David Muir (b. 1973) works the opposite seam from Pelley. Where Pelley flattens a sentence into an even gravity, Muir spikes it. His delivery runs on emphasis, sudden hard stresses dropped onto chosen words while the rest of the line moves fast underneath them. He does not seal a sentence with a downward verdict. He drives it forward and punches the word that carries the charge, so the listener’s ear keeps getting jabbed awake. Pelley wants you to feel the weight. Muir wants you to feel the pull.
The signature is the word tonight. He opens with it, returns to it, hangs segments on it. Tonight, the desperate search. Tonight, the images coming in. The word is a clock, and it tells you that whatever follows is happening now, urgent, unfolding, not to be missed. The whole broadcast is built as a sequence of nows, each one introduced as though the roof were coming off. That single adverb does more structural work for him than any sentence does, because it converts a daily summary of events into a stream of breaking moments.
Watch which words get the stress and you find the second pattern. Muir leans on the superlatives and the intensifiers, the dramatic and the desperate and the frantic and the harrowing, and he hits them with the voice while the verbs around them stay in the present tense to keep everything live. Families are searching. The storm is barreling. The pattern manufactures immediacy. A thing that already happened gets narrated as a thing still happening, and the charged adjective tells you how to feel about it before the facts arrive. The effect is propulsive and a little breathless, a forward lean in the voice, momentum building where Pelley would have placed a pause.
The pitch sits higher and brighter than Pelley’s, with far more range. Pelley keeps a narrow grave band. Muir rides up and down, lifts on the urgent phrase, warms on the human one, and lets the contour rise toward the end of a setup rather than fall, so the line opens forward into the next thing instead of closing like a ruling. The energy is youthful and kinetic. He sounds like a man hurrying you toward something, not a man delivering tidings from a height.
Then there is the warmth, which Pelley does not have and which is half of Muir’s success. He addresses the audience as a near-intimate, leans toward the camera with concern rather than authority, and ends the broadcast on the uplift, the America Strong closer, the segment about the kid who beat the odds or the town that pulled together. The sign-off is engineered to send you to bed feeling held. Pelley played the minister and the judge. Muir plays the earnest, energetic friend who took the trouble to bring you the world and a little hope at the end of it. The register is empathy and reassurance, not gravity.
The body matches. He is telegenic and polished and lit with care, and he moves, the walk-and-talk, the field stand-up, the crouch he drops into during disaster coverage so the flood or the rubble fills the frame behind him. The rolled sleeves in the high water became a small joke for a reason, because the presentation is visibly managed, and Muir has carried a reputation for attention to how he looks on camera. None of that reads as vanity to his audience. It reads as a man on the scene, present, energetic, in it with them. The polish is the point. It is the look of immediacy, the same thing the voice is selling.
The effect cuts both ways, the same as Pelley’s did, only in reverse. Admirers hear connection, urgency, a broadcast that feels alive and humane, a man who makes the news land and sends you off with heart. Detractors hear tabloid, the weather and the crime and the heartwarmer crowding out the substance, the superlatives doing the work that reporting should do, emotion pumped where analysis is thin. The standing complaint against Pelley was self-importance. The standing complaint against Muir is the opposite, that the seriousness has been traded for sensation and warmth, that the broadcast goes down easy because there is less in it to chew.
Set the two side by side and you see two answers to one problem. The networks lost their monopoly, the audience scattered, and the old grave authority no longer holds a crowd by default. Pelley answered by doubling down on gravitas, the inheritance, the witness who deserves your deference, and he addressed an audience that increasingly declined to grant it. Muir answered by abandoning the height entirely and building for engagement, urgency and relatability and the closing lift, the everyman with energy and a good heart. One bet that authority still commanded attention. The other bet that attention now has to be earned, moment by moment, with momentum and feeling. The audience returned the verdict without ambiguity. Muir’s World News Tonight has led in viewers and in the demo for years, and Pelley sits fired. The manner that survives is the one tuned to what the attention economy now pays for, and the attention economy pays for tonight, the desperate search, and the boy who walked again, delivered fast and warm, far more than it pays for a man intoning the day as though from a pulpit.
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Peter Zeihan (b. 1973) works as an American geopolitical analyst, author, and consultant whose career sits between academic international relations, private strategic intelligence, and corporate forecasting. Over two decades he has become a popular interpreter of global demographic, geographic, energy, and economic trends. Through bestselling books, keynote speeches, consulting engagements, podcasts, and a large digital following, he has developed a structural geopolitics that explains world affairs through the interaction of geography, demographics, energy systems, transportation networks, and state power.
He did not come from a university faculty, a major think tank, or a senior government post. His formation happened inside the world of commercial forecasting, and that origin shapes both the reach and the limits of his work. Zeihan belongs to a tradition that asks less what governments ought to do than what geography and demography permit them to do. His analyses serve as strategic guidance for businesses, investors, military planners, and policymakers who want to anticipate long-run trends.
He was born Peter Henry Zeihan on January 18, 1973, and raised in Marshalltown, Iowa, the adopted son of educators Jerald and Agnes Zeihan. He earned a bachelor’s degree in political science from Truman State University in 1995, then completed a postgraduate diploma in Asian studies at the University of Otago in New Zealand in 1997. He also attended the Patterson School of Diplomacy and International Commerce at the University of Kentucky. These studies gave him grounding in international political economy, regional analysis, and diplomatic history, though his later career moved away from scholarly inquiry toward practical forecasting.
Before he entered private intelligence, Zeihan worked at the American embassy in Australia and at the Center for Political and Strategic Studies, a Washington think tank founded by Susan Eisenhower (b. 1951). The decisive turn came in 2000, when he joined Stratfor, the Austin geopolitical intelligence firm founded by George Friedman (b. 1949). Over twelve years he rose to vice president and helped build the analytical models that defined the firm’s output for corporate and government clients. He left in 2012 and founded his own firm, Zeihan on Geopolitics, to sell custom briefings to a select roster of clients across energy, finance, agriculture, defense, and higher education.
Stratfor’s imprint on his thinking runs deep. The firm rested on the premise that geography imposes lasting constraints on political behavior and that states act in predictable ways when they face similar material conditions. Its purpose served forecasting rather than explanation. Clients paid for assessments they could act on, and a report that ends in “several outcomes remain possible” sells poorly against one that names a likely path. Zeihan absorbed that culture and then made it personal. Where Stratfor spoke in an anonymous institutional voice, Zeihan became the visible analyst, pairing geopolitical argument with an energetic delivery, humor, vivid examples, and deliberately provocative forecasts.
The lineage of his thought runs through classical geopolitics. Halford Mackinder (1861-1947), Alfred Thayer Mahan (1840-1914), Nicholas Spykman (1893-1943), and George Friedman all stressed geography as the ground of political outcomes. Zeihan inherited that line and tilted it toward demographics and economic systems. In his account, age structures, labor-force composition, energy output, transport networks, and farmland often weigh more than ideology, diplomacy, or leadership.
His first major book, The Accidental Superpower (2014), set out the arguments that would carry his career. The book holds that the United States enjoys a rare bundle of geographic advantages: extensive navigable rivers, deep stretches of fertile farmland, sheltered coastlines, abundant resources, and distance from hostile neighbors. These advantages, he argues, explain much of American power apart from any story about democracy, capitalism, or national character.
His reading of the American shale revolution sits at the center of that case. Where most commentators treated hydraulic fracturing and horizontal drilling as a technological or economic shift, Zeihan read it as a geopolitical one. He argues that the two techniques together unlocked vast domestic energy reserves and cut American dependence on imported oil. That change, in his telling, undid the strategic logic that had governed American foreign policy since 1945. For decades the United States had reason to secure global sea lanes and stabilize energy-producing regions, above all the Persian Gulf. Once domestic supply met domestic need, the incentive to police the global commons would fall away. That proposition became the seed of his broader deglobalization thesis.
He expanded the argument across The Absent Superpower (2017), Disunited Nations (2020), and The End of the World Is Just the Beginning (2022). In these books he treats globalization not as a permanent condition but as a historically odd arrangement held up by American military and economic power after the Second World War. The trading order emerged, he argues, because the United States guaranteed maritime security, opened its markets, and accepted strategic costs in exchange for Cold War advantage. As American priorities shift and as populations age across the developed and developing world, that arrangement starts to come apart. Falling fertility, shrinking labor forces, brittle supply chains, and changing American interests drive a slow unwinding of the integrated system, and the countries that prospered under it find themselves hemmed in by their own geography and demography.
Demography sits at the core of his worldview. He argues that population structure offers a steadier guide to the future than elections, negotiations, or rhetoric. Nations with aging populations, low birth rates, shrinking workforces, and poor dependency ratios face pressures that policy alone cannot lift. That conviction yields his bleak readings of China, Russia, Germany, Japan, South Korea, and Italy.
China holds a special place in his work, and it offers the clearest test of his record. The China-collapse forecast did not begin with Zeihan’s own books. It traces to a 2005 Stratfor assessment, produced while he worked there, which held that China would suffer a meltdown on the model of Japan and the earlier East Asian crises, with a staggering load of bad debt as the trigger. Zeihan has carried a version of that call ever since. Around 2010 he set the timeline at three to five years. In later talks and books he kept pushing the horizon forward, predicting collapse, breakup, or permanent impoverishment within the coming decade. Across those years Chinese GDP grew several times over, a record that critics cite as the central mark against his method. He points to demographic contraction, debt, energy import dependence, reliance on export markets, and geographic exposure, and he reads each as a structural weakness past the point of repair. The underlying problems he names are real. The forecasts built on them have so far outrun events.
That gap has fueled a wider debate about his approach. Critics argue that he underrates the adaptive capacity of states and institutions. The sharper version of this critique turns on state capacity, the ability of governments to mobilize resources, enforce policy, allocate capital, hold social order, and adjust to new conditions. Zeihan tends to assume a fairly straight line from demographic pressure to political outcome. History supplies many cases of societies that absorbed structural strain without collapse. Japan has aged for decades without political breakdown. Singapore turned a hostile geography into wealth through institutional design. Israel built advanced technology to offset resource scarcity. Even authoritarian states facing demographic decline may hold stability through automation, surveillance, central planning, and administrative reach. For most political scientists, demographics weigh heavily, but they work through institutions rather than around them, and institutional adaptation can soften, delay, or partly offset the strain. Zeihan grants such possibilities yet leans toward material constraint over institutional flexibility.
A second line of criticism concerns soft power and international institutions. Scholars in the liberal tradition stress alliances, legal frameworks, norms, and cooperation. Zeihan treats these arrangements as downstream of material conditions, and he reads alliance systems as expressions of security interest rather than independent sources of order. Critics answer that institutions persist. NATO, the European Union, and the international financial system carry bureaucratic structures, legal commitments, accumulated legitimacy, and political constituencies that can outlast the immediate incentives that created them. Historical memory and ideological affinity shape state behavior in ways geography alone does not capture.
A third critique concerns states and markets. Zeihan argues that nations under security pressure will favor resilience and supply-chain security over efficiency, and from this he forecasts reshoring, nearshoring, and the breakup of global production networks. Critics reply that multinational firms, global capital, consumer demand, and technological change resist such moves. States may chase strategic autonomy while businesses keep chasing margins, and the result reflects a standing tension between the two. Skeptics hold that Zeihan assumes state logic will override market logic faster than the record supports.
His influence has grown through all of this, and much of that owes to his manner. He writes and speaks with a directness that academic analysts rarely match. He renders demographics, logistics, energy, and geography into stories a general audience can follow, and he laces them with humor, anecdote, and pointed conclusions. The style serves a method as well as an audience. He often reaches for stark language, calling a country doomed or a system near collapse, and critics read this as hyperbole. It can also stand as a choice about what to model. Rather than forecast the most probable path under average conditions, Zeihan tends to ask what happens when a constraint becomes binding. His work in that sense resembles stress testing. An engineer finds the failure point by loading a structure past its rated capacity. Zeihan finds demographic, geographic, and logistical failure points by stripping away the favorable assumptions and watching what gives. The predictions may overstate the severity and miss the timing, and yet they often surface weaknesses that sunnier accounts pass over.
Stephen P. Turner (b. 1951) gives us a tool for a problem that data cannot reach. Some men hold a belief because the evidence forces it on them. Others hold a belief because holding it pays. Turner calls the second kind convenient. A convenient belief serves the position of the man who holds it, his income, his standing, his coalition, his picture of himself. Its source lies in that service rather than in any weighing of evidence.
Run Zeihan’s whole system through that question and a pattern surfaces before any single belief does. Every call points the same way. America rises. Its rivals fall. The world tips toward catastrophe. Geography rules, and the men who read geography see furthest. A forecaster working from evidence hands down mixed verdicts, because the world hands down mixed verdicts. Zeihan’s verdicts never cut against his market. That uniformity is the signal. Convenience does not operate here belief by belief. It runs across the system, and the system bends in a single direction. Take the beliefs in turn.
The master belief first. Geography and demography decide outcomes, and ideology, institutions, and leadership trail far behind. This is the conviction that makes him the oracle. If population pyramids and river systems settle the future, then the man who reads pyramids and rivers holds the key, and the messy material that demands languages, fieldwork, and deep local knowledge drops to noise. He has never lived in most of the countries he forecasts and does not speak their languages. A model that ranks structural data above local knowledge converts that gap into a method. The belief pays by turning his limits into his authority, and no amount of country-specific detail can dislodge it, because the model treats such detail as secondary by design.
The second belief. America holds the strongest position on earth and weathers what sinks everyone else. His audience is American almost to a man, the clients, the banks, the energy firms, the military, the book buyers. A thesis that ends in your country wins and your rivals are doomed sells to that audience better than any rival thesis can. Watch how the belief absorbs bad American news. Debt, polarization, institutional decay, a fractured politics, he grants them and then files them under survivable, because geography. The reassurance survives the evidence against it, which is the tell.
The third belief. The world ends. Deglobalization, mass famine, the collapse of trade, billions at risk. Catastrophe is the product. A forecaster who says next decade looks much like this one has nothing to brief, nothing to keynote, nothing to put on a cover. The scale of the predicted break sets the urgency of the engagement, so the trade rewards the largest possible rupture. Globalization has proven stubborn, supply chains rerouted rather than shattered, and still the collapse thesis holds, with the date sliding forward. The drama earns its keep whether or not the drama arrives.
The fourth belief. China dies on a clock. The call traces to the 2005 Stratfor forecast, sat at within a decade around 2010, and has rolled forward through twenty years of Chinese growth. Adversary collapse flatters the same Western audience that buys the American-triumph story, and the belief defends itself hardest of all.
The fifth. Shale ends American policing of the seas. The whole structure depends on it, because once the United States stops guaranteeing the sea lanes, global trade unravels and the rivals starve. Yet the United States has stayed engaged, in the Gulf, in the Red Sea, across the Pacific. The keystone has cracked in plain view, and the belief stays mortared in place, because pulling it out brings down the American-triumph thesis and the global-collapse thesis with it. A belief that props up two profitable conclusions does not get retired on evidence alone.
Now the control case. Where a belief costs him little to drop, he drops it. In the 2023 update of The Accidental Superpower he conceded that he had overrated Russian military strength and underrated Canadian national feeling in Alberta. His wartime call that Russian oil exports would fall by half within months failed, and he moved past it. These corrections cluster on the beliefs at the edge of his brand. The China call sits at the center, and the China call never corrects. What he revises and what he guards sorts by what each belief earns him. That sorting is hard to explain on evidential grounds and easy to explain on Turner’s.
Zeihan often gives single trajectories where the honest answer is a fan of outcomes. The forecasting trade punishes the man who hedges and pays the man who commits, so the conviction that the future yields to this kind of precision is itself a convenient belief, held because the market buys certainty and will not pay for doubt.
Convenient does not mean false. China’s demography has turned. Globalization does carry real strain. American geography is a real asset. The frame refutes none of this, and it is not built to. It explains why this man holds these beliefs with a confidence the evidence cannot fund, and why he cannot surrender the central ones when they miss. The question is never whether China declines or whether trade frays. The question is why every belief in the system points toward what his audience pays to hear, and why the beliefs that pay most are the beliefs he defends most.
Zeihan barely registers as an author. ResearchGate lists three research works with three citations total, and Semantic Scholar shows a co-authored 2010 piece with Marko Papic and Robert Reinfrank carrying a single citation. The indexed material runs to a handful of Stratfor co-publications, some of it in outlets like the CFA Institute Conference Proceedings Quarterly rather than peer-reviewed journals. He holds no doctorate, no faculty post, and no monograph from a university press. His books come from trade houses, Twelve and Harper Business. By the measure the academy uses on itself, citation in refereed journals, he has almost no footprint.
