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Related: About this forumWill Lesley Stahl, Bill Whitaker Exit '60 Minutes' After Scott Pelley's Firing? Everyone at CBS Wants to Know
The future of 60 Minutes could well hinge on two people with deep ties to CBS News past.
Many staffers and producers at the beleaguered newsmagazine are left wondering whether Lesley Stahl and Bill Whitaker, two CBS News veterans who have been with the news division now controlled by Paramount Skydance since 1971 and 1984, respectively, will stay with the show in the wake of a series of stunning ousters of its top ranks over the past week. Their decisions could play a big role in whether the program will be entirely hallowed out or have some ties to the elements that have brought viewers in for years.
The decision is an emotional one, says one person familiar with the business of CBS News: I think they feel like if they leave, theres nothing left of 60.
There is certainly less. On Tuesday night, Scott Pelley, one of the programs most recognizable correspondents, was ousted by Nick Bilton, installed last week as the shows new executive editor by Bari Weiss, the CBS News Editor in Chief who is intent on overhauling the series. Bilton was outraged that Pelley questioned his credentials at a Monday meeting of the shows staff, and angry that the correspondent would not take his calls or meet him in advance of that event. Bilton and Weiss felt Pelley had created an unsustainable working environment.
https://www.yahoo.com/entertainment/tv/articles/lesley-stahl-bill-whitaker-exit-145027528.html
dem4decades
(14,493 posts)lostincalifornia
(5,613 posts)60 minutes used to be.
BigmanPigman
(55,660 posts)I have left 3 different jobs in my lifetime for this reason. I did it when the boss was unfair to a fellow employee. I never had any regrets. My dad said he was disappointed that he raised me to "be a nice guy" since people walk all over me and I screw myself as a result. I still believe I stood by my principles and I'd do it again. Sometimes you have to make a stand.