FCC boss Brendan Carr went after journalist Scott Pelley for claiming in his recent New York Times profile that it โhadnโt occurredโ to him that he would be fired from โ60 Minutes.โ
โOne of the reasons why trust in media is so low is because many legacy journalists are completely out of touch,โ Carr wrote on X Sunday morning. โYou could not get away with that behavior at any run of the mill job. It is revealing to see how blind some are to that.โ
By โthat behavior,โ Carr means Pelleyโs recent and very public distaste for the new regime at CBS News and โ60 Minutes.โ It was reported that on May 25, Pelley lashed out at the showโs new executive producer, Nick Bilton, telling the former NYT tech columnist that he had โslender qualificationsโ for his job. Bilton was recruited to โ60 Minutesโ by CBS News editor-in-chief Bari Weiss, whom Pelley accused of โmurderingโ the show through her leadership during the same meeting.
On June 2, Bilton released a letter claiming that CBS News and Pelley failed to reconcile, and that Pelley was fired from โ60 Minutes.โ
โYour antipathy to the future of the show has come through loud and clear,โ Bilton wrote. โAnd I have heard you. I therefore write on behalf of CBS News to inform you that your employment with CBS is terminated effective immediately.โ
Elsewhere in his NYT interview, Pelley suggested that Paramount-Skydance, the parent company of CBS News, needs to remove Weiss as editor-in-chief. Pelley alleged that โtelevision is not her thing,โ and that โ60 Minutesโ is in desperate need of โadult supervision.โ
โWe have people whoโve been installed in these jobs who through no fault of their own have no experience in television. They donโt know what theyโre doing,โ Pelley told the Timesโ Lulu Garcia-Navarro. โAnd thereโs a subtle political bias that Iโve never seen at โ60 Minutesโ before, or at CBS News before. So that is my hope: a return to sanity.โ