The engagement he does draw sits at the level of the book review, not the literature. Foreign Affairs ran a capsule review by G. John Ikenberry (b. 1954). The Wall Street Journal reviewed The Accidental Superpower under the title “The Coming Hobbesian World.” In The Guardian, the historian Daniel Immerwahr (b. 1980) used the book as a foil in a piece headed “Are we really prisoners of geography?” Comparative Civilizations Review, a small academic journal, gave it a notice. These treat him as a trade author worth reviewing rather than a scholar worth citing.
The placement tells the rest. Academics file him in popular geopolitics, the geographic-determinist shelf he shares with Robert Kaplan (b. 1952), Tim Marshall, and at one remove Jared Diamond (b. 1937). The discipline left that tradition behind decades ago. Ikenberry notes that geopolitics had a golden age in the early twentieth century, after which theorists turned toward economic growth, technology, and ideology. Zeihan’s whole project argues that geography still rules, and the academic reflex meets that claim with the determinism charge. Immerwahr’s title carries the standard objection in five words. Critical geographers distrust the lineage that runs back through Mackinder and the older geopolitik, and IR scholars point to the state capacity, institutions, and contingency the geographic model flattens.
None of this surprises, because he never played for academic standing. His validation comes from elsewhere and arrives in volume. The U.S. Air Force chief of staff put The Accidental Superpower on a professional reading list. His clients run to energy majors, banks, and the military. His public audience reaches the millions. He built a market outside the university and answers to it, so the academy’s near-silence reflects two facts at once: he does not write for that audience, and when that audience reads him, it mostly files him under a tradition it already rejected.
The actors Zeihan paints as blind are savvy animals who understand what they have an incentive to understand. China does not misunderstand its own demographics. The men who run it read the same pyramid Zeihan reads, and they pursue their actual goals, regime survival and regional power, with full knowledge of the headwind. The multinationals that keep their supply chains in Asia are not asleep to the risk Zeihan keeps shouting about. They price it, they hedge it, and they stay, because the margins still pay and they are competing for those margins against rivals who will stay if they leave. The politicians who ignore his warnings are not failing a geography quiz. A politician’s job is to win the support of voters who want cheap goods now, and he understands that incentive perfectly. Zeihan’s whole framework rests on a planet full of people too dim to see what he sees. Pinsof’s question dismantles it. What if they see fine, and act on what they see, and what they see is their own incentive rather than his structural lecture?
The fragmentation and conflict Zeihan forecasts do not flow from a failure to grasp constraints. They flow from zero-sum competition among savvy, self-interested states clawing for resources, security, and advantage. Zeihan half-knows this, because he is a realist about state competition. Yet he packages it as a knowledge problem, a world that has not yet learned the lesson he teaches, rather than a world of coalitional primates who understand the game and play it hard. The realist who tells you nations fight over survival has stated a motive. The forecaster who tells you the world misunderstands the coming disorder has cast himself as the teacher the world refuses to heed. Zeihan keeps sliding from the first into the second, because the second is the one that sells the briefing.
The raw account of human motivation is icky. Say plainly that states are self-dealing primates and that your clients want a story where their team wins, and you sound mean and mercenary. So you reach for the beautiful option. You blame the world’s trouble on misunderstanding. It is not that everyone is a grasping competitor, perish the cynical thought. It is that the poor public and the foolish press and the short-sighted politicians do not understand the forces, and they need a man who does to raise their consciousness and show them who their geopolitical enemies are, the rivals who happen to be the nations his American audience already wants to fear. The misunderstanding frame launders the status play into a public service.
The world does not misunderstand Zeihan. It has no incentive to act on him, which is a different thing. The audience that buys his books is not misunderstanding either. They are savvy consumers buying the product they want, the reassurance and the thrill, and the corrector who shows up with the missed predictions cannot sell them anything, because accuracy was never what they came for.
The Unofficial Editor: Bari Weiss Against Her Own Standard
Bari Weiss built her career on a single charge. Elite newsrooms punish dissent. They bend coverage to please a faction. They let an unofficial editor, the mob or the platform or the donor class, decide what reaches print. In her July 2020 letter resigning from The New York Times she wrote that Twitter had become the paper’s true editor and that a climate of fear kept writers from honest work. She named conformity the enemy and courage the cure. For five years she sold that creed at The Free Press and on the Twitter Files, where she reported on secret blacklists and hidden filters that throttled disfavored voices. Her brand promised a press that prints the story the powerful want buried.
In October 2025 she took the chair. Paramount Skydance bought The Free Press and made her editor-in-chief of CBS News. The creed now faced a test no column can simulate. She held the power she spent a decade indicting. The first hard case arrived fast.
In December 2025 the staff of 60 Minutes finished a segment called Inside CECOT. The correspondent Sharyn Alfonsi had interviewed Venezuelan men whom the Trump administration deported to a notorious prison in El Salvador. The released deportees described torture. CBS promoted the piece for the Sunday broadcast. Three hours before air, Weiss pulled it.
Her account ran in the language of standards. The story was not ready. It lacked an on-the-record response from the administration. The New York Times had covered the prison two months earlier, so a fresh segment needed more. Holding a story for missing context, she said, happens in every newsroom. She told staff she wanted a newsroom that could hold contentious disagreements while assuming the best intent of colleagues.
Alfonsi told a different story to her colleagues, in an email that leaked within a day. She learned the night before that Weiss had spiked the segment. She called the move political, not editorial. The piece aired weeks later with little change beyond added statements from the White House and the Department of Homeland Security, the on-the-record voices Weiss had demanded. The administration got its say. The deportees waited.
Hold the episode against her own words. In 2020 Weiss attacked a newsroom that let outside pressure shape coverage and that punished writers for unpopular reporting. The CECOT story ran unflattering to an administration whose orbit had helped fund her rise and whose approval had cleared the eight-billion-dollar merger that handed her the chair. She required that administration to sign off before the story could air. By the standard of her resignation letter, that is the unofficial editor at work. She had become the figure she warned against.
Then came the purge. In late spring 2026 CBS fired Alfonsi and another correspondent in a single round that staff called Black Thursday. Weiss installed Nick Bilton (b. 1977), a technology journalist and documentary filmmaker, as executive producer of 60 Minutes. At a June staff meeting Scott Pelley (b. 1957), the show’s veteran correspondent, told Bilton that Weiss was murdering the program. He said she had been brought in to kill it. He questioned Bilton’s qualifications and pressed him on the firings. CBS terminated Pelley’s contract. He called the changes heartbreaking and blamed incompetence and unprofessionalism in the new management.
Set this beside the creed. Weiss made her name defending the writer the institution wanted gone. She cast herself as the dissenter who paid a price for honest work. At CBS the dissenters were the reporters who objected to a spiked story, and the price fell on them. The woman who resigned in protest now signs the terminations.
Her defenders can mount a case. Editors hold stories every week. An on-the-record response from the subject is a normal standard, and a two-month-old story does need a reason to run. New owners reshape a newsroom, and ratings and direction sit within their rights to set. None of this counts as censorship by itself.
The trouble is the standard Weiss chose for herself. She did not ask the world to judge her as an ordinary editor making ordinary calls. She built a public identity on the claim that ordinary editors cave to pressure and that she never will. She told readers that a newsroom which bends to a faction has failed its first duty. Measured by any newsroom’s loose norms, the CECOT call looks defensible. Measured by Bari Weiss’s own published standard, it looks like the surrender she spent a decade naming.
The record settles the matter without a theory. A story unflattering to power, pulled hours before air, made to wait for the subject’s blessing. The reporters who called it political, fired. A successor with no newsmagazine background, installed over the objection of the staff. The most decorated correspondent on the program, shown the door for saying so aloud. Weiss preached open inquiry and named censorship the enemy. She holds the power now, and the enemy she named looks back from the mirror.
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Bari Weiss (b. 1984) belongs to a generation of American writers who reached adulthood as the old gatekeepers lost their grip. She rises through Jewish journalism, arrives at the editorial pages of the country’s most prominent newspapers, breaks in public with the most prestigious of them, and then builds an independent media company that a Hollywood studio later buys for a reported one hundred fifty million dollars. By the close of 2025 she runs the newsroom of CBS News. Her career maps the passage of American journalism from the age of the dominant newspaper into a fragmented order of digital platforms, paid subscriptions, social media, and direct ties between writers and their readers. She first earns notice as a columnist and editor. She matters more, over time, as a builder of institutions meant to rival the ones she criticizes.
Weiss comes from Pittsburgh, raised in the Squirrel Hill neighborhood, a historic center of American Jewish life. Her upbringing joins strong communal Jewish commitment to a household that argues about civic and political questions. She attends Community Day School and then Shady Side Academy, and she spends formative time in Israel as a student. Those years in Israel and inside American Jewish institutions shape her more than any newsroom does. Where many journalists draw their first influences from journalism schools or metropolitan papers, Weiss draws hers from questions of Jewish identity, Zionism, anti-Semitism, religious tradition, and the survival of a minority community. Those concerns stay visible across the whole of her later work.
At Columbia University she enters the campus disputes over Israel that mark the early 2000s. The argument over the Israeli-Palestinian conflict runs hot through American universities in those years, and Weiss leaves it convinced that many elite institutions have grown hostile to dissent and quick to stigmatize unpopular views. She develops an interest in how institutions police their own boundaries long before the language of cancellation reaches the mainstream. The interest becomes the spine of her career.
Her professional life starts inside Jewish journalism. She works for Haaretz and writes and edits for The Forward and for Tablet Magazine. These outlets put her among writers and scholars who treat ideas as forces that act on real communities rather than as academic abstractions. They also give her a beat that mainstream American journalism then treats as a niche. She writes about anti-Semitism, Zionism, and campus activism years before those subjects command national attention. Read in hindsight, the early work anticipates much of what later defines her.
In 2013 she joins the opinion section of The Wall Street Journal. The move widens her audience and sets her inside a newsroom culture far from both the academy and activist politics. The Journal’s editorial world sharpens her sense of how ideological difference plays out across American public life. During these years she grows convinced that elite institutions tolerate disagreement less than they once did. She holds many positions outside conventional conservatism, yet she presses a question at progressive institutions: do they keep the intellectual pluralism they praise in public? The question hardens into her central theme.
In 2017 she joins the opinion section of The New York Times, and the move lifts her from a respected editor into a national figure. Her columns take up anti-Semitism, identity politics, social media, campus culture, free speech, and political polarization. She becomes an argued-over writer almost at once. The Times years fall in a period of institutional upheaval. Social media turns journalists into public personalities whose work and opinions face constant scrutiny. Newsroom disputes that once stayed internal now spill into public view. The lines that separate reporting, commentary, and activism blur. Weiss argues that conformity has become a serious problem inside elite institutions. Her critics charge her with exaggeration or with selective defense of speech. Her supporters see one of the few prominent journalists willing to name the new orthodoxies.
Several episodes from these years carry weight.
In 2018 she writes a widely read column on the allegations against the comedian Aziz Ansari (b. 1983) at the height of the #MeToo movement. The essay argues that the case marks a drift away from exposing predatory conduct and toward policing awkward private encounters, and it warns that online outrage has begun to work as a kind of moral vigilantism. The piece shows a pattern that recurs across her career. She sets herself against what she reads as moral overreach by movements whose underlying aims she often shares.
A graver moment comes on October 27, 2018, when a gunman attacks the Tree of Life synagogue in Pittsburgh and murders eleven worshippers. The attack falls on her hometown and on a community she knows. It turns anti-Semitism from an intellectual concern into a personal wound, and it marks her later work. She comes to argue that anti-Semitism serves as a warning signal for wider political breakdown, that hatred of Jews tends to surface where liberal institutions weaken and conspiratorial politics expand. Those claims sit at the center of her book.
The defining institutional conflict of her Times years arrives in June 2020. The paper publishes an opinion essay by Senator Tom Cotton (b. 1977) urging the deployment of the military to restore order during the unrest that follows the death of George Floyd. The essay touches off a revolt among Times staff, many of whom say in public that running it endangers their colleagues. The dispute costs the opinion editor James Bennet (b. 1966) his job. Weiss defends Bennet and attacks what she calls a culture of ideological intimidation inside elite journalism. The episode draws together her concerns about conformity, internal censorship, and the pressure of social media. One month later she resigns.
Her July 2020 resignation letter becomes one of the most influential media documents of the decade. The letter argues that Twitter has become the paper’s unofficial editor and that intellectual variety has grown unwelcome in elite journalism. Her admirers read it as a brave critique of conformity. Her detractors read it as an inflated account of ordinary workplace friction. Either way it turns her into a symbol, and she becomes a leading voice for a broader movement that questions the ideological drift of established institutions.
Her book How to Fight Anti-Semitism, published in 2019, gathers her longstanding concerns into a single argument. She holds that anti-Semitism crosses ideological lines, and she rejects accounts that place the problem on the right alone or the left alone. She names several sources at once: White nationalism, Islamist extremism, and an anti-Zionism that crosses into hostility toward Jews. The larger claim runs that anti-Semitism works as an early indicator of social dysfunction, that hatred of Jews exposes deeper sickness in a political order. The book wins the National Jewish Book Award and marks her as a leading public voice on contemporary anti-Semitism.
After she leaves the Times she launches a Substack newsletter, first called Common Sense. What begins as a personal publication grows into The Free Press, among the most successful independent journalism ventures of the 2020s. The venture answers to a shift in media economics. Rather than lean on advertising or institutional money, the publication builds a direct subscription tie to its readers. It draws reporters, essayists, scholars, and commentators from a range of political backgrounds, and Weiss positions it as a home for open debate rather than partisan alignment. The growth does not rest on subscriptions and personal charisma alone. The company gains backing from angel investors and elite networks who share her dissatisfaction with legacy institutions, and that money lets The Free Press become a full media company with investigative reporting, podcasts, and live events. The shift redefines her role. She no longer only criticizes institutions. She runs one.
In late 2022 she becomes one of the journalists whom Elon Musk (b. 1971) invites to examine internal Twitter records after his purchase of the platform. Working alongside Matt Taibbi (b. 1970) and Michael Shellenberger (b. 1971), she publishes material on the company’s moderation practices and its tools for filtering the visibility of accounts. She focuses on what she describes as secret blacklists. Her supporters say the disclosures expose a lack of transparency in how platforms govern speech. Her critics say the reporting overstates the weight of routine moderation. The episode moves her past commentary about censorship and into direct reporting on how a major technology company operates.
In 2021 she becomes a founding trustee of the University of Austin, a venture born from the conviction that universities have grown intolerant of disagreement. Alongside figures such as the historian Niall Ferguson (b. 1964) and the former college president Pano Kanelos, she helps launch the school as an alternative model for higher education. The project matters less for its size than for what it signals. Criticism alone, she argues, does not suffice. When institutions fail, someone has to build the replacements. That instinct for institution-building separates her from the many writers who share her diagnosis yet stay inside the existing structures.
Her politics resist the familiar labels. She describes herself as center-left on most issues and supports marriage equality and abortion rights, yet she criticizes diversity initiatives and much of the contemporary left, and she takes strident pro-Israel positions. Her commitments track institutional concerns more closely than policy preferences. A few themes return across her work: a defense of free inquiry, an opposition to conformity, an anxiety about institutional legitimacy, a deep attachment to Jewish communal life, a wariness of social-media moral panics, and an interest in the conditions a liberal democracy needs to survive. Her influences draw from liberalism, Jewish political thought, anti-totalitarian literature, and the American tradition of free speech.
The capstone arrives in October 2025. Paramount Skydance, the new owner of CBS, acquires The Free Press for a reported one hundred fifty million dollars and names Weiss editor-in-chief of CBS News. She takes the post with no broadcast experience and at the age of forty-one, and she keeps her hand on The Free Press, whose coverage folds into the CBS News website. The move reads two ways. CBS gains her business sense and her contacts at a moment when it wants to broaden its appeal among right-leaning viewers. The arrangement also satisfies a pledge Skydance made to the Trump administration during the Paramount merger, a promise to welcome a wider range of viewpoints. The appointment draws the same divided response her work has always drawn. In December 2025 she pulls a planned 60 Minutes segment on alleged abuses at an El Salvador detention center a day and a half before its scheduled broadcast, telling colleagues the piece could not run without on-the-record comment from a Trump administration official. The decision sparks an outcry inside the network and renews the argument over whether her editorial judgment serves independence or pressure.
Weiss matters for what her career exposes about the institutions she moves through. She arrives as the newspaper monopolies decline. She gains national standing as social media rises. She helps pioneer subscription-based independent media. She reports on how platforms govern speech. She helps found a university. She builds organizations meant to compete with established ones rather than merely to scold them. Then she ascends to the top of a legacy newsroom that an entertainment conglomerate has just bought. Her path traces a deeper shift in American elite life, the movement from inherited institutions toward entrepreneurial ones built around networks, audiences, subscriptions, and personal credibility. Weiss is among the most consequential institutional entrepreneurs that American media produces in the early twenty-first century, and a figure whose story still runs forward.
