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Bari Weiss, known for her stance against progressive ideologies, recently left the 60 Minutes team taken aback during a private meeting. As the editor-in-chief of CBS News, Weiss posed a challenging question that caught the journalists off guard: why do viewers perceive their reporting as biased?
The 41-year-old, who champions political neutrality as a core value for the network, directed this pointed inquiry at the team on Tuesday, according to a report by The New York Times. Her question, simple yet profound, was met with silence from the room, which includes some of the most prominent figures in American journalism.
Weiss’s inquiry reportedly created an awkward atmosphere, as noted by three anonymous sources familiar with the meeting.
The question was directed at a group of seasoned reporters, including Anderson Cooper, who also serves as a prominent anchor at CNN, and Lesley Stahl. These reporters pride themselves on their commitment to impartiality, insiders revealed.
Despite claims from former President Donald Trump and other conservative voices suggesting a leftist bias, the 60 Minutes team has consistently denied such allegations, defending their work as objective and balanced.
They have fiercely rejected the idea perpetuated by Donald Trump and other conservatives that their coverage is left-leaning.
Weiss has already caused a stir in her first two weeks filling the network’s top position, in which she vowed to provide news for the American ‘mainstream’ who have been ‘ill-served’ by the media.
Her background as a vocal opinion journalist with no previous broadcast experience has made her a controversial pick for editor-in-chief.

Anti-woke CBS News editor in chief Bari Weiss (pictured) left the 60 Minutes team stunned when she asked them to consider why viewers think their coverage is slanted

The 60 Minutes team, from left to right: Jon Wertheim, Bill Whitaker, Lesley Stahl, Scott Pelley, Cecilia Vega and Anderson Cooper
She co-founded The Free Press, which Paramount Skydance is acquiring, and formerly worked as a NY Times opinion editor, but left the role due to the company’s ‘illiberal environment’ in 2020.
While her official start date at CBS News was October 6, an insider previously told the Daily Mail she had been ‘informally consulting’ the company for ‘a while.’
Her hiring by new Paramount Skydance CEO David Ellison, the son of billionaire Trump ally Larry Ellison, made waves within the CBS newsroom after a tumultuous year.
In October last year, Donald Trump sued the network over a 60 Minutes interview with Kamala Harris that he claimed was deceptively edited.
Paramount ultimately agreed to pay Trump $16 million to settle the lawsuit.
That settlement paved the way for the administration’s approval of an $8billion merger between Skydance Media and Paramount in August.
CBS News – specifically 60 Minutes – was also heavily criticized for its coverage of the Israel-Gaza war.
Network veteran Stahl specifically came under fire over her treatment of a Hamas hostage, with conservatives accusing her of being sympathetic towards the terrorist group in a damning April interview.

Weiss’s background as a vocal opinion journalist with no previous broadcast experience has made her a controversial pick for the editor-in-chief role

While her official start date at CBS News was October 6, an insider previously told the Daily Mail she had been ‘informally consulting’ the company for ‘a while’ (pictured: The CBS News building in New York City)

Paramount Skydance CEO David Ellison is the son of billionaire Trump ally Larry Ellison
Stahl was slammed after she asked former hostage Keith Siegel if Hamas terrorists starved him on purpose or if they just did not have any food to hand out.
Seigel, who spent 484 days in captivity, replied: ‘No, I think they starved me, and they would often eat in front of me and not offer me food.’
Not long after, 60 Minutes executive producer Bill Owens and CBS News CEO Wendy McMahon both resigned over concerns with the company’s direction.
Despite his previous run-ins with CBS, Trump recently told CNN the network will be ‘fairer’ with Weiss and Ellison in charge. ‘CBS has great potential,’ he said.