‘60
Minutes’ Stars Will Stay Because They Don’t Want Show to ‘Die’
Lesley
Stahl, Bill Whitaker and Jon Wertheim said on Friday in an email to the show’s
staff that they had reached the decision after a period of “grieving” and
frustration.
By
Benjamin Mullin and Michael M. Grynbaum
June 5,
2026
Updated
1:47 p.m. ET
https://www.nytimes.com/2026/06/05/business/media/60-minutes-cbs-stahl-whitaker-wertheim.html
Lesley
Stahl and two other “60 Minutes” correspondents said on Friday that they would
remain in their posts, ending days of speculation about whether a roiling
crisis at the CBS News program would leave it entirely deprived of on-air
stars.
In a
joint email to the show’s staff, Ms. Stahl, Bill Whitaker and Jon Wertheim said
they would “stay and fight” in order to “repair and preserve” the reputation of
the country’s top-rated news program.
“Here’s
why we are staying: We don’t want to see ‘60 Minutes’ die,” they wrote.
But the
correspondents also expressed deep frustration with the decision by Bari Weiss,
the CBS News editor in chief, to fire Tanya Simon, the show’s executive
producer, and several longstanding producers and correspondents, calling those
exits “heartbreaking.” And they warned that if the program lost its editorial
independence, “we leave.”
Ms.
Weiss’s moves — including the appointment of Nick Bilton, a tech journalist and
filmmaker with no broadcast news experience, as the program’s new leader —
shocked the “60 Minutes” newsroom. In a meeting on Monday, the longtime
correspondent Scott Pelley assailed Mr. Bilton and accused Ms. Weiss of
“murdering” the show; he was fired the next day.
In the
days since, Mr. Bilton scrambled to persuade Ms. Stahl, Mr. Whitaker and Mr.
Wertheim to remain. At a dinner with Ms. Stahl, Mr. Bilton offered assurances
that he would preserve the show’s journalistic rigor; on Thursday, he emailed
the staff promising that “60 Minutes” would stay editorially independent from
its parent company, which is controlled by the tech scion David Ellison, who
appointed Ms. Weiss.
CBS News
did not immediately return a request for comment.
Ms.
Stahl, in an interview with The New York Times on Friday, said that she and her
fellow correspondents had reached their decision after a marathon of calls
across multiple continents. (Mr. Wertheim is in Paris, covering the French
Open.) The trio huddled on a video call across different time zones.
Ms. Stahl
said their decision to stay would be reversed if Mr. Bilton did not live up to
his promises. “We’re more or less taking his word for it,” she said. “But if
what he was talking about in his statement doesn’t work, we’re going to leave.”
For Ms.
Weiss and CBS management, the correspondents’ decision will come as some
relief. “60 Minutes” is set to begin its next season in September. The chaos
affecting the news division’s most popular show had led some journalists there
to worry that it might be difficult to prepare segments in time — particularly
if the three remaining correspondents quit. (CBS News has said it plans to hire
additional correspondents soon.)
Mr.
Bilton, however, will still need to rally his new staff. “We are working to
build trust with Nick,” the correspondents wrote.
But they
also lamented the abrupt firings of their colleagues, whom they said “were
treated so shabbily, with such indecency.” They added: “We feared that our
returning might be construed as an endorsement of the existing power structure.
That is simply, categorically not the case.”
In the
interview, Ms. Stahl said that she, Mr. Whitaker and Mr. Wertheim had agreed to
make a collective decision about whether to remain. She said she believed they
could best accomplish their goal of preserving the program if they decided as a
unit.
Benjamin
Mullin reports for The Times on the major companies behind news and
entertainment. Contact him securely on Signal at +1 530-961-3223 or at
benjamin.mullin@nytimes.com.
Michael
M. Grynbaum writes about the intersection of media, politics and culture. He
has been a media correspondent at The Times since 2016.


Sem comentários:
Enviar um comentário