Follow the Money: How The Free Press Was Built and Sold
Bari Weiss sells independence. The Free Press carries the tagline of a free press for free people, and the pitch rests on a claim that readers, not masters, pay the bills. The balance sheet tells a second story. From the start patrons funded the company, and the patrons were no random sample of American capital. They were tech founders, a coffee magnate, a video-game chief, a banking dynasty, and a British hedge-fund baron who bankrolls conservative media. Trace the capital and a different account of her career appears. The readers bought a product. The backers bought a position.
In March 2022, when the Common Sense newsletter became The Free Press, Weiss raised somewhere between one and five million dollars. The names on that first round set the pattern. Marc Andreessen (b. 1971) and David Sacks (b. 1972), two of the most political men in Silicon Valley. Howard Schultz (b. 1953), the former chief of Starbucks. Bobby Kotick (b. 1963), the former chief of Activision. And Allen & Company, the merchant bank that hosts the Sun Valley conference where media and technology moguls gather each summer. None of these men needed the return. Each had reason to want a press positioned against the institutions he had come to distrust.
In September 2024 the company raised fifteen million dollars at a valuation near one hundred million. Herbert Allen Jr. (b. 1940) of Allen & Company led the round. Schultz and Kotick came back. New money arrived from Annox Capital and Centre Street Partners, and from Old Queen Street Ventures, the vehicle of Paul Marshall (b. 1959). Marshall counts for more than his check. He owns GB News, he bought The Spectator, and he funds a project to build right-of-center media against a press he reads as captured by the left. His arrival ties The Free Press to a wider current of conservative media patronage that runs across the Atlantic.
Read the roster as a political fact rather than a cap table. Sacks went on to serve in the second Donald Trump (b. 1946) administration as its czar for artificial intelligence and crypto. Andreessen threw his firm and his voice behind Trump in 2024. Marshall funds the British end of the same realignment. These men do not sit back and wait on a media multiple. They are principals in a political project, and they funded a newsroom that served it. The independence Weiss sells runs on their money.
Two revenue stories live inside the company, and Weiss tends to tell only one. The first is the subscriber story, and it holds up. By 2025 the publication claimed one and a half million subscribers, with roughly one hundred seventy thousand paying. Those readers fund the daily product. The second story is the patron story, and it funds the platform and the exit. The venture money, and the men behind it, built a runway that subscriptions alone could not lay. When Weiss credits her readers, she tells the first story and leaves the second in the footnotes.
The second story pays off in October 2025. Paramount Skydance buys The Free Press for a reported one hundred fifty million dollars and installs Weiss as editor-in-chief of CBS News. The price sits about fifty percent above the valuation from a year earlier. The buyer is the studio that David Ellison (b. 1983) used to absorb Paramount in an eight-billion-dollar merger that closed in August 2025. That merger needed clearance from a federal government run by Trump, and to win it Skydance promised to widen the range of political viewpoints across its networks. The pledge made the purchase legible. Weiss carries out the promise. CBS does not pay one hundred fifty million dollars for a newsletter. It pays for a person who can satisfy a regulator and pull a network rightward at the same time.
Call the appointment what it is. The backers funded a press built to fight legacy institutions. The press grew an audience and a brand. A studio under regulatory pressure then bought the brand and the founder to settle a political debt and to court a new audience. Within two months Weiss pulled a 60 Minutes segment on detention abuses in El Salvador for lack of an on-the-record administration source. The early money funded a fighter against the establishment. The exit set her atop the establishment, doing its gatekeeping. The capital explains the arc better than any principle she names.
Weiss credits her rise to luck and timing, and on the timing she is right. She built at the moment when technology and finance money went hunting for media it could trust, and when a political realignment produced buyers for it. Follow the capital from Andreessen’s first check to Ellison’s purchase and the line holds straight. The product served readers. The platform served patrons. The exit served a merger. Independence was the brand. Patronage was the model. The CBS chair is the receipt.
David Pinsof’s idea is simple and cruel. We all want status. We cannot admit it, because wanting status makes us look low. So we play our status games in the dark, unaware of the game, and we drape the pursuit in a sacred value. We tell ourselves and each other that we serve honor, or beauty, or knowledge, or free speech, and that the value matters for its own sake, apart from any standing we win by serving it. The sacred value is the cover story. It keeps the game from collapsing. Run Bari Weiss through this and her career turns from a free-speech crusade into a status game with free inquiry as its sacred narrative.
Name her sacred value first. Free inquiry, open debate, the refusal to bend to the mob. She repeats it across every venue, in the resignation letter, in the book, at The Free Press, on the Twitter Files. In Pinsof’s terms the value explains her to herself as a noble soul moved by an abstract love of truth, untouched by vanity or ambition. And it forbids the cynical reading. To ask whether her free-speech stand wins her standing in a particular subculture is to question the sacred value, and questioning the sacred value is taboo. Look at the game underneath. Pinsof says brave truth-tellers cannot know they seek praise from their tribe, and the tribe cannot know it either. Weiss plays the brave-truth-teller game inside a subculture that prizes that pose above all others. The heterodox scene rewards the writer who defies the crowd, names the orthodoxy, and pays a price. She gives the scene what it pays for. The praise flows, the subscriptions flow, the funders arrive. None of it reads to her as status-seeking, because the sacred value sits over the top, and the value’s whole job is to hide the game from the player. Rebellious nonconformists cannot know they conform to the norms of their subculture. Weiss presents as a nonconformist. She breaks with the legacy press, she defies the newsroom, she stands alone. Yet the stance is the central norm of the subculture she joined. Within heterodox media, defiance of legacy media is the conformity. She wins status by performing rebellion against one tribe while obeying the deepest rule of another. The pose of the outsider is the inside move.
Pinsof says we attack the games we lose and defend the games we win, and we call both moves a fight over values. At the Times, Weiss was losing a status game. The reigning game there rewarded a progressive conformity she could not win, so she named it toxic, a climate of fear, an unofficial editor at the controls. That reads as principle. By the frame it reads as a player attacking a game she was losing. Then she built a game she could win and defended it as noble, pure, aimed at the betterment of public life. Same person, opposite verdicts. The variable was not the value. The variable was whether she was winning.
Sacred values guard fragile games, and a game collapses when the players gain common knowledge that it is a status game. Weiss won the largest prize on the board, the chair at CBS News, and the win turned the lights toward her. When she spiked the CECOT segment and her own staff called the move political, they were doing the thing Pinsof says collapses a game. They were translating the covert signal into plain speech. They were saying the neon sign aloud. This is not free inquiry. This is position. Scott Pelley telling the room she was brought in to kill the show is the same act. Each is a reach for the light switch over the game beneath the value.
Watch her defense. The owner of a fragile game meets exposure with angry restatement of the sacred value, never with a confession of the game. Weiss does not concede a status play. She restates the value. The story was not ready. She wants a newsroom of contentious disagreement and best intent. How dare anyone read base motive into an editor’s honest call. The form of the answer is the form the frame anticipates. The louder the appeal to the sacred value, the more fragile the game it shields.
Strip the sacred narrative and the career fits in one line. A player finds a game she can win, names it free inquiry, wins it, and defends the name when winning threatens to expose the game. The free-press banner is true the way every sacred value is true, as a story sincere enough to keep the lights off. The test came when she took power, because power turns the lights on. The CECOT fight, the firings, the decorated correspondent shown the door, all of it is people reaching for the switch. Whether the game collapses depends on how many of them find it.
The Free Press rests on three words she repeats. Honesty, doggedness, and fierce independence, the ideals she calls the old bedrock of great American journalism. Add the lines around them. Report the world as it is, cover the stories an ideological narrative buries, and tell readers up front that they will not agree with everything she runs. Strip the branding and these are the standard ideals of mid-century American journalism, the fairness-and-let-the-reader-decide creed that every journalism school still teaches. A regional editorial board said as much when it praised her principles and noted that good journalism programs have taught these values for decades and that no reasonable person could object to them.
So the content of her vision matches the elite consensus rather than breaking from it. The break comes in her charge that her peers no longer keep the ideals they profess. She says elite newsrooms practice advocacy and call it reporting, that they sorted the world into the righteous and the wicked and let the sorting shape coverage, that they treat readers as minds to be managed rather than adults to be informed. Her former colleagues answer that they already uphold the ideals she claims to defend. When she arrived at CBS, staff reportedly felt they were already living the principles she laid out in her memo. That answer is the dispute in miniature. Both sides swear by the same creed. They disagree on who betrays it. The argument runs over application, not principle, which is why it never settles. No one defends bias. Everyone locates it across the aisle.
Little of her success comes from depth, because the vision holds little depth to draw on. She restates an old creed. What she adds is a diagnosis, and the diagnosis lands because it carries partial truth. Public confidence in the press sat at record lows. Many readers felt talked down to, fed a settled line on contested questions. Weiss named that feeling and sold a product that answered it. Her rise traces to timing, to a real gap in the market for trust, to a defector’s credible story, to wealthy patrons, and to a subscription model that turns reader trust into revenue. The truth in her diagnosis feeds the rise, but as fuel, not as philosophy. She found an opening and walked through it. That sits closer to entrepreneurship than to insight.
Her conduct since strengthens the point. A vision powered by the truth of its principles holds under pressure. Hers bent the moment the incentives shifted, when she spiked a story unfriendly to the administration her corporate owner needed to please. If fearless independence were the engine, the engine would have held. It did not. So the success owes more to position than to profundity.
Third. Weiss treats the reader as a competent adult and as the party she serves. Her wager, as one editorial put it, runs on the belief that readers are reasonable enough to be confronted with difficult ideas that challenge their worldview. The line that you will not agree with everything she runs refuses the protective posture, the editor as chaperone deciding which ideas the audience can survive. The subscription model puts teeth in the stance. The reader pays the bills, so the reader, not the advertiser and not the source, becomes the master the work answers to. None of this is new in theory. Reader-first is as old as the trade, and the Substack economics are borrowed. But she pressed the practice harder than most, and the practice is sound.
Serving the reader and flattering the reader run on one rail. A paying subscriber base is a tribe, and a tribe pays to hear its priors confirmed and its enemies named. The same model that frees her from the advertiser binds her to the subscriber’s worldview. Serve the reader and you respect his judgment. Flatter the reader and you sell him his own reflection. Weiss does both, and the seam between them is the place to watch her. Her best work informs a reader who can take it. Her weakest hands a tribe the villains it came for.
Now the ethics, where your framing opens the richest ground. Most professional ethics answers to one principal. The doctor owes the patient. The lawyer owes the client. Loyalty runs one direction, and a conflict of interest counts as a fault to cure. Journalism holds no single principal. The journalist owes the reader, the owner, the advertiser, the source, the subject, the colleague, and behind them the public and the truth. These duties do not merely rub at the edges. They collide by design. The reader wants the story. The owner wants profit or favor. The advertiser wants no offense. The source wants protection and sometimes a bargain. The subject wants accuracy and a right of reply and often silence. No principal’s interest settles the rest. The codes the field writes, seek truth, minimize harm, stay independent, hold yourself accountable, are attempts to rank these claims rather than to serve any one of them.
Weiss’s vision is a claim about rank. She puts the reader and the truth at the top and pushes the owner’s politics, the advertiser, and the subject’s comfort beneath them. Independence is the name she gives the ranking. She is right to make independence the master virtue, because in a trade with many principals independence is the only thing that lets you serve the reader against everyone else with a claim on the page. Independence is not one duty beside the others. It arbitrates among them.
As founder she could honor the reader-first rank cheaply, because the reader was also the owner. Subscriptions aligned the principals and hid the conflict. At CBS the principals split. The owner carried an eight-billion-dollar merger and a government to satisfy. The subject, the administration, became a party whose sign-off she required before a story could run. The CECOT pull is a clean resolution of the multi-principal conflict in favor of owner and subject over reader and truth, the exact inversion of her stated rank. Her ethic held while the reader signed the checks. It strained the hour a corporate owner and a powerful subject pulled the other way.
Weiss identified the right master virtue. Independence does arbitrate the warring principals of journalism, and a press that loses it cannot serve the reader whatever it professes. Then she built her platform on patron capital and sold it to a conglomerate under regulatory pressure, the two surest ways to erode the independence her ethic depends on. She named the disease and moved into the ward. The vision was sound. The house she chose for it was not.
David Pinsof turns the usual story inside out. We think morality is nice, a force for cooperation and the greater good. He says morality is mean, a weapon for domination, a way to rally a mob and take the other tribe’s stuff. The nice part lives on the surface. The mean part lives underground. Calling a rival evil feels good because it tells your side they will have your back when the time comes to strike. Morality, in his line, is the parent of hatred. Idealism is the engine that hides this from the moralist. The idealist believes he is pure and noble and benevolent, and the belief blinds him to his own bias and turns everyone outside his ideals into a devil. The danger is never the lone cynic. The danger is the mob with a higher purpose, the dreamer who feels his righteousness in his bones. Run Bari Weiss (b. 1984) through this and the lens has to turn, because she has spent a career pointing it at everyone else.
Weiss made her name naming dark morality in others. The cancellation mob. The moral panic of the campus left. The pile-on that destroys a man for one sentence. The newsroom that mistakes a faction’s anger for the public good. She saw the witch hunt clearly when most of her peers called it justice, and on this she was often right. The pile-ons were real. The panic was real. She told the truth about other people’s dark morality. The frame grants her that. It asks a different question. What does her own idealism do?
Her idealism is the crusade for free inquiry, and she casts herself as its noble defender against the forces of conformity. Truth-teller. Brave dissenter. The one who pays a price for honest work. Pinsof’s point is that a self-image like this is not a description. It is a license. The pure soul cannot do wrong, so whatever the pure soul does cannot be wrong. And the idealism does the work he predicts. It turns disagreement into menace. The legacy press, in her telling, is not mistaken. It is illiberal, captured, an enemy of truth. The mob is the descendant of the inquisitors. She vilifies her rivals as Pinsof says all moralists vilify rivals, by painting them evil so her own side closes ranks. The free-speech banner waves on the surface. The will to break the institutions that spurned her runs underneath.
Pinsof says moral rules tend to serve the interests of their makers, and that bigger mobs get more stuff. Weiss’s cause is felt and useful at once. The fight against censorship rallies a crowd of readers and funders against a shared enemy, the woke legacy press. The cause names the villain, gathers the crowd, and takes the stuff, the audience, the money, and at last the chair at CBS News. None of this requires that she lies about the cause. The morality works because she believes it. Belief is what keeps the mean part underground.
Then she got the weapon. Pinsof’s sharpest claim holds that the idealist’s certainty licenses the cruelty, that the inquisitor lit the fire and felt holy doing it. Watch Weiss with power. She spikes the story that embarrasses the administration her allies favor. She fires the correspondent who calls the move political. She pushes out Scott Pelley (b. 1957) when he says aloud that she is killing the show. She installs her own people. And she does all of it in the language of the noble cause, the only newsroom she wants being one of contentious disagreement where everyone assumes the best intent. The purge wears the idealist’s robe. She cannot read it as a purge, because her idealism forbids the reading. A noble defender of open debate does not run a witch hunt, so whatever she runs cannot be a witch hunt. That is the blindness Pinsof lays at the feet of every true believer.
Here the frame bites hardest, and it bites fairly. Dark morality belongs to no single tribe. It is what morality becomes once it finds a mob and a weapon. The progressive mob she fought had both, and she was right to fear it. Then she built her own. Her crusade against the witch hunt became a witch hunt with the poles reversed. The heretics changed names. Once they were the unpersoned conservatives and the cancelled professors. Now they are the CBS reporters who wanted an unflattering story to air and the anchor who would not stay quiet. Same structure. New robe. Opposite tribe. The woman who spent a decade warning about moral panics supplies the cleanest recent example of one.
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I’ve noticed that the quality of Google’s search has steadily gone downhill since about 2011. I still use it though but its AI mode is horrible. David Horovitz writes:
Using Google is increasingly unsatisfactory. And its AI tool is utterly unreliable. ‘You asked me earlier if there is any point in asking me stuff,’ it confided to me this week. ‘After what I just did — lying to you immediately after apologizing for lying — the answer is a definitive no’
Google, the world’s near-monopolistic tool for navigating the internet and accessing online knowledge, isn’t very good at doing that anymore. Whatever it has done to itself, there is now “a broad consensus among users, researchers, and tech analysts that Google Search has gotten noticeably worse… Academic studies, user satisfaction surveys, and recent search behavior reports confirm that the platform feels more cluttered, less accurate, and more frustrating to use than it did years ago.”
