• 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
May 14, 2025
In The Room
Range Rover
Dylan Byers Dylan Byers
Greetings from Los Angeles and welcome back to In the Room. In tonight’s issue, fresh reporting on Jake Tapper and Alex Thompson’s Original Sin, and a years-long beef between Tapper and Hunter Biden that underlines the extremely tortured nature of Bidenworld’s crisis-control effort. 🍸 On the latest edition of The Grill Room, Julia Alexander and I explored the key themes emerging from this week’s upfronts in New York, from NBC’s live sports strategy to WBD’s expected decision to spin off its decaying linear assets. Plus, some thoughts on Fox News’s status as the lone thriving cable news business, and the NBA’s position in the next media era. Follow The Grill Room on Apple, Spotify, or wherever you prefer to listen. Mentioned in this issue: Bob Iger, David Zaslav, Jeff Bezos, Jimmy Pitaro, Mark Thompson, Will Lewis, John Harris, Jake Tapper, Joel Embid, George Clooney, Chris Meagher, Scott Galloway, and many, many more… Let’s get started…
  • WBD, Worst Board of Directors: Warner Bros. Discovery chief David Zaslav announced this week that the Max streaming service will once again be called HBO Max, reversing his initial, misguided decision to strip the brand of the three most prestigious letters in television. At the same time, his direct report Mark Thompson previewed a new CNN streaming service that will allow subscribers to watch the linear feed in the app, which called to mind part of the old plan for CNN+. The whiplash here is stupefying. But the real mystery is why the board—which Scott Galloway has now dubbed the “worst board in media”—continues to furnish Zaz with roughly $50 million in annual comp even as WBD’s stock has dropped more than 60 percent since it started trading in April 2022. Anyway, it hardly matters anymore. After three years of brand deterioration, Zaz is finally ready to spin out his cable networks and put CNN on the road to a smaller and shittier future with a Cox or a Tegna. In the meantime, Thompson’s latest bright idea is the creation of a CNN Weather app. Good luck.
  • ESPN’s Hail Mary: On a brighter note, Jimmy Pitaro has formally unveiled the new ESPN—the all-inclusive, $30-a-month streaming service that his boss Bob Iger recently described as the sports network’s biggest move since acquiring NFL rights nearly 40 years ago. It’s not necessarily hyperbole. ESPN and its sister channels are the cornerstone of the cable business, of course, so the potential cannibalization of their own linear product could hasten cable’s decline. More notably, the new ESPN will also test whether or not any cable channel can navigate the linear-to-streaming transition and come within spitting distance of the record profits of the peak cable era. Obviously, the Versant and future WBD spinco networks won’t. But maybe ESPN can.
A MESSAGE FROM OUR SPONSOR
RANGE ROVER
RANGE ROVER

TASTEMAKER’S CHOICE

The Range Rover is a serene, elegant expression of modern luxury.

EXPLORE

  • Will o’ the Wisp: Jeff Bezos’s stewardship of The Washington Post is the subject of a new New Yorker piece by Clare Malone, which mostly rehashes the paper’s very familiar recent history, while peppering in some Beltway gossip about the private life of its controversial publisher and C.E.O., Will Lewis. Specifically, Malone notes Will’s reputation for heavy drinking, and quotes a former Postie who says this has damaged his reputation with staff. She also notes, rightly, that he is conspicuously absent from many Post and D.C. social functions that previous publishers would have attended (“a state of hiding,” per Malone’s sources). Depending on whom you ask, this is either a red flag, or merely a sign of Will’s contempt for the D.C. crowd. (One anecdote suggests Will skipped a screening for the new Kay Graham documentary after perusing the guest list—a charge Will denies.)In any event, the most apt description of Will probably comes from a longtime associate who describes him as “a ‘wide boy’—British slang for someone who survives by his wits, often on the wrong side of right.” Does Jeff care about all this scrutiny? Maybe not. But I bet he’d rather have a leader of the Post who didn’t have this rep, and who was confident enough to show up and shake some hands, even if everyone in town hates his guts.
  • Politico’s Dasha Playbook: Finally, Politico announced this week that its new White House bureau chief, Dasha Burns, will also become the chief correspondent for the flagship Playbook franchise. Officially, Dasha’s “deeply sourced reporting” will supplement lead Playbook author Jack Blanchard’s “sharp editorial voice,” but there’s undoubtedly more to it. While Politico chief John Harris may adore Blanchard’s English wit, his lack of expertise in the machinations of official Washington is surely costing the business. In truth, Playbook is a B2B product that only succeeds if it holds sway with key opinion-formers on Capitol Hill and K Street. In time, they’ll either have to give the business to Dasha or face further attrition. Will Dasha be a better steward of the product? Ask me in six months…
And now, the main event…
The Hunter Biden-Tapper Face-Off

