 Subscribers to this newsletter (and its many rivals) may have noticed an increase in the sheer volume of media reporting. There are more stories to tell and more new names to know, as the hierarchical structures of media have toppled. And nowhere is that truer right now than in linear television. Viewership is declining — dramatically in many parts of cable, and steadily in broadcast news. Paramount is betting that at CBS News, television broadcasting experience is basically unnecessary for many of the top jobs, as the company places greater value on multiplatform content. Speaking with me after the network dismissed a good segment of 60 Minutes leadership, new 60 Minutes chief Nick Bilton had a warning for legacy media: “If you look historically to what happens to these institutions, why they fail — it’s because they don’t innovate and they don’t disrupt themselves.” Yes, but: For now, a few television programs have remained stubbornly relevant. Speaking with us on Mixed Signals last week, Fox News anchor Bret Baier, whose Special Report program has actually seen growing ratings, talked about the incoming he still gets from the country’s leaders. He speaks with President Donald Trump up to a few times a week — when his show has irked the president somehow, or when he wants a read on Trump’s thinking about an issue. When Sen. Mitch McConnell was still the top Senate Republican, he used to block out an hour of his day to watch Baier’s show. And Baier’s fans aren’t all Republicans; he told us he occasionally texts with California Gov. Gavin Newsom, who the Fox News anchor said is a flawed but “formidable” 2028 contender. There’s a reason CBS’ Bari Weiss tried to hire Baier, and why — for all the discussion of the end of television — the networks are still duking it out for top talent and the eyeballs of aging Americans, many of whom happen to be America’s leaders. Also today: turnover and turmoil at New York Public Radio, the latest on Paramount-WBD, and which streamer Americans turn to for fun. |