There’s an under-reported Israel angle to the corporate effort to muzzle ’60 Minutes’
Billionaire heiress Shari Redstone has regularly tried
to interfere with news coverage of Israel's war on Gaza on one of America’s
leading TV networks.
By James North May 3, 2025
The corporate efforts to
muzzle “60 Minutes,” the prestigious American television news program, have
been publicly exposed by courageous members of its own staff. But mainstream
U.S. media reports have underplayed one significant factor: the intense pro-Israel
views of Shari Redstone, the billionaire heiress who is the controlling
shareholder of Paramount, the CBS TV network’s parent company. Her views have
mostly gone unreported, even though she is one of the most powerful media
moguls in America, and someone who has already sharply criticized her own
network’s coverage of Israel’s war on Gaza.
Here’s what’s happened: on
April 22, the executive director of ’60 Minutes,’ Bill Owens, resigned,
charging interference. Then, at the end of the program’s normal Sunday evening
broadcast, one of its on-air reporters, Scott Pelley, dared to stand up for Owens.
As the New
York Times said, “. . . Mr. Pelley presented Mr. Owens’s decision
to resign as an effort to protect ’60 Minutes’ from further interference.”
Pelley pointed out rightly
that the parent company, Paramount, has a big merger pending, and that “The
Trump administration must approve it.” So far, the majority of the mainstream
coverage is emphasizing the merger angle; the (strong) suggestion is that
Paramount is trying to tone down criticism of Trump so Shari Redstone can get
the necessary Federal Communications Commission blessing to sell it to another
billionaire.
Reporting the merger angle
about the proposed sale is certainly not wrong. But it downplays another
significant factor. Redstone is passionately pro-Israel, and there is evidence
that she has regularly interfered in her network’s coverage. Back in January,
she apparently complained to CBS executives about a ’60 Minutes’ segment on
Israel and Gaza. In response, CBS appointed a special watchdog to pre-review
program reports — an unusual, possibly unprecedented step that smells like
additional pressure.
Redstone’s pro-Israel passions
are no secret. To pick just one example, you could turn to a New York
Post report last
October, which cited her anger with a couple of other CBS news programs,
including “Face the Nation,” the network’s Sunday morning show. The Post said:
“She was particularly upset with a ‘Face the Nation’ broadcast last spring in
which the show was critical of Israel after seven aid workers were killed
during a strike in Gaza. . .”
This raises some important
questions:
- CBS News, although no longer the
distinguished exemplar that it was in the days of Walter Cronkite and Dan
Rather, is still a powerful presence on the America media landscape. ’60
Minutes’ is the most highly-rated news program on television, has 8.5 million
viewers, and will celebrate its 57th anniversary later this year. (By
contrast, 2-3 million regularly watch Fox News programming.)
- Shari Redstone is still the dominant
shareholder in the parent company, (at least until she does get permission
to sell it).
- Redstone is strongly and publicly
pro-Israel, and has tried to shape the network’s coverage. Put yourself in
the position of, say, the producers of the CBS Evening News. Are we
supposed to believe that they are going to ignore her as they plan their
daily programming?
So the question remains: Why
aren’t Shari Redstone’s views — and her efforts to influence CBS’s news
coverage — known more widely?
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