The Hunter Biden-Tapper Face-Off

Joe Biden’s cognitive decline, Bidenworld’s cover-up, and the dire consequences for the Democratic Party, as reported in ‘Original Sin,’ have stirred up the Beltway blame game and dragged the former president out for a sad redemption tour, while raising the question of what exactly went down between Jake Tapper and Hunter Biden at Super Bowl LII.
Dylan Byers Dylan Byers
On Tuesday, Jake Tapper and Alex Thompson, the co-authors of Original Sin, the heavily hyped book about President Biden’s cognitive decline and how it was allegedly covered up, launched the opening salvo of their promotional blitz via an excerpt in The New Yorker. The piece was a scathing indictment of Biden’s decision to run for reelection despite his condition, and then drag his feet on withdrawing from the race, even after his infamously disastrous debate performance. There was David Plouffe, the former Obama campaign manager and Harris advisor, stating on the record that Biden had “screwed” and “fucked” the Democrats. There was another Democratic strategist accusing Biden of stealing an election “from the American people.” And there was George Clooney, gutted by Biden’s feebleness and his failure to even recognize him at a Hollywood fundraiser, asserting that the Democrats’ attempt to deceive the country about Biden’s acuity was “how Trump won.” Also on Tuesday, an addition excerpt published by Axios, where Thompson serves as national political correspondent, revealed that Biden’s advisors had discussed letting the president use a wheelchair after reelection—but only after reelection, so as to avoid the “politically untenable” optics. The New York Times review described Original Sin as “a damning portrait of an enfeebled president” protected and enabled by his family and handlers. In an appearance that day on CNN, Tapper excoriated the White House for “lying”—“not only to the press, not only to the public, but … to members of their own cabinet … to White House staffers … to Democratic members of Congress.” And this is merely the beginning; the book itself doesn’t hit shelves for another week, at which point the inevitable deluge of podcast appearances will begin. In the still-early days of Trump 2.0, Original Sin has become a catalyst for some cathartic scapegoating among Democrats. If Biden “fucked” the party, as Plouffe and Tapper and Thompson posit, then the Democrats’ failure to defeat Trump can be attributed to the pride and vanity of one geriatric man and his enablers rather than a structural failure of the party to prevent the reelection of a convicted felon who blatantly disregards truth, law, and civility. In this self-serving narrative, the Democrats can move toward the midterms having cast off the Biden albatross, Kamala can pursue a gubernatorial bid without the humiliating stain of defeat, and the media itself can blame their mostly tepid coverage of Biden’s acuity on a well-hidden White House conspiracy. Meanwhile, those who did sound some semblance of alarm, Tapper and Thompson included, can take a self-satisfied victory lap. Needless to say, Biden and his loyalists take a different view. With help from former deputy press secretary Chris Meagher, the Biden team has launched a woefully misguided campaign to win back the narrative by denying Biden’s mental decline. This began with a soft BBC interview and continued with a humiliating appearance on The View that only bolstered the co-authors’ thesis and, presumably, their book sales. In response to the New Yorker excerpt, the Biden team shifted its defense to a focus on performance: “No one has been able to point out where Joe Biden had to make a presidential decision or make a presidential address where he was unable to do his job because of mental decline.” (I have not yet read Original Sin, though I have reason to believe the book may provide such evidence.)
A MESSAGE FROM OUR SPONSOR
RANGE ROVER
RANGE ROVER

TASTEMAKER’S CHOICE

The Range Rover is a serene, elegant expression of modern luxury.

