COULDN’T HELP MYSELF, BELIEVE IT OR NOT
Re-immersing in news after a week off for travel, I stumbled into a story that could have come straight from “Ripley’s Believe It or Not!”, the now more than 100 year-old cartoon that specialises in things so strange, readers doubt their veracity. Hence this open letter to the new CBS News Editor-in-Chief.
Dear Bari Weiss: As a concept, never mind a genuine need, spending a reported $10,000 a day on as many as eight bodyguards and a small convoy of armoured SUVS, to keep you safe in the streets and office suites of New York is deplorable, pathetic and laughable in equal measure.
It certainly fits a Ripley’s cartoon, especially considering you tried to inspire your new staff to do the job they’ve been doing with courage and distinction for decades, by signing off a pep talk with: “Let’s get out there and do fucking news”.
Do you have any inkling of what the people you will be responsible for sending into conflict zones and civil strife actually face?
Would it help you get a feel for it if I sent you the body armour and Kevlar helmet I stored in the basement when I retired?
Sorry. Silly questions.
The answer to both is obviously no, and hence you have even less of an idea how you will be viewed, and the loyalty your regime will not in any way command among them.
If you want to inspire and earn the respect of CBS staffers, you’d be far better citing the news philosophy of legendary Manchester Guardian editor C.P. Scott: “One of the virtues, perhaps almost the chief virtue, of a newspaper is its independence. Whatever its position or character, at least it should have a soul of its own.”
But then, you left a prime columnist job at the New York Times because, allegedly, the paper discouraged your “bold” and “challenging” writing, and failed to address “bullying by colleagues who disagree with my views.”
I would have thought the “damsel in distress” trope was beneath you, Ms Weiss.
Which also raises the question: why should those to whom you are now management, believe you’ll stand up for them, or the journalistic principles you claim to espouse, against a U.S. president who has made a career out of bullying anyone and everyone he sees as a vulnerable enemy?
Or when one of your reporters asks a legitimate question and is threatened, insulted, denigrated or stonewalled by him, a member of his cabinet or a Press spokesperson?
If you won’t back your staff in the face of them, or economic pressure, why should your employees believe or have any faith you’ll pull out all the stops the way the old CBS did when anyone was under threat, wounded, injured or killed?
Again, silly me.
The new CBS owners have already set the precedent for that.
THE COST IN CURRENCY YOU UNDERSTAND
At a rough guess, your security bill will be the annual equivalent of the salaries of as many as 40 of the one hundred or so people who actually get the news on the air, but have been fired since you were hired.
In a memo (no personal touch necessary, of course), David Ellison, the billionaire who hired you and made them “redundant” characterised doing so as “phasing out roles that are no longer aligned with our evolving priorities.”
What’s the bet whatever they evolve into will turn out to be worthy of a Ripley’s cartoon?
Ellison pro forma characterised the bloodletting as “a difficult process” and flavoured it with “these decisions are never made lightly.”
That, I feel safe in saying, fits the “or not” category.
Firing people is no more stressful for your new boss and his ilk than discarding a suit or shirt that no longer fits.
President Donald Trump called you “a great new leader”, which is odd, considering he also said: “I don’t know her.”
But for sure, it indicates Trump expects you to try to turn the once-upon-a-time Tiffany network into what might best be described as CBSFOX.
AN ALTERNATIVE
Instead, I unhumbly suggest you strive to emulate 2021 Nobel Peace prize winner, Maria Ressa. As founder of the Philippines-based online news site Rappler, she exposed what the Nobel committee characterised as “the abuse of power, use of violence and increasing authoritarianism of the regime of (Philippines) President Rodrigo Duterte.”
What Ms Ressa did not do was surround herself with bodyguards. She simply stood fast and relied on journalistic integrity for protection and guidance.
Do anything other than that, Ms Weiss, and your epitaph, and that of whatever is left of CBS News when you are done with each other, will be the last lines of “The Hollow Men”, T.S. Eliot’s reflection on hopelessness and social decline:
“This is the way the world ends
Not with a bang but a whimper.”
Yours sincerely, etc…
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2 thoughts on “COULDN’T HELP MYSELF, BELIEVE IT OR NOT”
allen…like you i spent decades at CBS News…
i always enjoyed and revered the combativeness
of the division and more than anything else the
fearless leadership that guided us in the reporting ranks…
but now you “don’t have to be a weatherman to
know which way the wind blows”…
the forecast is unchanging…
the news division of CBS “will be aligned on a
shared vision”…Bari weiss(overseer)
“news that is balanced and fact based…david ellison(owner)…
ms. weiss-whose shared vision?
mr. ellison-remember when “alternative facts”
were among your favorites?
my connection to the institution that we knew
and respected is gone…
the few colleagues still employed(a daily diminishing number)with whom i remain in touch
are battening down but fear the ship has sailed
onto fatal shoals…there is no optimism for the
polishing of what was, in our decades, the jewel
of the tiffany network…the division is costume
jewelry…
sorry to carry on allen, i think there are few on this week’s perch who lament as we do…
Sadly…spot on mate