“60 MINUTES” REVEALS WHAT THIN SKIN COVERS
Among other things, the travesty that has been unfolding at CBS’s storied and incomparable 60 Minutes, has led me to conclude this: “The thinner the skin, the more emaciated the intellect and character of the one wearing it.”
Nick Bilton, the new head of 60 fired Scott Pelley because he thought the broadcast’s most respected correspondent, had treated him “with remarkable incivility and contempt.”
That poses the question: “And your point being…”
Confrontation is part of the DNA of 60 Minutes, and not just when it comes to interviews and story choices.
A long time, multi-award-winning producer said 60 founder Don Hewitt “…deliberately prompted a fiercely competitive atmosphere that often created shouting matches between producers, correspondents and executives, all in the interest of attaining the best possible story telling and journalism.”
The clashes between Hewitt and the late, great Mike Wallace are legendary.
All of which goes a long way to proving Pelley’s point to Bilton: “You’ll never be welcome here.”
And if that’s what hurt Bilton’s feelings enough to fire Pelley (who was, if you think about it, actually doing Bilton a favour in pointing out what should have been obvious to him in the first place), I’d love to have been in the room had he ever come up against the late and incomparable Andy Rooney, 60 Minutes’ resident professional curmudgeon.
Rooney refused to recognise even the most sacred cows, and took delight in taking on any and all who crossed his lines.I had the somewhat nerve-wracking privilege of being seated next to him at a table at an awards ceremony, along with several CBS News senior management honchos, and the then Evening News Executive Producer Al Ortiz.
In a gentlemanly way of including me in the conversation, Al asked me what I thought was wrong with the way the Evening New was being done.
I was doing my best to state my case and still be polite, when Rooney leaned forward and said, as near as I can recall: “Goddammit, at least there are two of us here who know how news ought to be done.”
As he laid into the subject, not allowing anyone else to get a word in edgewise, Ortiz leaned over and said quietly in my ear: “I’ll get you for this, Pizzey.”
I knew he wouldn’t. Fighting your corner, stating your case and even stepping over the line sometimes to do it, wasn’t a cardinal sin at CBS back then.
On different occasions, in a state of over-emotional anger about what I thought were unjustified and unfair decisions, I said “F*** you” to a President and a Vice-President of CBS News.
Neither of them threatened to fire me, or even demanded an apology. The subject was never mentioned again,
I can only assume it was because they thought it was justified, from my point of view. Or maybe theirs. Or both.
Bari Weiss fired Sharyn Alfonsi for the “insult” of criticizing — without so much as a hint of profanity — one of her decisions, and didn’t even bother to otherwise justify her actions.
But then, that seems to be part of Weiss’s DNA.
In spite of being in charge and having made the decisions that prompted Scott Pelley to speak truth to pomposity, according to reports from a meeting to try to resolve things, she replied to Pelley’s questions as to why she had fired his colleagues and 60 Executive Producer Tanya Simon, with a weasel word version of the Fifth Amendment: “I’m not answering that question”, and didn’t have the decency, or maybe courage, to add “on the grounds that it may incriminate me.”
LIKE WORSHIPPER LIKE IDOL
Considering that Weiss owes her position to efforts by the new owners of CBS to ingratiate themselves with President Donald Trump, her thin-skinnedness (a fair description, even if not an actual word) should come as no surprise.
He, after all, personifies the malady, as evidenced by his own treatment of journalists he sees as having slighted him by not being sufficiently obsequious, or, as he would see it, loyal.
Journalists travelling on Air Force One, women in particular, are often insulted by Trump in ways that would get anyone in the private sector fired on the spot.
An increasingly popular admonition on forums like Facebook is that the insultees should respond in kind.
One recent example suggested the retort to his pernicious ”You’re a terrible reporter”, ought to be an instant “You’re a terrible president,”
Retorting to childish slurs is neither the job of reporters, nor wise.As the quote widely attributed to the humourist and sage Mark Twain advises: “Never argue with a fool, onlookers may not be able to tell the difference.”
Telling thin-skinned putative bosses what they need to know is another matter altogether, especially it if reveals what they really are.
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4 thoughts on ““60 MINUTES” REVEALS WHAT THIN SKIN COVERS”
I’m not usually drawn to sporting analogies but this really comes across as an own goal. No better way to elevate someone’s point of view than to fire him for it?
They are clueless…and evil
Because they are insecure and have no understanding of real journalism.For starters.
A great column Allen! Worthy of sharing. I admire Scott. I talked with him about Cronkite and radio the day I retired from CBS. He wished me well on my way out the door. And Al Ortiz, Peggy Noonan and writer Will Wright had our 30th birthday party together in my garden apartment in 1980. I tell that story in my upcoming Substack episode on June 19th 🙂