Greetings from Los Angeles and welcome back to In the Room.
Americans’ faith in the media
has fallen to an all-time low, with just 28 percent of those surveyed by Gallup expressing a “great deal” or “fair amount” of trust in mass media to report the news fully, accurately, and fairly—down from around 70 percent when Gallup began its survey in the 1970s. Fertile ground for disruption, I guess. Speaking of…
In tonight’s issue, news and notes on Bari Weiss’s ascension to the top of CBS News, which David Ellison plans to announce next week, along
with his $150 million cash-and-stock deal to acquire The Free Press. Plus, some thoughts on the Josh D’Amaro fever suddenly gripping Disney.
🍸 Plus, on the latest edition of The Grill Room, Julia Alexander and I assessed OpenAI’s and Meta’s new video-generation apps, which have sent
Hollywood into a state of not-so-mild panic, and could reshape the media industry. Then, we turned to the YouTube TV–NBCU carriage dispute, and what it portends for similar industry battles going forward. Follow The Grill Room on Apple, Spotify,
or wherever you prefer to listen.
📝 Finally, if you haven’t filled out the latest Puck Private Conversation survey, powered by our partners at Orchestra and focused on the most pressing issues in the media industry, you can do so
here.
Mentioned in this issue: Bob Iger, Bari Weiss, David Ellison, David Rhodes, Dana Walden, Josh D’Amaro, Jimmy Kimmel, James Gorman, George Cheeks, Adam O’Neal, and many
more…
Let’s get started…
|
- Disney’s
D’Amaroland: Don’t ask me why, but lately everyone with proximity to Disney and the Bob Iger succession race seems to have jumped onto the Josh D’Amaro bandwagon. The conventional wisdom had long been that the Parks chairman was in a two-horse race with Entertainment co-chair Dana Walden, despite the fact that Disney was officially also considering ESPN chair Jimmy Pitaro (a distant dark horse) and Dana’s
fellow Entertainment co-chair, Alan Bergman (not gonna happen). Now, everyone’s talking like it’s D’Amaro’s to lose.
In surveying media insiders last week about Dana’s handling of the Jimmy Kimmel imbroglio, several Disney-proximate executives suggested D’Amaro was going to get the job regardless of recent events.
Someone apparently put that prediction to Iger himself over lunch at Farmshop in Brentwood the other week, per Bloomberg’s Thomas Buckley, which didn’t go over well. “Iger bristled,” Buckley reports. “He raised his voice, saying the board hadn’t made a decision and that he had ‘no idea’ where that notion
was coming from.”
Is the D’Amaro chatter indicative of real boardroom developments or mere Rotunda gossip? It’s hard to tell. That Bloomberg reportage was peppered with overtly pro-D’Amaro sourcing, and blind quotes about the breadth of his talents beyond the Parks remit—a feature of Disney succession posturing for decades. Ten years ago, when Tom Staggs was auditioning for the job, his “understanding” of Disney went “well beyond [his] training as a
financial steward,” according to a 2015 New York Times profile. Today, Buckley reports that “while D’Amaro has never supervised Disney’s film or TV units, he interacts almost daily with the people who run those businesses and is well liked by them.” Feel free to scoff.
In any event, the matter isn’t up to Iger this time around. It’s up to board chairman James Gorman, who capably managed the Morgan Stanley leadership transition before being brought in to oversee
this one. A disciplined professional, he likely doesn’t give a shit what anyone is saying. - WaPo Opinions changes: Fresh off the heels of his inaugural interview with Fox News, new Washington Post Opinions editor Adam O’Neal has announced his first hires, adding three conservative voices to the paper’s ranks: Kate Andrews of The Spectator, Dominic Pino of National Review, and
Carine Hajjar of The Boston Globe. Meanwhile, O’Neal laid off at least half a dozen staffers and contractors this week, as part of what was described as “organizational changes.”