EXPLORE

Biden, who served his party mostly admirably for 50 years and remains the only political candidate who has so far defeated Trump, undoubtedly looks at his fellow Democrats and feels a level of betrayal and injustice most mere mortals can’t even countenance. Nevertheless, his refusal to leave the bar when everyone is telling him to go home is difficult to watch.

The Tapper Beef

Why does Bidenworld continue to fight a battle it is so obviously poised to lose? Pride, of course, and perhaps the belief that one should never take a punch sitting down. For certain members of Biden’s family, however, there seems to be added indignity in the fact that the final chapter of the former president’s legacy is being co-written by Tapper, specifically. Indeed, there’s some notable history here. In February 2018, both Tapper and then-Vice President Biden and his son Hunter found themselves at U.S. Bank Stadium in Minneapolis for Super Bowl LII. Both Tapper and the Bidens are lifelong Philadelphia Eagles fans—the Eagles would beat the Patriots that day, 41 to 33—and both had been invited to a pregame party at the stadium with various Philly-adjacent notables, including Joel Embid, Danny DeVito, and Rob McElhenney and Kaitlin Olson. Upon entering the room, Tapper said hello to the former vice president, as well as former Rep. Kevin McCarthy, before going over to shake hands with Hunter. There are contrasting, almost Rashomon-like accounts of what happened next. But what is certain, according to three sources present in the room, is that Hunter put his arm around Tapper’s shoulders and told him that, if the two men were not in a public setting, “I would knock you out.” By most accounts, Hunter appeared to believe that Tapper had reported on allegations of his adultery and drug use, stemming from an acrimonious divorce with his ex-wife Kathleen Buhle the previous year. With hands raised, these sources said, Tapper sought to assure Hunter that he had done no such reporting—and, indeed, he hadn’t. Two sources in Bidenworld attribute Hunter’s anger that day to something else entirely: an alleged phone call between him and Tapper that took place around the time of his brother Beau Biden’s death three years previously, in which Tapper allegedly called repeatedly from an unknown number and then asked Hunter to notify him when Beau died. According to these sources, Hunter was so irate at Tapper that he told him to “fuck off,” and, according to one source, continued to express his anger to family members for a week following his brother’s death. Notably, neither source agreed to level this charge on the record. Tapper did go on the record, however, and called the insinuation “a patently false lie. At no point in my life have I ever called Hunter Biden—I’ve never even had his phone number—and I would never have contacted a person’s immediate family during such a challenging and personal time.” Presumably, if Hunter remembers that differently, he can say so on the record. In any event, Tapper did confirm the Super Bowl run-in: “Hunter did once confront me at a Super Bowl party, but it was over an unrelated issue—coverage he wrongly believed I had done regarding divorce allegations of drug use and using prostitutes, which I actually had never done.” I surmise this isn’t the last these two have seen of each other.
The Powers That Be
Join Emmy Award-winning journalist Peter Hamby, along with the team of expert journalists at Puck, as they let you in on the conversations insiders are having across the four corners of power in America: Wall Street, Washington, Silicon Valley, and Hollywood. Presented in partnership with Audacy, new episodes publish daily, Monday through 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
Netflix’s New Nightmare

Netflix’s New Nightmare

ERIQ GARDNER
A Democratic Red Alert

A Democratic Red Alert

PETER HAMBY
Zaz’s Sports Playbook
Inner Circle Exclusive

Zaz’s Sports Playbook

JULIA ALEXANDER
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 . 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 • May 15, 2025
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 • May 15, 2025
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 • May 15, 2025
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 • May 15, 2025
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 • May 15, 2025
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 • May 15, 2025
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 • May 15, 2025
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 • May 15, 2025
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 • May 15, 2025
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 • May 15, 2025
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 • May 15, 2025
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 • May 15, 2025
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 • May 15, 2025
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 • May 15, 2025
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 • May 15, 2025
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 • May 15, 2025
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 • May 15, 2025
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 • May 15, 2025
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 • May 15, 2025
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 • May 15, 2025
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 • May 15, 2025
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