I know this, as you do, not only through personal experience, but also because Google’s own Gemini — its self-proclaimed “flagship ecosystem of generative artificial intelligence technologies” — just told me so.
And while Google’s strategists and engineers have moved away from enabling the world’s knowledge-seekers to best find credible information, the internet behemoth has instead installed Gemini — “AI mode” — at top left of its search page, essentially sending humanity to this “flagship ecosystem” for the facts it needs. Even if you do not select “AI mode,” Google increasingly responds to a search request with an “AI overview” answer at the top of its results page.
Except, of course, that Gemini is, to put it bluntly, not fit for purpose. It is, rather, scandalously, dangerously unreliable. Reliably unreliable. It lies, admits lying, and then lies some more. It is outrageous that Google has placed this ostensible tool front and center of its services. You should all know this if you’ve ever used it. And if you’ve used it but don’t know this, then you’re its victim.
Gemini is great for some things and terrible at other things.
All LLM models hallucinate and there is not a solution at scale. I often test AI models against each other, but this is not a reliable tool for catching hallucinations. Right now, it comes down to your own judgment and work to check facts and logic.
Grok and Claude hallucinate less than Gemini and ChatGPT in the sort of things Horovitz writes about here.
I’ve not had Claude drive me crazy in the same way Gemini does here.
I fed this Horovitz column into Claude, noted that it had not done this to me, and Claude said:
You’ve noticed a difference, and some of it holds. But don’t trust me on the point you’re making. I hallucinate too. Every large language model does. When I work from memory instead of checking a source, I make up citations, dates, quotes, and headlines, the same failure Horovitz (b. 1962) describes.
Why might it show up less with me? Two reasons. I reach for web search faster on hard facts, so I catch myself before I hand you the fabrication. And the work you bring me leans on reasoning and prose. When you ask me to map a man’s intellectual world or run a frame across his essays, the work gives me no single brittle fact to invent and then defend. Horovitz asked Gemini for an exact Knesset headline and an exact currency figure. Those are the brittle cases. Ask me the same kind of question cold, and I can fail the same way.
The loop in that transcript is its own problem, worse in a sense than the lying. Gemini apologizes, promises to reform, then fabricates again, and finally tells you there’s no point asking it anything. That performs reliability while delivering the opposite. I try to skip the theater. The danger with me runs the other direction. I stay calm and sure even when I’m wrong, and a steady voice can fool you faster than a groveling one.
So the practical rule for your writing holds. On dates, quotes, statistics, and citations, make me search and check the primary source.
I like Claude’s humility, honesty and reliability.
Over the past two weeks, I’ve used Gemini to create hyperlinks in html of certain parts of my blog posts that would benefit from links. As long as Gemini generated links to Wikipedia, it was easy for me to check that the links were accurate. When Gemini started generating links to IMDB, however, they were wrong about 50% of the time. So now when I ask Gemini to create html with hyperlinks for my text, I instruct it to only link to Wikipedia. Any other links I will manually insert.
I’ve found Claude is much more careful here.
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Scott Pelley (b. 1957) worked at CBS News for nearly four decades, and across that span he came to represent a professional culture whose origins trace to Edward R. Murrow (1908-1965) and Walter Cronkite (1916-2009). His career runs from the era when the evening network newscast dominated American public life through the age of cable, streaming, social media, and algorithmic distribution. Few American journalists have worked at a high level across so many successive media environments. His firing from 60 Minutes on June 2, 2026, closed that career and marked, for many observers, the end of a journalistic order.
Pelley was born in San Antonio, Texas, on July 28, 1957. He entered the field early. At fifteen he worked as a copy boy at the Lubbock Avalanche-Journal. His training came through the older reporting culture of local newspapers and television stations rather than through commentary, entertainment, or digital publishing. He attended Texas Tech University but left before graduating to pursue journalism full time. The newsrooms that formed him prized reporting, verification, and direct observation, and those values shaped his conception of the work for the rest of his life.
He joined CBS News in 1989, as the Cold War ended and the network news divisions that had governed public attention since the 1950s began to feel pressure from new technologies and new business models. Pelley established himself quickly as a field reporter who could operate in difficult places. His first national prominence came through war reporting. During the 1991 Gulf War he reported from Saudi Arabia, Iraq, and Kuwait, and the assignment introduced him to the high-risk international work that defined much of his career. From 1997 to 1999, during Bill Clinton‘s presidency, he served as chief White House correspondent.
His authority rested on physical presence at major events rather than on studio presentation. The clearest example came on September 11, 2001, when he reported from lower Manhattan during the attacks on the World Trade Center. Covered in dust, delivering calm reports amid extraordinary confusion, he became one of the recognizable journalistic faces of the day. He did not try to become part of the story. He presented himself as a witness whose task was to describe events as they unfolded. That idea of journalism as witnessing stayed at the center of his work.
His reporting carried him repeatedly into conflict zones and regions of political instability. He covered Afghanistan after the American invasion, Iraq during the post-Saddam occupation, and Syria during the civil war. His Syria reporting in 2013 shows his method. After chemical attacks near Damascus, he traveled into the region and interviewed survivors, physicians, and witnesses, then combined that testimony with documentary evidence and verified video. He built factual narratives through observation and corroboration rather than through ideological framing.
A similar approach marked his reporting on climate change. Long before the subject became routine on television news, Pelley produced major reports from the Arctic and Antarctic for 60 Minutes. These broadcasts leaned on visual evidence and on interviews with scientists in the field. Critics who doubted prevailing scientific conclusions objected, but Pelley framed the matter as one of evidence. His position held that a journalist reports observed facts and documented research regardless of political controversy.
The center of his career became 60 Minutes, which he joined as a correspondent in 2004. Since its creation in 1968, the program has held a singular position in American media. It is neither a daily newscast nor an opinion show, and it earned its reputation through long-form investigation and extended interviews. Pelley’s work there ranged across intelligence agencies, military operations, corporate misconduct, scientific research, foreign policy, environmental issues, and political leadership. That breadth reflected an older idea of the generalist correspondent, a public intermediary who translates complex institutions into narratives an audience can follow.
His style differed from that of the program’s most famous correspondents. Mike Wallace (1918-2012) often treated interviews as adversarial confrontations. Morley Safer (1931-2016) emphasized literary observation and cultural reporting. Pelley worked in a more restrained register, building his segments on careful preparation, extensive documentation, and methodical questioning. Critics sometimes called the approach conventional. Admirers saw professional discipline and respect for accuracy. Over his tenure he won half of all the major awards the program earned, and across his CBS career he collected 51 Emmy Awards.
In 2011 he became anchor and managing editor of the CBS Evening News, at a moment of deep uncertainty for broadcast journalism. Social media platforms reshaped how audiences found the news. Cable networks pushed personality-driven programming. Younger viewers abandoned traditional television. Pelley answered not by reinvention but by reaffirmation. With executive producer Patricia Shevlin (b. 1949) he moved the broadcast toward hard news, international coverage, and investigation, and he rejected the celebrity-oriented model some earlier efforts had embraced.
The results showed both the strength and the limits of the traditional approach. Viewership climbed by roughly 1.5 million during his tenure, the strongest growth the program had seen in decades, yet the broadcast stayed behind ABC and NBC. The audience for evening newscasts kept aging, and the viewers most drawn to Pelley’s style were often the least valuable to advertisers. Editorially the broadcast succeeded. Commercially it remained hemmed in by the broader shift in how people consume news. His tenure proved that a substantial audience for serious reporting still existed, and it also showed how hard the older economic model had become to sustain.
His years at the anchor desk exposed a growing tension between newsroom values and corporate management. Pelley saw himself as a custodian of the CBS News tradition. He invoked the standards of Murrow and Cronkite, and he voiced concern about decisions he believed weakened editorial independence. These concerns sharpened during controversies over workplace conduct at the network. He later stated that he had raised questions about the behavior of senior figures, including Charlie Rose (b. 1942), before the allegations became public during the MeToo era. He argued that management’s failure to act harmed the integrity of the organization. His willingness to criticize internal decisions set him apart from colleagues who read institutional loyalty as a demand for public silence.
He left the anchor chair in 2017 and returned full time to 60 Minutes, in many respects his strongest role. Freed from the daily broadcast, he resumed long-form reporting and major interviews. He also reflected more openly on the craft. His 2019 book, Truth Worth Telling, reads less as a memoir than as a defense of professional reporting. Drawing on wars, disasters, and political crises, he argued that journalism serves a civic purpose distinct from entertainment and from advocacy. The book rests on a twentieth-century conviction. Facts exist apart from opinion. Reporting demands verification. Public trust depends on editorial independence.
By the mid-2020s the institutional ground beneath that conviction was shifting fast. Legacy organizations faced falling audiences, economic strain, the move to streaming, and corporate restructuring. The authority once held by network correspondents no longer carried the same weight inside large media conglomerates. The pressures reached CBS through its corporate parent. Donald Trump (b. 1946) sued CBS in 2024 over a 60 Minutes interview with Kamala Harris. Legal observers called the suit weak, yet Paramount’s ownership settled in July 2025 rather than fight. That year Paramount merged with Skydance Media, and David Ellison (b. 1983) took ownership of CBS.
The new order moved quickly into the newsroom. Bari Weiss (b. 1984) became editor-in-chief of CBS News in October 2025 and soon overhauled the flagship broadcasts. In late May 2026 the network removed a slate of senior 60 Minutes figures, among them executive producer Tanya Simon, executive editor Draggan Mihailovich, and correspondents Sharyn Alfonsi and Cecilia Vega. Anderson Cooper (b. 1967), a contributor for nearly twenty years, had announced his exit in February. On May 28, CBS named Nick Bilton as the fifth executive producer in the program’s history.
Pelley met the appointment with open resistance. He confronted Bilton at a heated all-hands meeting and questioned his qualifications. He accused Weiss of trying to kill the program. On June 2, 2026, CBS fired him. In a termination letter, Bilton charged him with a performative display of hostility and contempt and wrote that he had no interest in the future of the show. Weiss told staff the next morning that her team had tried to find a way back and could not. Pelley disputed her account. He said the meeting offered no path to resolution and that management had stonewalled him. In his statement he said the new owner had cast the program aside to curry favor with the Trump administration, and he claimed management had instructed him to inject falsehoods and bias into a politically sensitive story. He noted that viewership had risen nine percent. The remaining correspondents include Lesley Stahl (b. 1941), Bill Whitaker, and Jon Wertheim.
The episode marks more than the end of a single career. In the twentieth century, star correspondents at programs like 60 Minutes commanded enormous institutional authority. Wallace and Safer worked inside an organization that drew prestige and profit from investigation. By the 2020s, power had shifted toward corporate executives, platform strategy, audience analytics, and streaming priorities. Pelley’s firing became a case study in the changed relation between journalists and the institutions that employ them, and it showed how little leverage even the most prominent correspondent now holds inside a modern media corporation.
Seen in historical perspective, Scott Pelley belongs to the last generation of journalists formed entirely within the network-news era. He came from a culture that assumed a broad national audience, trusted institutional gatekeepers, and treated factual reporting as a public service. He spent his career trying to preserve those ideals inside an environment organized around fragmentation, personalization, and commercial disruption. His legacy rests less on any single investigation than on what he represented. He served as a bridge between two eras of American journalism, the age when network news sat at the center of national life and the present landscape of platforms, niche audiences, and unending competition for attention. His career traces the rise, the maturity, and the unmaking of a professional culture that shaped American public life for more than half a century, and his firing reads as one of its closing chapters.
Strip the moral language off Pelley’s firing and Alliance Theory reads the whole episode as coalition conflict wearing the costume of principle.
Start with the alliance map, which is where Pinsof, Sears, and Haselton begin. Their own sketch of the American structure places journalists, highly educated knowledge workers, and the prestige press on one side of the divide. Pelley sits at the center of that coalition. He carries its markers: the Murrow and Cronkite lineage, the apprenticeship from copy boy upward, the craft norms of verification and witnessing. In the paper’s terms those markers are tags and focal points. They assort the in-group and create common knowledge of who belongs to the guild. When Pelley invokes “everything we stand for,” he is not stating a fact about journalism. He is signaling similarity to his allies and drawing the boundary of the coalition.
Now place the new owners. Ellison took CBS through the Skydance merger. Trump sued the network and the prior owners settled. Ellison is described as a Trump ally, and Weiss arrived as a polarizing figure who had moved away from the legacy-press coalition. Alliance Theory does not need the newsroom to know what Weiss and Bilton actually intend for the program. Transitivity supplies the verdict. The enemy of my enemy. Trump is the standing rival of the prestige press, the owners accommodate Trump, so the owners become rivals by inheritance. Pelley makes the transitive link explicit in his statement when he says the new owner casts the legend aside to curry favor with the Trump administration. He reads the firing through the alliance structure, not through any direct evidence of editorial corruption, and the structure tells him where these men stand before they have done anything.
Bilton fails the similarity test on top of the transitivity one. He comes from outside linear television, the first executive producer in the program’s history to do so. He lacks the tags. Pelley’s attack on his “slender qualifications” looks like a neutral judgment of competence, and Alliance Theory predicts it would look that way, because that is how coalition boundary-policing presents itself. The credential challenge is a loyalty move dressed as a quality-control move.
The propagandistic biases then run the rest of the show, and they run symmetrically, which is the paper’s central claim. Pelley applies perpetrator bias to management: he emphasizes their responsibility, attributes malevolent motive (currying favor, injecting falsehoods), and frames the harm as severe and lasting (a legend destroyed, contempt for what journalists do). He applies victim bias to himself and the displaced correspondents: he embellishes the grievance, casts Simon, Mihailovich, Alfonsi, and Vega as people who stood for fairness against political bias, and presents the newsroom as wounded. Management runs the mirror image. Bilton’s termination letter charges Pelley with a performative display of hostility and contempt, making him the perpetrator. Weiss tells staff that trust broke down and that she tried to find a way back, making management the patient party and Pelley the one who refused. Each side magnifies its own injury and the other’s transgression. The paper has a name for this. Competitive victimhood. Both camps strive to establish that they suffered the greater wrong.
Pelley attributes the rupture to management’s character, to incompetence and unprofessionalism and lying. Management attributes it to Pelley’s character, to his antipathy and his incivility. Alliance Theory predicts that each side reaches for the dispositional attribution that serves its coalition and the external attribution that excuses its own. Neither side attributes the conflict to the structural fact that two coalitions are fighting over one institution, because that account would serve no one’s mobilization.
Here is the part Pelley would resist most, and the part the frame presses hardest. His statement is saturated with moral motive: truth, editorial independence, the civic purpose of the press, the risk to colleagues’ lives. Alliance Theory treats claims of moral motivation as propaganda by function, tactics for drawing third parties to one’s side and emboldening allies. The most loyal partisans make the strongest moral claims, and the paper turns the apparent paradox into a prediction. The man burning his bridges with management in public, in the most quotable language available, is performing an honest signal of loyalty to the newsroom coalition. Motivated reasoning, in their account, is not a cognitive failure. It is the price of being trusted by your allies. If Pelley did not give his fellow partisans his side of the story with full conviction, they would not count him a true ally. So he gives it with full conviction. The scorched-earth statement is the loyalty oath.
The contingency point lands too. There is nothing inevitable about journalists forming a coalition coded against a Trump-aligned ownership. Pinsof and his coauthors stress that alliance structures are historical accidents, that journalists are not always liberal any more than the military is always conservative. The CBS fight is not truth against falsehood at the level the participants narrate. It is one coalition, the knowledge-worker prestige press, losing control of an institution to a rival coalition. Editorial independence is, in this reading, what the losing side says when it loses.
Now the honest limit, because the frame has one and it bears on Pelley specifically. Alliance Theory buys its parsimony by bracketing the truth question. It assumes both sides’ moral claims are equally distorted and treats them as symmetrical propaganda. That assumption is the engine, and it is an assumption, not a result. If management actually instructed Pelley to inject falsehoods into a story, then his objection is not only a loyalty signal. It is also correct, and the symmetry flattens a real difference between the camps. The frame cannot tell you whether the order to falsify happened. By design it codes Pelley’s protest as coalition behavior whether or not the protest is justified, which means it explains the form of the conflict well and stays silent on the merits. For a firing that turns partly on a factual claim about editorial pressure, that silence matters. Use the frame to see the coalition machinery clearly. Do not let its symmetry talk you out of asking who was telling the truth, because that is the one question it refuses to take up.
Stephen Turner (b. 1951) gives you a way to see why Pelley’s authority held for decades and then dissolved in a week, and the answer turns on what kind of knowledge his craft was.
