Is CBS News chief Bari Weiss really going ahead with a significant shake-up at ’60 Minutes,’ the nation’s highest-rated television newsweekly whose viewership is up 9 percent this season despite the continued plunge in network news viewers across the broadcast and cable spectrum? Apparently so, according to this NYT update on the latest behind-the-scenes controversy at “60 Minutes.” … *
Fyi: One of Weiss’s reported “re-engineering” ideas is developing “60 Minutes-themed live events,” similar to The New Yorker Festival and apparently similar to what Weiss, in extra-thick syrupy language, announced on Tuesday at her Free Press publication: ‘The Free Press Community,’ complete with a The Free Press Forum, The Free Press Supper Club and The Free Press Retreats and Excursions. … Actually, the live-events idea sounds like something every other media outlet has been trying for years now, from TCM Classic Cruises to BBJ business events to the Globe’s “events and experiences” lineup. … In other words: it’s not exactly an original idea. If anything, it sounds a little banal. But it’s harmless enough, I suppose.
* Update — Talk about timing. From the NYT (a few hours after I posted above): “In a bid to remake the country’s top-rated news program, Bari Weiss, the editor in chief of CBS News, on Thursday unveiled an overhaul of ’60 Minutes,’ replacing the show’s executive producer with a tech journalist and firing two of its on-air correspondents.” …
To my knowledge, she hasn’t given a clear explanation about why she’s doing this. It’s all so strange. I’m somewhat baffled, though I’m pretty sure it involves dashes of ideology, know-it-all-ism and petty vindictiveness .
Update II – From the LA Times: “(F)rom a business standpoint, ’60 Minutes’ is a curious target for a revamp. The program is one of the most profitable hours on the CBS prime-time schedule while retaining its status as television’s most prestigious journalism operation. While the ratings for “60 Minutes” get a boost from a lead-in from high-rated NFL late-afternoon games, it remains one of the few network shows that viewers make an appointment to watch.”