New ‘60
Minutes’ Chief Promises Independence in Bid to Reassure Staff
Nick
Bilton said he had consulted with the program’s remaining correspondents:
Lesley Stahl, Jon Wertheim and Bill Whitaker. All three were deliberating
whether to stay with the show, two people said.
Benjamin
MullinMichael M. Grynbaum
By
Benjamin Mullin and Michael M. Grynbaum
June 4,
2026
https://www.nytimes.com/2026/06/04/business/nick-bilton-60-minutes-memo.html?searchResultPosition=1
Nick
Bilton, the new executive producer of “60 Minutes,” moved to shore up support
of his demoralized staff on Thursday, writing in a memo that the program “will
never be instructed by the ownership” of CBS News on its reporting.
His
comments, delivered in an email to staff that was obtained by The New York
Times, came as questions swirled about the future of the program’s three
remaining correspondents, Lesley Stahl, Jon Wertheim and Bill Whitaker. All
three have been deliberating on whether to remain on the show in the wake of
the firing of their longtime colleague Scott Pelley, according to two people
familiar with the matter.
Ms.
Stahl, Mr. Wertheim and Mr. Whitaker did not immediately respond to requests
for comment.
Mr.
Bilton wrote in the memo that he had consulted with the remaining
correspondents in recent days, and that they were “core to this show’s
success.” Mr. Bilton dined with Ms. Stahl on Wednesday evening, according to
two people familiar with their plans.
Mr.
Bilton said Maria Gavrilovic, a longtime producer who had worked extensively
with Mr. Pelley, had been elevated to a senior role and would “be by my side.”
“60
Minutes,” the country’s top-rated news program, has been embroiled in crisis
since last week, when Bari Weiss, the CBS News editor in chief, fired the
show’s leadership team and two on-air correspondents and installed Mr. Bilton,
a tech journalist and filmmaker with no broadcast experience, as its new head.
The
overhaul fueled fears among some of the show’s journalists that CBS News would
be compromised by the influence of Ms. Weiss’s boss, the Hollywood mogul David
Ellison, who purchased CBS last year.
Mr.
Pelley and the other fired correspondents, Sharyn Alfonsi and Cecilia Vega,
said they had experienced editorial interference under Ms. Weiss’s reign. CBS
has denied those allegations, and Mr. Bilton wrote on Thursday that he would
“be guided solely and always by what makes the best piece for our viewers.”
Mr.
Bilton’s email struck a more conciliatory tone than his comments in an earlier,
more explosive encounter with his new staff. On Monday, he convened an
introductory meeting at the show’s offices and announced that technology was
rendering their program obsolete, warning that “broadcast is an ice cube that
is melting.”
In
response, Mr. Pelley tore into Mr. Bilton, saying he had “slender
qualifications” for the job and would “never be welcome.” Mr. Pelley also
accused Ms. Weiss of “murdering ’60 Minutes.’”
Mr.
Pelley’s lacerating comments were applauded at the meeting by the program’s
staff. But they infuriated Ms. Weiss and her leadership team, and Mr. Pelley
was fired on Tuesday evening. In a formal termination letter, Mr. Bilton told
Mr. Pelley that he had behaved “with remarkable incivility and contempt.”
The
ouster of Mr. Pelley deeply rattled the staff at “60 Minutes,” where he had
been a correspondent for decades. The mood in the news program’s offices has
been solemn, according to a person familiar with the matter.
On
Thursday, Mr. Bilton tried to move past that bitter period, assuring the staff
that “the foundation of ‘60 Minutes’ is its journalistic independence.”
He also
pledged not to drastically change the basic format and inner workings of the
show, an effort to assuage concerns from the staff that he might seek to
overhaul the program.
“Sunday
night works,” he wrote. “It’s the best hour of television journalism anywhere.”
He praised the famously rigorous “scheduled screenings,” the “detailed script
work” and the “long format of the pieces.”
The new
season of “60 Minutes,” the rare television news show that is both prestigious
and lucrative, is set to begin in September.
“It’s
been a hell of a first week,” Mr. Bilton wrote. “Let’s get to work.”
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.


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