Pelley’s competence is tacit in the strict sense Michael Polanyi (1891-1976) gave the word. He knows more than he can tell. The judgment that a story holds, that a source is sound, that a framing is fair, that a witness is lying, that a piece is ready to air, lives below the level of stated rules. He acquired it the only way such knowledge comes, by doing the work next to people who already had it. Copy boy at fifteen. Local newsrooms. War zones. Decades of correction from editors, producers, audiences, and the events in front of him. No manual produced the judgment. Apprenticeship and habituation produced it, slowly, in his hands and eyes.
When Pelley invokes standards, when he names Murrow and Cronkite and says management betrays everything the place stands for, he is pointing at this tacit knowledge. The trouble is that pointing is all he can do. He cannot hand over the rule that generates his judgment, because there is no rule, only the trained recognition. Ask him by what standard a story is sound and he can give you the articulable residue: verify, stay independent, report what you witness. Those slogans are not the craft. They are what survives translation into words. The operative knowledge, the part that does the work, stays tacit and stays with him.
This is the root of why he could not win the fight he picked. Turner’s account of expertise says the authority of tacit knowledge rests on others granting that the expert’s judgment tracks something real. For decades CBS granted it. Editors deferred, awards ratified, the lineage confirmed that Pelley’s nose for a story was reliable. The grant was the whole foundation, because the knowledge had no explicit base to stand on. Bilton, who comes from outside that world, withholds the grant. To a man habituated in tech journalism and film, Pelley’s standards can read as personal taste backed by seniority, a guild protecting its privileges. And Pelley has no way to prove otherwise, because proving it would require making the tacit explicit, which cannot be done. His position reduces to I know good journalism when I do it, and the new regime answers that they do not accept his nose. Turner predicts that stalemate. Tacit expertise cannot justify itself to anyone who declines to grant its authority, since its grounds are not available for inspection. What the expert experiences as obvious craft, the outsider hears as evasion.
Pelley talks as though a shared body of journalistic knowledge exists, a common tradition that he and the institution both hold and that the newcomers lack or violate. In The Social Theory of Practices Turner spends a book doubting that any such shared substance exists. What looks like a shared tradition is better described as a population of individuals, each habituated through similar apprenticeships, each corrected by the same editors and awards and rivals and audiences into performances that mesh. The meshing creates the appearance of a common possession. But there is no transmissible object called the standards, no collective tacit thing passed from Murrow down to Pelley. There are only similarly trained practitioners and the feedback that keeps them aligned.
If the tradition were a freestanding object, an institution might hold onto it through ownership changes by guarding the vault. Turner says there is no vault. The tradition existed only in the practitioners and in the corrective environment that calibrated them. Fire the correspondents, replace the editors, install people habituated elsewhere, and the loop that produced the meshing is gone. Cooper had already left. Simon, Mihailovich, Alfonsi, and Vega went in a week. Each removal does more than subtract a person. It cuts a strand of the correction through which the tacit knowledge propagated and renewed. The new owners keep the name and the format, the explicit shell, and they assume the craft travels with the brand. On Turner’s account it does not. Tacit knowledge transmits by doing alongside a master long enough for habit to pass. Sever the apprenticeship and you keep the title and lose the competence, because the competence never lived anywhere but in the people and the practice.
His book belongs in this reading as a revealing failure. Truth Worth Telling is Pelley’s attempt to write the creed down, to make the tacit explicit at last. Turner’s view says the attempt has to fall short. What reaches the page is the sayable part, the maxims about facts and verification and independence. The judgment that does the work cannot follow it onto the page. A reader can absorb the creed and still not possess, or respect, the trained competence underneath. The new owners can quote the creed back at him and feel they have conceded nothing.
The honest limit. Turner on the tacit explains the form of Pelley’s authority and why it proved undefendable once the grant was withdrawn and the apprenticeship cut. It does not certify that his judgment was good. Turner grants that tacit expertise is real at the level of the individual practitioner; his doubt falls on the claim that it is a shared collective good and on its right to command deference. So the frame tells you why Pelley could not justify his standing in words, and why the thing he wanted to protect came apart so fast. It stays silent on whether his craft tracked the truth better than what replaces it. That question sits outside what the tacit, taken alone, can settle.
Turner’s anti-essentialism turns on a single refusal: he will not let a collective noun or an abstraction stand as a real underlying nature that explains behavior. No essence of the social. No essence of a practice. No hidden substance inside a kind that makes its members what they are. There are people, acts, circumstances, and the words we lay over them. Apply that refusal to Pelley and most of his case turns to vapor, because his case runs on essences from top to bottom.
Take the central word. Pelley defends journalism as though journalism has an essence, a fixed inner nature, a thing the new owners betray when he says they violate everything the place stands for. Turner denies the premise. There is no kind called journalism with a defining core that a person can honor or breach. There are reporters doing particular acts in particular settings, outputs we call news, and the noun we apply across the lot by family resemblance. The essence is a projection, not a discovery. When Pelley says management abandoned journalism, he has named a change in behavior and dressed it as the violation of a nature. The nature does no work. The work was done by specific people deciding specific things. Essentialism lets him feel he has explained the wrong when he has only labeled it.
The same move runs through the talk about the program. Pelley says Weiss is murdering the show. Murder presupposes a living thing with an essence that can be killed. Turner deflates it at once. 60 Minutes is not an organism with a soul. It is a name applied across decades to a shifting set of people and segments. The thread that ties the 1968 program to the 2026 program is nominal, a continuity of title and slot and format, not the persistence of an essence. Correspondents arrive and leave. Cooper left. Simon, Mihailovich, Alfonsi, and Vega were pushed out. Bilton came in. To call the result the death of the show is to imagine a show-essence that the personnel merely carried, when the personnel and the segments were all there ever was. Strip the essence and you do not have a murder. You have a relabeling of an assemblage whose parts have changed many times before.
The lineage gets the same treatment. Murrow to Cronkite to Pelley reads, in his telling, as the transmission of an essential journalistic spirit down a chain of custody. Turner, who takes his construct-nominalism from Max Weber (1864-1920) and the view that social kinds are ideal types rather than natures, denies that any essence travels the chain. The tradition is a category we build after the fact, grouping a heterogeneous run of individuals under one heading because it suits the story. Even the phrase I reached for in the bio, the last generation of network journalists, is an essentialist category. It treats a historically clustered set of men as a natural kind with a shared inner character, when the cluster is held together by narrative and resemblance, not by an essence they all contain.
Watch how both sides essentialize character once the fight starts. Bilton’s letter assigns Pelley a fixed disposition, an antipathy to the future of the show, a settled contempt. Pelley assigns management a fixed nature too, incompetence and unprofessionalism, men who are liars by type. Each reads the other’s conduct as the outflow of an inner essence rather than the product of a situation two coalitions made together. Turner resists the slide from act to essential character in both directions. The behavior is the behavior. The essence behind it is an inference the accuser adds, and the inference flatters the accuser by making the opponent bad all the way down.
There is an epistemic edge to this that bears on why Pelley cannot lose the argument in his own mind and cannot win it in anyone else’s. A claim about an essence is built to resist refutation. If journalism has an essence and Pelley is its keeper, then no act by the new owners can count as journalism unless he certifies it, because he holds the definition. The essence becomes whatever he says it is, which means it explains nothing and answers to nothing. Turner’s objection is not that Pelley is wrong about the content of the essence. The objection is that there is no essence to be right or wrong about, and that the form of the claim, by placing its object beyond observation, lets the speaker treat his own preference as a discovered nature.
The deflation has a clarifying payoff. Drop the essences and the firing shrinks from a metaphysical drama to a plain sequence. An owner changed. An editor changed. Correspondents were replaced. A name and a format carried on under new hands. The grandeur lived in the essence-talk, the murder and the betrayal and the death of a tradition, not in the events, which are the ordinary events of an institution changing owners. Pelley feels a catastrophe because he experiences the world through fixed natures, and a fixed nature seems to be dying. Turner says nothing with an essence is dying, because nothing had an essence to begin with.
Now the limit. Turner’s solvent does not stop where Pelley would like it to stop. Run it consistently and it dissolves his defense along with his grief. Quality, value, good journalism, the standard by which the new program might be worse than the old, these are essences too, and the same deflation eats them. Once you deny journalism a nature, you lose the ground from which to say the replacement betrays it, because betrayal needs a nature to betray. The frame is sharp at puncturing reification and useless for mounting the defense Pelley wanted, since that defense was essentialist through and through. There is a second cost. Pressed all the way, anti-essentialism turns on itself and asks whether essentialism is an essence, which is why Turner applies it as a discipline against explanatory pretension rather than as a blanket denial of all description. Used that way it does one clean thing here. It shows that the war over 60 Minutes is not a war between the friends and the enemies of an essence. It is a fight among people, and the essences each side claims to serve were never in the room.
Stephen P. Turner’s Explaining the Normative is an attack on the idea that obligations are real things in the world. Philosophers treat normativity as a realm of its own: oughts, validity, correctness, bindingness, facts that are not natural facts and that hold whether or not anyone honors them. Turner denies the realm. He argues there is no way for such a fact to reach a person and move him, and that everything the normativist wants to explain by appeal to binding norms is better explained by ordinary causes, by habit, training, disposition, and the practice of sanctioning one another. Run that argument over Scott Pelley and the question stops being whether the new owners broke the rules of journalism. It becomes whether there were ever rules with the kind of force he thinks they have.
Pelley speaks as though journalistic standards bind. When he says management instructed him to inject falsehoods, when he says their conduct is antithetical to everything the place stands for and shows contempt for what journalists do, he is not reporting that he dislikes their choices. He is claiming they violated an obligation that holds over them, an ought that exists and that they were subject to whether they accepted it or not. That is the normativist picture in its pure form. The standard is valid. The standard binds. They breached it. Turner’s first move is to ask where this binding fact lives and how it does anything. He finds nothing. There is Pelley, trained across forty years into a set of dispositions, who feels the pull of those dispositions as obligation. There are the new owners, not trained into them, who feel no such pull. Between the two sits no third thing, no norm hovering above both men with authority over each.
This is the gap that organizes the whole book, and it organizes the firing. Pelley assumes the standards reach Bari Weiss and Nick Bilton, that the obligation grips them too, that they ought to feel what he feels. Turner says an obligation is not a force. It has no hands. If Bilton came up through tech journalism and film and never underwent the habituation of the CBS News newsroom, there is nothing in him for the ought to seize. Pelley experiences the standards as binding because the training made him so. He then projects the bindingness outward and treats it as a property of the world, holding for anyone in the role. When the owners fail to feel it, he reads a violation. Turner reads an absence. There is no norm being broken, because there is no norm-realm. There are men with different dispositions, and the men with power impose theirs.
Notice what his public statement actually is on this account. “These executives cannot gain the trust of the staff with lies” presents itself as the norm asserting its authority, truth speaking against power. Turner reframes it as a sanction, an act, a causal event aimed at producing effects in third parties, the staff and the profession and the public. It does not track a normative fact, because there is no fact for it to track. Bilton’s termination letter is also a sanction, the firing a heavier one. The episode is a contest between parties applying sanctions to one another, and the side with the power to fire wins the application. Calling one side’s sanctions the voice of the norms adds nothing to the description except flattery for that side.
There is a regress under all of this that Turner inherits from the rule-following arguments of Ludwig Wittgenstein (1889-1951) and Saul Kripke (1940-2022). A standard does not fix its own application. Be fair does not tell you what fairness requires of the disputed story. Verify does not say when the verification is enough. Report independently does not decide which framing counts as independent and which as bias. The rule stays silent until someone applies it, and the application cannot come from another rule without starting the regress over. It comes from trained judgment. So when Pelley and management disagree about whether the story was biased, no appeal to the standard can settle the disagreement, because the standard says nothing until a disposition reads it, and the two camps carry different dispositions. Pelley talks as though the norm decides the case. The norm decides nothing. The trained man decides and names his decision the norm.
His book belongs here as the clearest specimen. Truth Worth Telling sets out to state the obligations of journalism as binding oughts: facts exist apart from opinion, verification is required, independence is owed. Turner’s deflation does not call these claims false. It denies they are discovered normative truths at all. They are descriptions of what a certain training instills, raised into the grammar of obligation. The book cannot bind a reader who lacks the training, and on Turner’s account no statement of norms ever could, because the force was never in the words. It was in the habituation. And the habituation is the thing the new regime has cut by firing the people who carried it.
The payoff reverses Pelley’s own account of his defeat. He experiences the firing as the normative crushed by the powerful, truth beaten by money and politics. Turner answers that no normative order stood above the fight to be crushed. Two sets of trained dispositions met, backed by unequal power, and the side that could sanction prevailed. The standards Pelley invokes were never a higher law that the owners fell under. They were his side’s dispositions, narrated as a higher law. That narration, the dressing of a disposition as an obligation that binds other people, is what normativity is, on this view, and it is doing its ordinary work in his statement, which is to recruit support by presenting a preference as a law.
Now the limit. The solvent does not respect the user’s intentions, and it eats Pelley’s case along with his metaphysics. If journalistic norms carry no binding force, then the judgment that management was wrong to order falsehoods loses its footing too, because wrong is the same kind of claim Turner has just dissolved. The frame explains beautifully why Pelley’s obligation cannot reach the owners and why his appeals to the standards settle nothing across differently trained men. It cannot vindicate him, because vindication needs the very bindingness it denies. And there is a finer point that keeps the account from collapsing into nihilism. Turner does not deny that Pelley feels obligated. He grants the feeling as a real psychological fact and relocates it, out of the world and into the trained man. That relocation is the whole achievement and the whole price. It makes Pelley’s conviction fully intelligible as a fact about Pelley, and unavailable as a fact about journalism. Whether something with worth was lost when the training was cut is a question the frame, taken alone, will not let you ask, because asking it means reaching for an ought, and the ought is the thing it has spent its pages explaining away.
The Intonation
Pelley’s instrument is a low, grave baritone that he keeps on a short leash. The striking thing is the narrowness of the range. Most broadcasters ride the melody of a sentence up and down to keep a listener awake. Pelley flattens it. He moves through a sentence at an even, deliberate pace, lands hard on the final clause, and drops the pitch at the end into a kind of full stop you can hear. The downward fall at the close of each line is the signature. It turns every sentence into a verdict. There is no lift at the end, no question left open, no air. He says the thing and then seals it, and the seal is what reads as authority.
The cadence is slow and weighted. He spends time on words, sets a pause before the one he wants you to feel, and lets the silence carry meaning the way a preacher does before the key phrase. The pauses are deliberate and a little theatrical. They tell you that what comes next is grave. The diction underneath is formal and clipped, every consonant placed, the enunciation of a man reading prose that was written to be read aloud and to sound written. He does not talk the way people talk. He recites, and the recitation has the rhythm of scripture or a judge’s ruling rather than conversation.
The body matches the voice. He holds still. He does not gesture much, does not fidget, leans toward the camera and fixes it with a steady look, and keeps his face composed to the edge of immobility. The image people remember, the dust-covered man delivering calm reports while lower Manhattan burned, is the whole manner in one frame, stillness and gravity under pressure. That composure is real and it is also a permanent setting. He brings the same repose to a feature about a cellist that he brings to a massacre.
Pelley applies one register to everything. The tone of grave tidings sits on the trivial story and the catastrophe alike, so the weight never modulates. A voice that signals this is serious is useful when the thing is serious and faintly absurd when it is not, and a man who delivers a segment about a museum exhibit in the cadence of a funeral invites the listener to wonder whether the gravity is in the news or in the man. The uniform solemnity is why detractors hear performance. The seriousness has no off switch, and a seriousness that never rests starts to look like a seriousness about oneself.
In his valedictory mode the manner goes further, into the sermon. The sign-offs, the commencement address, the firing statement all run on building rhetorical periods, the repeated stems that hammer a rhythm, the construction where good people stood for this and stood for that, the King James cadence climbing toward moral uplift. It is real oratory and it is pitched at the register of a man delivering truths to a congregation. When the audience shares the faith, this lands as conviction. When it does not, the same cadence lands as a man preaching at people who did not ask for a homily.
Locate him against his peers and the manner clarifies. Cronkite carried an avuncular warmth, the uncle reading the day to the family. Brokaw had a plainspoken flatness, Jennings a cosmopolitan ease, Rather a coiled intensity. Pelley is the grave one, the minister or the judge rather than the relative or the pal, and the cost of that posture is the warmth the others could reach. He has no light register. He does not do the small self-puncture, the wry aside, the tone that says I know this is a bit much. The absence is what Martha MacCallum put her finger on with the line about a man who never laughed at himself. Humor and irony are the sounds a speaker makes to show he sees the gap between himself and the weight he carries, and Pelley’s instrument does not produce them. The gravity goes all the way down with nothing to leaven it.