O’Neal, a 33-year-old veteran of The Economist, has his work cut out for him. As I noted earlier this week, the media landscape is now saturated with opinion pages and outlets catering to the “free markets, free people” ethos that Jeff Bezos would like to see in
his own paper. How does O’Neal intend to differentiate the Post from The Wall Street Journal, The Free Press, et al.? Like many aspects of the Post’s seemingly endless self-immolating reinvention, this plan seems long on bluster and scant on specifics.
|
|
|
After David Ellison’s yearlong courtship, Free Press founder Bari Weiss will finally begin
leading CBS News on Monday. But can an editor who rose on her center-right-ish criticism of the mainstream media find her way now that she’s once again a part of it?
|
|
|
Next Monday, Paramount Skydance chief David Ellison plans to announce that he has acquired
The Free Press, the heterodox, oft-agitational news- and opinion-focused media company, and will install its founder, Bari Weiss, as editor-in-chief of CBS News. Five years ago, of course, this outcome would have seemed absolutely delusional—beyond batshit crazy improbable. Bari resigned from the New York Times Opinion page in protest of its allegedly illiberal drift and started a Substack. Next week, she’ll be given carte blanche to establish
the editorial philosophy of one of America’s most storied news networks. She’ll also receive a sizable windfall. As I first reported last month, David’s cash-and-stock deal values The Free Press at about $150 million, somewhere between an 8x and 10x multiple based on current revenues. Life comes at you fast, I guess.
Bari’s arrangement includes a rather
unconventional choreography. She will report directly to Ellison rather than CBS News president Tom Cibrowski, who is staying on in that role. (Former CBS News president David Rhodes will not return to the network, despite some informal overtures from Paramount.) Tom, meanwhile, will report to Paramount TV chair George Cheeks. In essence, Bari
will dictate the editorial agenda while Tom will manage all the other aspects of the business, including getting the shows on air every morning and night. Their chemistry will be essential to their success: Bari may be a brave contrarian and brilliant provocateur, but she’s not a manager or scaled operator, as some of her biggest admirers and current employees have attested to me. (On a separate note, Tom will also handle the impending layoffs at the news division—which, I’m told, could affect
around 100 employees.)
Of course, this deal has been a long time coming—a full year since David first met with Bari, months since formal talks started in Sun Valley, weeks since I reported that the deal was all but done—and it’s obviously garnered quite a bit of ink here and elsewhere. Still, it’s worth taking stock of this inarguably transformational
moment in media. Yes, Walter Cronkite may have retired from the network nearly a half-century ago, but the identity and ethos of CBS, and indeed all mainstream media, have lived in his shadow ever since. To her critics, Bari’s ascent marks a rupture with that tradition—especially given her penchant for ridiculing progressive identity politics, her unflinching support of Israel, and her overt attempt to cast herself as an alternative to the media establishment. Her
supporters, both inside and outside the building, counter that her commitment to free speech marks a much-needed return to journalism’s first principles.
As I’ve noted, Bari is actually more consistently centrist than her critics care to acknowledge. Indeed, for all the fears of rightward drift, it’s quite likely that her first brush with controversy will come
when her free speech absolutism puts CBS and Paramount in direct opposition to Trump, who has been testing the limits of his ability to influence newsrooms and late-night studios. After all, when Disney pulled Kimmel amid F.C.C. pressure, Bari was the one who reminded us all about the definition of jawboning.
Politics
aside, the more pressing question for Paramount and CBS centers on what happens to Bari upon going corporate. To date, she has built her brand by positioning herself as an outsider—a voice the Times couldn’t tolerate, a truth-teller too honest for the mainstream—and much of The Free Press’s commentary contains subtle or overt criticisms of the mainstream media. As one media entrepreneur of Bari’s generation put it to me, she’s ridden that hobbyhorse quite far. But what happens when she
becomes mainstream media, and is responsible for what gets said on a national news network between broadcasts of NFL games and reruns of NCIS? It’s harder to punch up when you’re at the top.
And while she and Ellison seem almost umbilically linked ideologically, at what point might some trusted steward suggest that a direct reporting structure might not make sense for a young guy trying to take over Hollywood? Most media moguls, after all, spend plenty of time
complaining about the mishegas created by their news divisions—a reality that has, among other things, led to all kinds of complex org structures, B.S. chairman’s roles, etcetera. Rather than build a cordon sanitaire around CBS News, Ellison has created a direct line. He bought Bari to let her be Bari—let’s see what happens when she is.
|
|
|
Puck fashion correspondent Lauren Sherman and a rotating cast of industry insiders take you deep behind the scenes of this
multitrillion-dollar biz, from creative director switcheroos to M&A drama, D.T.C. downfalls, and magazine mishaps. Fashion People is an extension of Line Sheet, Lauren’s private email for Puck, where she tracks what’s happening beyond the press releases in fashion, beauty, and media. New episodes publish every Tuesday and Friday.
|
|
|
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.
|
|
|
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
|
|
|
|