The Option
CBS News has replaced the executive producer of 60 Minutes — the longest-running newsmagazine on television — installing Nick Bilton, an outsider with no prior network news executive experience, while pushing out Tanya Simon, correspondent Cecilia Vega, and executive editor Draggan Mihailovich (27 years with the show). The move is the most significant step yet in Skydance's post-acquisition restructuring of CBS News, and it lands on top of the departures of Anderson Cooper and Sharyn Alfonsi. For agents, talent, and executives tracking power at the Skydance-controlled networks, the correspondent bench is now actively open — and the editorial direction is being set by people chosen by Bari Weiss. Key Takeaways: * Tanya Simon is out as EP after less than one year; she succeeded Bill Owens, who resigned citing inability to maintain editorial independence from corporate influence. * Nick Bilton — NYT tech reporter, Vanity Fair contributor, documentary filmmaker — is only the 5th executive producer in 60 Minutes' 58-year history. * Correspondent departures now include Anderson Cooper (left earlier this month), Sharyn Alfonsi (dropped after clashing with Bari Weiss), Cecilia Vega (out per this announcement), and Draggan Mihailovich after 27 years. * Paramount settled Trump's $16 million lawsuit over a 60 Minutes edit of Kamala Harris; the FCC cleared the Skydance-Paramount deal weeks after the settlement — the editorial shakeup follows that chain directly. * CBS News ombudsman Kenneth Weinstein has a background leading a conservative think tank, not journalism. * Simon's final note cited a 9% ratings increase year-over-year; her exit is not a performance firing. * Skydance CEO David Ellison is now seeking federal approval for a proposed Warner Bros. Discovery acquisition — 60 Minutes' editorial posture is a live political variable in that process. The correspondent bench at 60 Minutes has been substantially cleared in a matter of weeks. For agents and managers, that is an active conversation to have with CBS News now — Bilton has signaled he is building a next-generation roster. For the wider industry, this is what post-acquisition editorial restructuring looks like in real time: institutional memory removed, ombudsman installed, outside EP hired with a digital expansion mandate. Watch for Bilton's first major story selections and whether any of the departing correspondents land at competing outlets. Subscribe to The Option for daily updates on the business behind the business.
66 episodios
Comentarios
0Sé la primera persona en comentar
¡Regístrate ahora y únete a la comunidad de The Option!