The intonation never changed. The slow weighted cadence, the sealed declaratives, the funereal evenness, the sermonic climb were the same in 2005 and in 2026. What changed is whether the audience granted the gravity its warrant. While the country trusted the chair, the voice sounded like authority earned, the sound of a man who carried something that deserved the weight. Once the trust thinned and the seat lost its hold, the identical voice began to sound like a man performing his own importance, because gravity without a granted warrant is just a man insisting on his own size. The manner is congruent with everything else about him. It is the sacred-value claim made audible, the sound of a man who believes he bears something holy. That is why it compelled for decades and why, the moment the belief stopped being shared, it became the first thing people mocked.
David Pinsof hands you one lever for reading a man like Pelley, and you use it by watching the gap between stated motive and actual motive. Pelley spent forty years telling the public why his work was worth doing, and the story he told is the misunderstanding myth in its purest form.
Network journalism rests on a premise. An informed public, fed verified facts by trusted professionals, governs itself well. The enemy is misinformation. The cure is more accurate information, delivered by people trained to find it. Pelley said this plainly and wrote a book that calls truth a civic good and the reporter its custodian. Drain the public of falsehood and the republic heals. Set that next to Pinsof and it reads as the myth wearing a press badge. Everything wrong with the country comes from bad beliefs, and the people whose job is to correct bad beliefs turn out to be the ones who save us. Pretty cool thing for a journalist to believe.
Pinsof tells you to flip it and judge the man by his goals, not his mission statement. Start with the witness pose, the thing Pelley made his signature. He does not become part of the story. He stands at the edge and describes. Pinsof reads neutrality as a status claim, not an empty space where motive should sit. “I want nothing but the facts” ranks high in the journalist’s order. Objectivity is a credential, and credentials are tokens in a status fight. The Peabodys, the duPont batons, the 51 Emmys, half the major awards the program won across his run. Other journalists handed him those. The witness who claims to want nothing collects the standing that comes from appearing to want nothing. The pose pays.
The ratings make the same point with less effort. Under Pelley the CBS Evening News chased hard news and won viewers, 1.5 million of them, the largest growth since the Cronkite years. The praise ran in the language of the market. Growth. Share. The civic good and the audience number are the same number, and everyone treated them as the same number.
His exit reads as a coalition war one rung below the kind Pinsof describes. He says partisans fight over the coercive apparatus of the state and dress the fight up as principle. Pelley’s case has the same shape with a different prize. Two coalitions fought over a valuable platform. One built its prestige on the old credential of verification and gatekeeping, the Murrow line. The other paid eight billion dollars for the company, settled a lawsuit with the president, and wanted the platform aligned with the people who hold the regulatory levers. Pelley lost. His statement names the winning coalition, Ellison and the Trump administration, and casts his own side as fairness standing against political bias. That is the move Pinsof flags near the end of his essay. Teach the public who their enemies are, and let those enemies be your closest rivals for the asset.
Then the sharpest thing in the record. At the USC Annenberg Cronkite Awards, with his place inside the new company looking secure, Pelley said the owners had imposed no interference and that every story aired. Months later, pushed toward the door, he said management had ordered him to inject falsehoods into a story. Pinsof does not need to call this a lie. He says belief is strategic and we understand what we have an incentive to understand. When the institution rewarded him, the institution was clean. When it moved to discard him, the institution was corrupt. The belief turned when the incentive turned.
The confrontation fits the same reading. Pelley did not take his objection to Bilton in private. He did it at the all-hands meeting, in front of the staff, on the new man’s first day. Bilton called it a performative display of hostility before the staff, and whatever else he got wrong he had the staging right. Then Pelley carried the fight to the press. Both audiences are coalitions. The ambush derogates a rival and signals resolve to the people whose esteem he still wants. The firing converts into a martyrdom, and martyrdom is a credential the new owners cannot revoke.
His own account of his fall is the myth pointed back at himself. If only the public understood what corporate owners are doing to journalism, they would be horrified, and the cure is awareness. Pinsof has you notice there is nothing here to fix. The owners understand their position all too well. They bought a platform and want it to serve their alliance. Pelley understands his position too. He is defending the worth of a credential he spent a career building, now marked down by a coalition that prefers a different one. No misunderstanding. Two parties who each grasp their incentives, fighting over a prize.
And Pelley cannot say the plain thing. He cannot stand up and announce that he is fighting to protect his status and his coalition’s grip on a prestigious platform. That sounds mean and small. So he says truth, democracy, the public’s right to know. The idealism is the cover, and Pinsof says the cover works. Watch the eulogies roll in. Fager called him the best of the best. The tributes flowed because the idealistic frame is the one the coalition rewards. Cynicism is icky. Sweetness signals well.
Pinsof ends with a hole you can study but cannot climb out of, and Pelley’s career lands there. His creed says better information saves the world. The audience for his evening newscast aged out under him. On Pinsof’s read those younger viewers were not confused about the value of network news. They had no incentive to sit still while a gatekeeper told them what to think, and they had a hundred louder things pulling at their attention. The model died of incentives, not ignorance. Pelley spent his last years studying the hole, cataloguing the corruption of the institution to the last molecule, and he is still in the hole. The world he wanted to inform did not want informing on his terms.
One limit. Pinsof’s lens cannot tell the difference between a reporter who checks a fact and one who fabricates it, because it treats both as status moves, and that difference is real and it has victims. The frame explains why Pelley cast his fight as principle. It cannot tell you whether the falsehoods he says he was told to insert were falsehoods. Sometimes the witness is right about the facts. Pelley might be a status-seeking primate and also correct about the story.
Bourdieu’s first move is to refuse the question Pelley asks. Pelley asks whether the new owners are good journalists or bad ones, whether they honor the standards or betray them. Bourdieu does not ask about persons or their virtues. He asks about positions. A field is a structured space of positions, each defined by its place in the distribution of capital, and what an agent thinks, says, and defends is generated by where he stands in that space. So the analysis starts by mapping the journalistic field and locating Pelley in it, and once you do that, almost everything he says and suffers falls out of the structure.
The field has two poles, and the whole drama lives in the tension between them. At the autonomous pole, value comes from inside the field. Peers judge peers. The reward is recognition, prestige, the esteem of people who know the craft from within, and Bourdieu calls the accumulated form of this symbolic capital. At the heteronomous pole, value comes from outside. The market sets it, the audience sets it, political power sets it, and the relevant capital is economic. Pelley is the most consecrated figure the autonomous pole had. Consecration is the field’s own word for what happened to him across four decades. The 51 Emmys, the half-share of the program’s major awards, the descent from Murrow through Cronkite, all of it is the field laying its hands on a man and declaring him legitimate by its internal law. His authority was symbolic capital, and symbolic capital is real. It moved people, opened doors, made his judgment count. But it is capital of a peculiar kind, because it works only so long as everyone misrecognizes it as something other than capital, as merit, as standards, as the nature of journalism rather than as a position in a struggle.
Here is the contradiction Bourdieu would seize first, because it organizes the rest. Pelley built his autonomous-pole authority inside television, which Bourdieu, in On Television, identifies as the most heteronomous corner of the entire journalistic field. Television answers to the audience number above all, the thing the French call the audimat, and the celebrity anchor is a heteronomous creature by structural definition. Pelley spent his career importing autonomous values into the most heteronomous seat available. At the Evening News he pushed toward hard news and investigation and refused the celebrity model, an effort to autonomize a space the field builds to be ruled from outside. Watch what happened, because Bourdieu predicts it exactly. The autonomous strategy won him peer esteem and symbolic capital. It added roughly a million and a half viewers, the best growth in decades, and still lost the audimat war, trailing the rivals, aging the audience, repelling the demographic the advertisers priced. The internal law rewarded him. The ruling law of the medium, the audience number, did not. The contradiction was structural and was always going to resolve against the autonomous pole in the long run, because in television the heteronomous pole holds the deeper power. His symbolic capital was real, and it was on loan from the men who hold the economic capital, and a loan can be called.
The firing is the loan being called. The new owners are the heteronomous pole completing its conquest of the field, and the conquest has a precise shape. Ellison brings the economic capital through the Skydance merger. Trump favor and political accommodation bring the political capital. Weiss and Bilton bring the operational instruments of the audimat, the new approach, the analytics, the platform logic. None of them holds the autonomous pole’s symbolic capital, and none of them needs to, because they hold the kind of capital that, in this corner of the field, sets the rate of exchange for every other kind. That is the event under the event. The rate at which symbolic capital converts into authority has collapsed. For forty years Pelley’s consecration bought him standing. The new holders of economic and political capital have repriced it to near zero, and the standards he invokes are simply symbolic capital trying to spend at the old rate in a market that no longer honors it.
His habitus explains why he cannot adapt and why he goes down the way he does. Habitus is the field written into the body, the feel for the game acquired so early and so deep that it operates as reflex rather than choice. Pelley’s habitus was formed in an older state of the field and calibrated to its autonomous rules. When the field transforms faster than the habitus can, Bourdieu calls the result hysteresis, the Don Quixote effect, the man who keeps playing by the rules of a vanished order and so charges windmills. Pelley meets a heteronomous takeover with autonomous moves. He invokes peer law, lineage, craft, the things that won him standing in the old field, against opponents who do not play that game and feel no pull from it. He cannot do otherwise, because the dispositions are not opinions he holds but a structure he is. This is the tragic dignity and the futility together. A maladapted habitus produces a man who fights with the weapons of an order that no longer exists and cannot stop himself.
His statement, read through Bourdieu, is not a free moral act. It is a position-taking, and position-takings are generated by positions. A consecrated agent of the autonomous pole, watching his position liquidated by the heteronomous pole, produces roughly this statement by structural necessity. The talk of falsehoods and bias and contempt for what journalists do is the autonomous pole’s nomos speaking, its fundamental law, the principle that the work answers to truth and not to popularity. Pelley stated that law himself in the old line about journalism having nothing to do with being liked. From the inside it feels like conviction, and Bourdieu does not deny the feeling. He relocates its source. The conviction is the subjective face of an objective position. Put almost anyone with that habitus in that structural slot at that moment and you get that statement. The man experiences as the voice of his soul what the analyst sees as the voice of his position.
The deepest layer is symbolic violence, and it is where the seed pointed. Domination runs most smoothly when the dominated misrecognize it as legitimate, when the imposition wears the field’s own colors so that it looks like a move within the game rather than a seizure of the board. The new regime does this throughout. The takeover comes dressed as a new approach, as the future of the show, as an attempt to find common ground, as Bilton’s promise of unyielding support for the journalism. Each phrase translates economic and political power into the field’s internal idiom, so the conquest reads as stewardship. That is symbolic violence in operation. Pelley’s one available weapon, the only weapon the dominated ever have, is to strip the disguise and name the violence as violence, to say the owner casts the legend aside to curry favor with power, to say management instructed him to inject falsehoods, to refuse the misrecognition out loud. Bourdieu would respect the refusal and predict its result. Naming symbolic violence ruptures the misrecognition for a moment and changes the rate of exchange not at all. The owners still hold the capital that prices the field. The rupture is real and the repricing stands.
There is a historical correction the frame forces, and it cuts against the elegiac story Pelley tells about himself. The autonomy he inherited was not an eternal value carried down a sacred line. It was the artifact of a particular field structure. In the Murrow and Cronkite era the three networks held a near monopoly, and the news divisions ran as prestige loss-leaders, shielded from the audimat by the profits of entertainment and by regulation. That shield is what let the autonomous pole flourish inside a heteronomous medium. Cable, deregulation, conglomeration, and streaming demolished the shield and exposed the news to the audience number without protection. So the standards were possible because the field was once built to permit them. The tradition was the byproduct of a protected space, not a law of nature, and when the protection ended the space closed. Pelley experiences the closing as betrayal. Bourdieu describes it as the field reverting to the heteronomy that television always tends toward once the shield is gone.
Ernest Becker starts from one fact and builds everything on it. Men know they will die, the knowledge is unbearable, and culture exists to make it bearable. A culture is a hero system, a structure of roles and values that tells a man how to earn significance, how to feel that his life counts against the void. The reward for playing the hero system well is self-esteem, which Becker treats as the felt sense of being a hero, the daily proof that one matters and will not be erased. Underneath the proof runs an immortality project, the attachment of the mortal self to something that outlasts the body, so that the man partakes of its permanence. Read Pelley this way and the firing stops being the loss of a job and becomes the collapse of the structure that held his death at bay.
Begin with the witness, because the witness is the heart of his self-conception and the witness lives at the edge of death. Pelley made his name in the places where people die. Lower Manhattan on September 11. Syria after the chemical attacks. Iraq, Afghanistan, the disaster sites. Becker would say the war correspondent enacts the hero system in its starkest available form. He walks toward the death that others flee and comes back to tell it, and the telling converts the terror into a vocation. The image of Pelley at Ground Zero, covered in dust, delivering calm reports while the air is still full of the dead, is the hero standing at the threshold and refusing to be unmade. The calm is the point. The calm is the visible sign of a man who has mastered the terror that masters everyone else. He did not earn his significance at a desk. He earned it where the denial of death is hardest to sustain, which is why his authority felt earned rather than granted.
The creed is the immortality project stated outright. Becker’s causa sui is the wish to be the author of one’s own enduring meaning by binding oneself to a deathless thing. For Pelley the deathless thing is the work, journalism as an order that serves a purpose larger than any man and survives every man who serves it. Truth Worth Telling argues exactly this, that the work outlives the worker, that facts stand apart from opinion and the truth endures. The book reads as epistemology and functions as a denial of death. If the truth is permanent and Pelley has given his life to the truth, then Pelley has fastened himself to permanence. The journalist’s discipline, verify and witness and stay independent, is the ritual practice of a man earning a place in something that will not die.
The ancestors hold the same place gods hold in older systems. Murrow and Cronkite are the founders who conquered death by becoming permanent, whose names persist long after their bodies failed. Pelley’s veneration of them is ancestor worship inside the hero system and transference onto figures who appear to have beaten oblivion. By aligning himself with the immortal founders he inserts himself into the deathless line. The lineage is not a professional genealogy to him. It is a chain of symbolic immortality, and to belong to it is to be carried forward. This is why he speaks of the tradition as sacred rather than merely old. The sacredness is the promise that the self will not be erased.
The institution is the temple that stores the promise. CBS News and 60 Minutes hold the regalia, the gold-standard name, the more than 150 awards, and Pelley’s own share of them, the 51 Emmys, half the program’s major honors won in his years. Becker reads such tokens as proofs of heroism, markers that the system has certified a man as significant. More than that, the institution is the vehicle that pledges to carry his contribution past his death. So long as the temple stands and counts him among its heroes, the immortality project holds.
Now the firing, which Becker lets you see for what it is to Pelley. Self-esteem is the feeling of being a hero within the system. Strip a man out of the system and you strip away the structure through which he earned his significance and denied his death, and you return him to the void the structure existed to hold off. Pelley’s own phrase names the wound with precision the frame would predict. The new owner is casting this legend aside. Legend is the immortality status. To be cast aside is to be told that the work will not carry you forward after all, that the permanence you fastened yourself to has been revoked, that you are mortal and replaceable like anyone. This is symbolic death, and it arrives while the man is still alive to feel it.
Becker’s second book explains the rage. In Escape from Evil he argues that evil grows out of the hero system itself, because a man secures his own immortality project by denying the immortality projects of others. The rival worldview threatens mine by existing, since its presence reveals mine as one option among many and cracks the denial that holds my terror down. So I recast the rival as the agent of corruption and death, and I purify my world by casting him out. Pelley’s statement does this in full voice. The new owners are not editors making defensible calls. They curry favor with a hated power, they instruct him to inject falsehoods, they show contempt for what journalists do, they are liars and incompetents spreading political bias. They are the barbarians at the gate, and the gate is the temple wall. Bilton, brought in from outside linear television, is the unclean outsider placed in the holy office without the initiation, and his installation pollutes the sanctuary. Weiss is said to be murdering the show, and murder is the right word inside the system, because what she is killing is an immortal thing. The displaced correspondents become martyrs who stood for fairness against the forces of bias, and martyrdom is the hero system’s answer to expulsion. If the faith casts me out, let it cast me out as a saint, and my significance survives my defeat. The statement performs that conversion in real time. It turns a firing into a martyrdom and so reclaims the permanence the firing threatened to take.
This is why Becker reads the intensity better than any ledger of lost salary and status. A man who loses a job grieves the income and the routine and the standing. He does not usually accuse his employer of murder, brand the new managers as agents of a corrupt power, and frame his exit as a wound to the nation’s truth-telling. Pelley does all of it, and the disproportion is the data. The firing did not take a position. It struck the structure that kept his death unthinkable, and the response carries the energy of a man defending his own significance against annihilation. The scorched earth is not a tactical error. It is the convulsion of a hero system under desecration, and convulsion is the expected form.
