rights, and the streaming wars would want to endure the thankless chore of integrating a politically charged digital news business that, despite its relative success in the Substack
economy, would account for a modest eight-figure revenue line in his $18 billion entertainment business? If the lifers at CNN threatened to burn the place down when Chris Licht moved his office to a different floor, imagine the looming hysteria that will transfix CBS News. Assumedly, for Ellison, employee migration is also part of the point. David probably looks at CBS News as a bit of a
blank canvas. It’s a declining business, a cost burden, and, as recent history has made abundantly clear, a potentially massive P.R. headache. But the fact that it is losing money also opens a lot of opportunities for reinvention: Why continue to operate a declining asset that also bleeds cash at status quo? If you have to have it, why not try something
unconventional? Without getting philosophical, he’s planning on owning this asset interminably and his shareholders have already suffered through years of Shari-inflicted cash incineration. Why not take a flier on a format that’s economically inconsequential and eroding regardless? And if this maneuver gives David Rhodes second thoughts about moving back from London to manage the division, he can entrust it to existing newsroom leader Tom Cibrowski. Therein lies the intrigue behind the Bari deal. Even as he is poised to scale down the business, reduce talent salaries, and make it a leaner, trimmer operation, David is also poised to bring on a politically divisive marquee talent who might infuse the brand with a bold new identity and, frankly, at least make the network interesting again. Ellison also likely knows
there may be a surprising upside here. You may not be able to believe everything you watch on Fox News, but the network’s personality-driven content has single-handedly overturned the hourglass on the industry. We’re living through a media age, for better or worse, that prizes authenticity above all—it’s the leitmotif that explains the rise of Dave Portnoy and Joe Rogan and Donald Trump. Can CBS platform Weiss, and let Bari be Bari, while still
credibly delivering the news every evening and retaining the sanctity of 60 Minutes, etcetera? Yes, it certainly can, just as the Times and the Journal once did. And also because, well, that’s what David wants.
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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.
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Join Puck’s chief political columnist, John Heilemann, as he roams the corridors of power and influence in America on
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