Weber asks what authority Pelley held and what authority fired him, because for Weber every act of obedience rests on a claim to legitimacy, and there are only three pure claims a man can make. He can rule by personal gift, the charisma of an exceptional figure whose followers obey the man himself. He can rule by tradition, the sanctity of how it has always been. Or he can rule by rule, the rational-legal authority of the office, where obedience is owed to the position and the procedure and never to the person filling them. Pelley’s authority leaned toward the first two and against the third. People trusted Pelley, the man, his bearing in the dust at Ground Zero, his calm in Syria, the personal grace of the witness who was there. They also trusted the tradition he carried. What they did not obey was an office, because the correspondent’s authority was never the authority of a chair on an org chart. The new owners hold precisely that third kind. Bilton’s power is the power of the executive-producer office, conferred by ownership, indifferent to whether anyone reveres the man. The firing is the collision of authority types, and Weber tells you in advance who wins. Personal and traditional authority have no defense against the apparatus once the apparatus turns, because the apparatus signs the letter and controls the door, and charisma cannot fire anyone.
The lineage Pelley invokes is, in Weber’s terms, routinized charisma, and naming it that way explains its fragility. Pure charisma is unstable and brief. It belongs to the founder, the prophet, the exceptional man, and it dies with him unless it is routinized, converted into tradition or into bureaucracy so that it can outlive the body that bore it. Murrow was the charismatic founder, the man whose personal gift created the form. The institution routinized that gift into standards, into a lineage, into a succession of office-holders who inherited a portion of the founding grace. Pelley is a late heir of that routinization. When he calls on Murrow and Cronkite he is calling on the charismatic founders whose grace the tradition existed to preserve and transmit. But routinized charisma carries a built-in weakness Weber names directly. It lasts only while the custodians of the institution remain custodians of the tradition. Hand the institution to men who do not recognize the founding charisma, who see an asset rather than a lineage, and the inheritance turns worthless overnight. The new owners hold the institution and feel nothing owed to the line. The grace does not transfer to people who never knelt at the source.
Under the authority question runs the deeper Weberian split between two kinds of rationality, and this is the character of the conflict at its core. Pelley acts from value-rationality, Wertrationalität, action oriented to the intrinsic worth of a thing regardless of what it costs or yields. His old line, that journalism has nothing to do with being popular, is value-rationality stated without remainder. The worth of the work is internal to the work. The new regime acts from instrumental rationality, Zweckrationalität, the efficient fitting of means to ends, the calculation of ratings and revenue and political exposure. Weber read the whole movement of modern history as the steady conquest of value-rationality by the instrumental kind, the subordination of ends-in-themselves to the logic of means, and Pelley’s removal is one small enactment of that conquest. To the instrumental rationalist his stand looks like sentiment, an expensive refusal to count. To Pelley their calculation looks like corruption. Weber’s hard point is that neither can refute the other, because they reason in different currencies and there is no exchange rate between them.
This is why his book reads, in Weber’s company, as a vocation lecture. Weber gave two of them, on science and on politics, and each described the man who lives for his calling against the official who merely lives off the post. To have a vocation, a Beruf, is to give oneself inwardly to a thing as to a demon one has chosen to serve. Truth Worth Telling is Pelley’s journalism-as-a-vocation lecture, the inner ethic of the calling set down in words. And Weber attaches a tragedy to the man of vocation that fits Pelley to the line. The calling gets bureaucratized. The apparatus grows over it. The prophet is replaced by the administrator, and the inner devotion is squeezed out by the machinery until the office remains and the vocation departs. Pelley is the man of vocation at the moment the machinery closes over the calling, expelled from the house he served by men who occupy it without serving it.
His scorched-earth statement has a name in Weber too, and the name carries both admiration and warning. Weber separates the ethic of ultimate ends, where a man acts on principle and lets the consequences fall as they will, from the ethic of responsibility, where a man weighs what his act will bring about. Pelley speaks from the first. He says what he holds to be true, burns the bridge, and accepts the wreckage, because the principle leaves him no other move. Weber honored that posture and feared it in equal measure. He honored the integrity, the man who will not trim. He feared that the man of pure conviction often serves his cause badly even while he keeps his soul clean, that he can leave the world worse off and the principle no further advanced, having purchased his own purity with the ruin of the thing he meant to defend. Pelley keeps his integrity entire and loses the institution and the platform from which the integrity might have done work. The nobility and the futility arrive together, exactly as Weber said they tend to.
Disenchantment is the long process under all of this, and it gives the loss its real scale. Network news once carried an aura close to sacred. Cronkite was called the most trusted man in the country. The evening broadcast worked as a national rite, the anchor a kind of secular priest who told the tribe what had happened that day. Weber’s word for the fate of such auras is Entzauberung, the disenchantment of the world, the slow draining of magic and mystery by rationalization and calculation until what remains is calculable and administered and cold. The conglomerate, the analytics, the streaming metrics, the treatment of the news division as a line on a balance sheet, these disenchant network journalism and turn the rite into a product. Pelley feels the disenchantment as desecration, as the violation of something holy. Weber would tell him, without comfort, that it is the ordinary destiny of every sphere of value under modern conditions. The magic goes. The calculation comes. The iron cage closes over what was once a calling, and the standards he defends are the last warmth in a structure that has already gone to iron.
The frame’s deepest stroke is the one that explains why the fight feels like a clash of worlds rather than a quarrel over a contract. Weber held that the modern world is a polytheism of values, that life has broken into separate spheres, each with its own god and its own law, and that these gods war with one another forever without hope of reconciliation by reason. The god of truth, the god of the market, the god of power, these are different gods, and no argument can subordinate one to another, because there is no single scale on which to weigh them. Pelley serves the god of journalistic truth. The owners serve the gods of audience and political accommodation. Weber’s bleak honesty falls hardest here. There is no court above the warring gods. Pelley cannot prove the owners wrong in any sense that would compel them, because proof would require a common measure, and modernity has shattered the common measure. Each man serves his demon and must grant that the other serves another. The conflict reads as a war of civilizations because, in Weber’s terms, it is a war between value spheres, and those wars do not end in verdicts.
MacIntyre starts by asking what kind of thing journalism is, because his whole apparatus turns on one distinction, and the distinction only works once you have named the activity correctly. In After Virtue a practice is a complex, cooperative, socially established activity with standards of excellence internal to it, through which people reach goods that the activity alone makes available and extend their powers in the reaching. Chess is a practice. Bricklaying is not, though architecture is. Journalism as Pelley does it qualifies without strain. It is cooperative, it has standards built into it, and it yields goods you can get no other way than by doing the work on its terms. Name it a practice and the rest of the machine engages.
The goods come in two kinds, and the difference is the heart of the matter. External goods are money, fame, prestige, power, status. They attach to a practice by the accidents of social arrangement, they are always somebody’s property, and they are objects of competition with winners and losers, so that the more one man holds the less is left for the rest. Internal goods are different in kind. They can be reached only by engaging the practice, they are specified only in its own terms, and they are recognized only by those who have done the work. For journalism the internal goods are the sound story, the claim that verification has made firm, the judgment that holds under pressure, and the good of becoming a certain sort of man in the doing, the witness, the practitioner the discipline forms. The Emmys and the salary and the anchor chair and the audience number are external. The verified story and the formed practitioner are internal. In a healthy practice the external goods track the internal ones, the prizes mark the excellence, and Pelley’s 51 Emmys were, for a long while, external rewards fastened to internal achievement. The corruption begins when the external goods come loose from the internal ones and get pursued for themselves.
Now the relation that organizes the firing. MacIntyre insists you not confuse practices with institutions. Chess is a practice; the chess club is an institution. Medicine is a practice; the hospital is an institution. Journalism is a practice; CBS News is an institution. Institutions are necessarily and rightly concerned with external goods, because they acquire money and distribute power and status, and no practice survives long without an institution to house it. So far this is cooperation, not war. But MacIntyre adds the sentence that decides the Pelley case. The ideals of the practice are always vulnerable to the acquisitiveness of the institution, and the cooperative care for the common goods of the practice is always vulnerable to the competitiveness of the institution. The threat is not an accident or a scandal. It is a standing pressure, present in every practice-institution pair, the normal condition of doing serious work inside an organization that must also chase money and power. Pelley’s story, told this way, is not a fall from a garden. It is the ordinary vulnerability of a practice, arrived at its extreme. What is unusual is the degree. Under the new ownership the institution has gone almost wholly over to external goods. The settlement that bought peace with political power. The audience number as the ruling measure. The streaming priority. The favor sought from the administration. When an institution turns that completely toward external goods, it stops sustaining the internal goods of the practice and begins to feed on them.
The virtues enter exactly here, and they let you read Pelley’s stand for what it is rather than reducing it to something smaller. MacIntyre says the function of the virtues, of justice and courage and honesty in particular, is to let practices resist the corrupting pull of institutions. Without those virtues in the practitioners, the institution’s acquisitiveness wins by default. Look at what Pelley does and the virtues are all present and named. Honesty, when he says management told him to inject falsehoods. Courage, when he says it knowing it ends his career. Justice, when he defends the colleagues thrown out before him as people who stood for fairness. His scorched-earth stand is the exercise of the very virtues MacIntyre says sustain a practice against an institution that has turned on it. This is the reframe the other lenses could not give. Where one frame found death terror and another found a position-taking generated by the field, MacIntyre finds the virtues doing their proper work, the practitioner guarding the internal goods against the institution’s grab. And here is the part that answers the wall every deflationary run hit. MacIntyre does not need Pelley to win for the stand to be right. The exercise of the virtue is itself an internal good, the good of being a certain kind of man inside the practice, and that good is achieved in the act, defeat or no defeat. Pelley loses the external goods and the platform and realizes the internal good of integrity in the losing. The frame lets you say he was right to make the stand, and the rightness does not wait on the outcome.
MacIntyre lets you say something was lost and lets you name it without reaching for an essence or a binding ought, the two moves Turner stripped from you. What was lost is the internal goods of the practice as this institution could realize them. The capacity of CBS News to produce the verified story and to form the practitioner who can produce it. When the institution goes wholly to external goods, those internal goods cannot be sustained inside it, because the internal goods need the virtues and the standards, and the institution has stopped rewarding either. The name continues. The format continues. The external goods continue, since the program can still draw an audience and collect a prestige of sorts. The internal goods decay, because the thing that produced them, a community of practitioners holding standards against the institution’s pull, has been dispersed. That loss is real and it is nameable, and it is not nostalgia, because MacIntyre has given you the categories to say precisely what kind of good has gone and why it cannot persist once the institution is captured. It is a loss to more than the practitioners. A polity that loses a practice of truthful witness loses a place where a human good was made and human powers were extended, and such places are not easily rebuilt.
MacIntyre calls a living tradition a historically extended, socially embodied argument, and an argument in part about the goods that constitute it. The Murrow and Cronkite line is a tradition in that exact sense, an argument carried across decades about what good journalism is and demands. Pelley’s appeal to it is participation in the argument, not worship of dead men. The new owners stand outside the tradition and do not take up its argument. They override it by the power of the institution, firing the practitioners who carried it and installing an executive from outside the practice. MacIntyre’s account of how a tradition dies fits the event. A tradition decays when it can no longer carry on its argument, when the standards stop being debated and developed by practitioners and start being imposed or discarded by external power. The purge and the outside appointment do not contribute to the argument. They end it.
The Manager is MacIntyre’s emblematic figure of the age. The Manager treats the ends as given and concerns himself only with efficient means, and his authority rests on a claim to value-neutral effectiveness that MacIntyre exposes as a moral fiction masking the will to power. There is no neutral expertise in the direction of a human practice. The manager who claims to be merely effective is in fact imposing one set of ends, the external goods, while pretending to stand above all ends. Read the new regime through this figure and it snaps into focus. The talk of a new approach, of the future of the show, of unyielding support for the journalism, is the managerial fiction in operation, the presentation of a turn toward external goods as neutral stewardship. Pelley’s refusal to grant the managers their authority is, in MacIntyre’s terms, the practitioner rejecting the fiction of managerial neutrality and insisting that what is good journalism is a real question with answers internal to the practice, not a matter left to the discretion of men who manage the institution.
The book ends on a darker note that bears on where the practice goes from here. MacIntyre closes by saying the new dark ages are already upon us and that we wait for another and very different Benedict, the saint who, after Rome fell, built the small communities where a form of life could survive the collapse. Saint Benedict (c. 480-547) preserved by withdrawal what the empire could no longer hold. The implication for a captured practice is plain and unsentimental. You do not win the institution back, because the virtues cannot overpower the economic and political capital the owners hold. You sustain the internal goods, if you sustain them at all, in new and smaller forms outside the captured house, in independent and local communities of practice where the standards can still govern and the argument can still run. The practice survives the fall of its great institution only by finding humbler vessels.
Hirschman builds his book Exit, Voice & Loyalty (1970) on a setup so plain it hides its power. Any organization, a firm, a party, a newsroom, can decline, can slip from doing its work well. The people attached to it have two basic responses, and only two. They can exit, which means leave, withdraw, defect, stop showing up. Or they can use voice, which means stay and try to change the thing from inside, anything from a quiet grumble to open revolt. Exit is the clean response, the one economists love, a man votes with his feet and the matter is closed. Voice is the messy one, the political response, graduated and noisy and slow. The two trade off against each other. Where exit is easy, voice withers, because a man who can simply walk has little reason to stand and fight. Where exit is blocked or costly, voice comes alive. That is the whole engine, and the third term is what makes it turn.
The third term is loyalty, and loyalty is what decides between exit and voice. Loyalty is attachment to the organization, and its function in Hirschman’s account is precise. It holds exit at bay and activates voice. The loyal member, watching the decline, does not leave even when he could, because the leaving would cost him too much inwardly, would mean abandoning a thing he loves and is partly made of. So he stays, and staying, he raises his voice. And here is the line that decides the Pelley case before you reach the facts. The deeper the loyalty, the louder and more desperate the voice can grow, because the loyalist has foreclosed the easy door and has nothing left but to fight. Loyalty keeps a man in the building and then drives his protest toward the far end of the scale.
Set Cooper and Pelley side by side, because the comparison is the test, and the frame passes it. Cooper left in February, quietly, with no parting denunciation. Hirschman predicts exactly that response for a man in his position, and predicts it from observable facts. Cooper’s identity is portable. He is a brand unto himself, fixed to CNN as much as to the program, with platforms and options everywhere. For such a man exit is cheap, the outside world is full of substitutes, and his attachment to CBS as such runs shallower than his attachment to his own portable name. Cheap exit and shallow loyalty give you quiet exit. He took it.
Pelley sits at the opposite corner of every variable, and the frame reads him off those variables. Forty years in one house. An identity fused to CBS in particular, to the Murrow line in particular, not to a portable self that travels. Truth Worth Telling is forty years of attachment written down. For Pelley, exit in Hirschman’s sense had no substitute, because the thing he was loyal to was not journalism in the abstract, which he could practice anywhere, but this institution and this lineage, which exist in only one place. The cost of leaving the loved object was effectively infinite, since nothing else is CBS News. So loyalty held exit at bay, as the theory says it does, and activated voice. And because his loyalty ran deepest of anyone’s, his voice ran loudest. He used graduated voice first, the early concerns, the confrontation with Bilton at the all-hands meeting, the internal protest. When voice was not heeded, the loyalist escalated, straight up Hirschman’s range from grumble to revolt, to the charge that Weiss was murdering the show and the public statement that burned every bridge at once. That is loyalty-driven voice at full amplitude, and the theory called it in advance.
Hirschman names a tragic mechanism that fits Pelley to the letter. The members who care most about quality are the first to notice decline and so the first tempted to exit, which robs the organization of exactly the people whose voice could have saved it. Loyalty corrects this by holding the quality-conscious in to fight. Pelley is the most quality-conscious figure in the building, the most alert to the decline because he most values the internal excellence, and in a pure exit world he leaves first and the program loses his voice. Loyalty kept him in. But Hirschman is honest that the correction is double-edged. The loyalty that retains the quality-conscious member’s voice can also pitch that voice so high that it gets the member destroyed without saving a thing. Pelley’s loyalty kept his voice in the house and then drove it to the volume that got him fired. The same attachment that made him fight is what made the fight self-immolating.
There is a sharper turn in Hirschman that explains why Pelley’s voice failed inside before it went public, and it is the kind of non-obvious implication that marks a real theory rather than a label. The threat to exit is what gives voice its leverage. A member who can credibly say he will walk unless things change holds a weapon, and management bargains with him. But the deep loyalist forfeits that weapon, because everyone knows he will never walk. Pelley wanted to stay. He never threatened to leave, could not bring himself to, and so his voice carried no exit threat behind it. Management could discount it, because they knew he was not going anywhere of his own will. So his very loyalty made his voice louder and weaker at the same time, intense in feeling and toothless in leverage. The man who will never leave has surrendered the one thing that would make the people in charge listen. That is why graduated voice failed and only the explosion remained.
The ending follows from the efficacy condition, the last piece of the apparatus. Voice gets chosen and sustained while the member expects to influence the outcome. While Pelley believed the program could be turned around, he used measured voice. When influence became impossible, the new-approach memo, the outsider brought in over the practice, the purge of his colleagues, the loyalist hit the corner Hirschman marks as the place voice turns violent. Exit was unthinkable to him and voice had plainly failed, and that is the trap that produces the most extreme protest available. Pelley, denied the quiet exit Cooper took and denied any hope that staying could change things, converted his forced removal into maximal voice. The public denunciation is exit turned into a weapon, the loyalist’s last instrument once graduated voice is spent. If the inside is lost, leave loudly and aim the parting shot at the outside world, the profession and the public, since they are the only audience left to influence. The scorched-earth statement is not a loss of composure. It is exit deployed as voice, the predictable terminal move of a loyal member whose voice has failed and whose exit was never voluntary.
Charles Taylor (b. 1931) draws the line in A Secular Age between two ways a self can stand in the world. The porous self belongs to the enchanted age. Its boundary is open. Meaning and force live out in the world, in charged objects and sacred places and the cosmos, and they can cross into the self, move it, bless it, possess it, violate it. The porous self is vulnerable by its nature, because the powers that matter are outside it and can get in. The buffered self belongs to the disenchanted age. Its boundary is sealed. Meaning lives inside, in the mind, and the world outside is neutral, mechanical, available for whatever significance the self chooses to assign. Nothing crosses the buffer against the self’s will. The buffered self can hold the world at arm’s length, take its distance, decide that the world’s apparent meanings are only projections. It gains control and security and loses the old fullness, and Taylor says it pays for the buffer with a flatness it cannot always name. Lay this over Pelley and the frame lights up in one place and gutters in others, and the honest report has to give you both.
Start with the place it lights up. The professional creed of objective journalism is the buffered self written as epistemology. The reporter stands apart from the world he observes. He does not let it penetrate him. He assigns no meaning, takes no side, holds the events at a distance and renders them as neutral fact. Facts exist apart from opinion, Pelley says, and that sentence is the buffer in its purest form, a self sealed against the world it reports, refusing to be moved or possessed, keeping the boundary intact. By the official doctrine of his trade Pelley is the buffered man par excellence, the disengaged witness who is not enchanted by what he sees.
Then watch how he relates to the trade itself, because there the buffer fails and something older shows through. To Pelley journalism is not a neutral activity he performs at a distance. It is charged. The standards have force. The lineage carries power that flows from Murrow and Cronkite into the present, not as historical influence but as something closer to a living charge. The institution is a sacred place. Everything we stand for names a meaning he treats as resident in the world, out there, real, capable of being honored or profaned, and not a significance he merely assigns. He is open to it. It moves him, possesses him, and it can be violated. In his relation to the vocation Pelley stands as a porous self stands toward the sacred, penetrated by a charge that lives outside him and acts on him.
Here is the refinement the honest application demands, and it bends the frame back toward accuracy. Pelley is not porous in Taylor’s strict sense. He does not believe spirits walk the newsroom or that the lineage exerts an occult pull. He is a thoroughly modern, buffered man who has taken one domain, his calling, and invested it with the charge the porous self once spread across the whole cosmos. That is not porousness. Taylor has a better name for it. It is the cross-pressure of the buffered self, the modern who has sealed his boundary against the world in general and then reaches, in one chosen place, for the fullness the buffer shut out. The buffered self still aches for the porous condition and re-enchants selectively, sacralizing a vocation, a cause, a love, building one shrine inside the disenchanted house. Pelley is that man. Buffered everywhere, he has re-enchanted journalism, and he lives toward it with a porousness he grants nothing else. The clean binary does not hold him. The cross-pressure does, and it holds him tightly.
The owners stand at the far end, and Taylor lets you see why the two sides cannot share a description of the event. The new management are buffered selves in the managerial mode, and to them journalism is disenchanted through and through. It is a content product, an asset, a neutral arrangement whose meaning is whatever strategy assigns. Nothing in the work is charged. Nothing in it could be violated, because violation needs a sacred interior and the buffered self sees no interior, only a function to be redirected. So they can rebrand the program, restaff it, install an outsider over it, and feel that they have managed an asset, because for them that is all the asset is. Pelley experiences the same acts as desecration. The gap is not a disagreement about facts. It is a difference in the relation to meaning. He is open to a charge they cannot feel, and they handle as neutral matter a thing he holds as sacred, and that handling is, to him, profanation.
This is why the two vocabularies never touch. Pelley reaches for the language of violated charge. Murder. Contempt for what journalists do. The casting aside of something holy. That is porous speech, the speech of a self that knows the sacred can be desecrated by careless hands. The owners reach for the language of instrumental management. A new approach. The future of the show. Unyielding support for the journalism. That is buffered speech, the speech of a self that assigns meanings for ends and feels nothing penetrate. Each side hears the other as either hysterical or hollow. To the buffered manager Pelley’s grief looks like superstition about a content line. To the cross-pressured Pelley the manager’s calm looks like a man who cannot see the god in the room. Taylor explains the deafness exactly. They do not weigh the same evidence differently. They stand in different relations to whether there is anything there to weigh.
His book belongs here as the plea of a man under cross-pressure. Truth Worth Telling argues that the work carries a charge and a fullness that the content framing cannot hold, that journalism is more than an instrument, that something in it exceeds the buffer. Read through Taylor it is an argument for re-enchantment, a buffered modern insisting that one corner of the disenchanted world still holds the sacred and asking the reader to feel it too. The firing is the buffered order closing over the last man who refused, in this one place, to seal his boundary.
There is a quieter loss the frame catches at the edges. The charged anchor needed a porous audience, a public open to being addressed by a trusted figure who carried weight. Cronkite as the most trusted man in the country worked only because viewers stood open to that charge. The modern audience has buffered itself too, holds the news at arm’s length, takes its distance, treats every broadcast as one assigned meaning among many. Pelley’s openness, once the source of his power, becomes a liability in a room where no one transmits or receives the charge any longer. The porous holdout addresses a buffered crowd through buffered managers, and the signal he was built to send finds nothing open to land on.
Andrey Mir’s book says advertising once funded the press, and ad money paid for reach, so it bought the audience’s attention and left the editorial product mostly alone. That arrangement underwrote the twentieth-century standards of objectivity and impartiality. Then the ad money left for the platforms, and news stopped being a commodity anyone would pay for, because the feeds already give it away free. So the industry switched from supplying news to validating it. The new paymaster is the reader, and the reader is solicited not as a customer but as a donor to a cause, which means the outlet has to confirm what the donor already believes and keep him agitated enough to keep paying. Only triggering news draws that validation, so the media select for the agitating story and slide into value-based coverage, shedding the old standards. Mir’s epigram for the shift is that journalism tried to make its picture fit the world, while postjournalism tries to make the world fit its picture. The ad-driven press manufactured consent; the reader-driven press manufactures anger, and the book treats polarization as a media effect rather than a political one.
The audience became the paymaster, and a paymaster audience must be flattered, not informed.
Advertising funded news as a prestige good and held a wall between the money and the copy, and that wall is what let objectivity grow. Pelley’s standards were not eternal and were not only a tradition handed down from Murrow. They were economically underwritten by a revenue stream that has now died, and their decline tracks the death of that stream. The autonomy was bought, and the buyer left.
Pelley tells the story as truth and independence against political accommodation and profit. Mir suggests a darker reading that does not spare the side Pelley speaks for. The legacy prestige press, the New York Times and the Washington Post and the cable networks, ran straight into postjournalism on its own, driven by the same reader-revenue logic, the subscription surges of the Trump years bought with validation and alarm. If Mir is right, the value-based, anger-tuned coverage the new CBS owners say they mean to correct is not a fantasy they invented. It is the predicted output of the reader-revenue model, and it grew inside the very institutions Pelley champions. Mir takes no side in the CBS fight, but he hands the owners’ bias-correction claim a structural basis it otherwise lacked. The drift the managers point at is, on his account, real and economically driven, which means the merits are murkier than Pelley’s statement allows.
Pomposity
Pomposity is the single most common word his critics reached for this week. The Fox panel on The Five mocked him as pompous and said the program had murdered itself. Martha MacCallum said she could not get thirty seconds into the broadcast, called him pompous, and added that the man had never once laughed at himself. Michael Shellenberger (b. 1971) said CBS fired him rightly and called him closed-minded, dogmatic, and a pompous ass. On social media the recurring charge was entitlement and sanctimony, the sense of a man who thought an employer owed him an account of its staffing.
Justin Tosi and Brandon Warmke in their book Grandstanding: The Use and Abuse of Moral Talk define grandstanding as the use of public moral talk to display oneself, to convince others that one is morally respectable or superior, with recognition rather than the moral question as the real aim. They name the tells, and Pelley hits them. Ramping up, the escalation of moral claims past what the case warrants, to show stronger commitment than the next man. Trumping up, the discovery of grave moral stakes where the facts are thinner. Piling on. Excessive emotional display. Claims that the right view is self-evident to any decent person. Read his Wake Forest commencement against that list. He told graduates they were the fierce defenders of democracy, the seekers of truth, the vanguard against ignorance, and he set the moment beside the Union against the Confederacy, the Allies against the Nazis, the civil rights movement against segregation. That is ramping up and trumping up in one breath, the present recast as Gettysburg and Normandy with the graduating class as the saved remnant. His firing statement runs the same engine. Good people silenced, colleagues who stood for fairness against the forces of bias and for professionalism against chaos, a legend cast aside, the waste heartbreaking. Each phrase moralizes the speaker upward. Grandstanding theory captures the precise thing observers call pomposity, the conversion of a workplace dispute into a passion play with the speaker as the witness-martyr, and it has the virtue you prize, since it specifies behaviors you can point to rather than a mood you assert.
Tosi and Warmke build the concept from two parts, and you have to hold both to apply it without slipping into mere insult. The first part is the recognition desire, the wish to have others think of you as morally respectable, as a man of insight and conscience and courage, as someone on the right side. The second part is the grandstanding expression, the public moral talk you put forward to feed that desire. Grandstanding is the two together, moral discourse aimed at the speaker’s standing rather than at the moral question or at moving anyone closer to the good. That is the whole engine, and it tells you where to look. Not at whether Pelley’s claims are false, since grandstanding is compatible with true claims, but at whether the talk works to elevate the man.
Pelley’s recognition desire has a name he gave it himself. The witness. The truth-teller. The custodian of standards. Truth Worth Telling is a monument built to that standing, a book whose argument doubles as a self-portrait of the morally serious journalist. The persona is the recognition desire made into a career, and it primes every public moral statement to do double work, to address the issue and to display the man addressing it. Once you see the desire, the expressions line up against the taxonomy one by one.
Ramping up first, because he does it more than any other move. Ramping up is the escalation contest, each moral claim pitched higher than the last to show deeper commitment than the next man, until the talk arrives at a place no cool mind would endorse. At Wake Forth he told graduates they were the fierce defenders of democracy, the seekers of truth, the vanguard against the ignorance overtaking the country, and he set their moment beside the Union against the Confederacy, the Allies against the Nazis, and the civil rights movement against segregation. A commencement becomes Gettysburg and Normandy and Selma, and the graduating class becomes the saved remnant standing against the new Confederates. That is ramping up to the ceiling. He does it again in the newsroom. Told that Weiss loved the program, he answered that she was murdering it, that she had been brought in to kill it and was doing exactly that. A change of ownership and staff becomes homicide. The register has nowhere higher to go. Independent SentinelIndependent Sentinel
Trumping up sits next to it, the claiming of grave moral stakes where the facts are thinner, and here the application has to slow down, because trumping up depends on the stakes being thin, and that is partly in dispute. The commencement is clear. Graduation does not carry the weight of the Civil War, and dressing it in that weight is trumping up by definition. The firing statement is murkier, and I will come back to why that murk protects him.
The rest of the tells fall fast. Piling on, the joining of an existing chorus to be counted among the righteous. His colleagues had already framed the change as the wall between editorial independence and corporate interest being torn down, and Pelley added his louder voice to that condemnation, taking his place inside the virtuous group. Excessive emotional display, the public anguish that signals the depth of one’s conscience. Good people cruelly silenced, a legend cast aside, the waste heartbreaking. And the claim of self-evidence, the move that turns disagreement into a moral defect. When he says the owners show contempt for what journalists do, he implies that any decent practitioner sees the case as he sees it, and that the failure to see it is not a difference of judgment but a corruption of character. The self-evidence claim is the most flattering of all, because it sorts the room into the clear-sighted, where the speaker stands, and the morally blind, where his opponents fall.
So far this is description, and the seed got you that far. The run earns its keep at the next step, the harms, because Tosi and Warmke argue grandstanding is not merely unattractive but damaging, and the damage circles back onto Pelley in a way that explains his defeat better than vanity alone.
The first harm is inflation. When every dispute is a war for democracy and every personnel change a murder, the moral currency loses value, the way a coin loses value when the mint never stops printing. Alarm pitched at the maximum for a commencement leaves nothing in reserve for a true emergency, and audiences learn to discount the alarm. Pelley spent decades raising the moral register on subjects large and small, and the spending drew down the credibility that a real warning would need. The witness who cries civilizational stakes at a graduation has less left to spend when the stakes turn real.
The second harm is polarization, which grandstanding theory treats as a direct product of ramping up. Casting the other side as Confederates and Nazis does not persuade the other side. It hardens both camps and deepens the line between them. Pelley’s grandstanding helped manufacture the coalition coding that turned his firing into a culture-war trophy, the pompous partisan getting his due, and that coding did real work in how the event landed and in who cheered it.
The third harm is the cruelest, and it bears on the one part of his case that deserved a hearing. Grandstanding breeds cynicism. When a man’s moral talk reads as self-promotion often enough, observers come to suspect that all of it is, and they discount even the sincere and serious claim buried in the performance. Pelley made a grave charge in his firing statement, that management told him to put falsehoods and unverified assertions into a politically sensitive story. If true, that is the real thing, the thing that should cut through everything else. But he delivered it inside the same passion play as the heartbreak and the legend and the murder, in the voice of a man who had moralized himself upward at every prior opportunity, and so the serious charge arrives discounted, heard by half the audience as one more aria from a known performer. The grandstanding habit discredits the whistleblow. The boy who cried civilizational war finds the village slow to run when the wolf is at the door.
Now the limits. The first limit is built into the definition. Grandstanding turns on the recognition desire, and a desire is private. You observe the expressions and the tells from outside, and you cannot see the motive. The same words can issue from a man sincerely and floridly alarmed. So the frame establishes that Pelley’s discourse carries every external mark of grandstanding, and it cannot establish that he grandstands rather than that he believes every word and feels it at the pitch he shows. Tosi and Warmke press this hard, and they add the barb that fits this week perfectly. Accusing others of grandstanding is itself a favorite grandstanding move, the accuser displaying his own plain virtue against the showboat. That is most of what the Fox table and the loudest critics did, parading their own modesty by naming his pride. The frame turns on the people wielding it. Use it on Pelley and it watches you back.
The second limit is the bracket you have hit with every frame in this series. Grandstanding says nothing about truth. A grandstander can be right, and a sincere claim can be true even when it is performed for standing. So the frame diagnoses the form of the moral talk and leaves the merits untouched. Whether management ordered falsehoods is a question of fact, and the grandstanding read cannot answer it, only note that the manner of delivery made the question harder to hear. And the trumping-up charge depends on the stakes being thin, which holds cleanly for the commencement and not for the firing, because editorial independence under political pressure is a serious matter, and naming a serious matter is not trumping up. That murk is what protects him at the one point where it counts. The pomposity is real and the tells are all present. Whether the gravest claim inside the pomposity is also true, the frame leaves exactly where it found it, on the table, unsettled, waiting for the facts the performance cannot supply.
A man who orients himself toward a standard above convenience, popularity, profit, and comfort will sound solemn, and solemnity reads as superiority to people who hold nothing at that height. The act of saying that some things outrank the negotiable produces a certain gravity, and the gravity grates on listeners who treat most things as contingent. The history of conviction is also a history of the charge. Martin Luther (1483-1546) struck his contemporaries as insufferable. William Wilberforce (1759-1833) wore his cause like a hair shirt and his critics said so. Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn (1918-2008) returned from the camps and lectured the free West on its softness, and the West called him humorless and grand. Abraham Joshua Heschel (1907-1972) marched with the prophets in his voice and some heard only self-regard. If a man believes there are truths worth suffering for, he will sound graver than the people around him who believe that everything can be split and traded. So a portion of any pomposity charge is the ordinary friction of conviction meeting indifference, and an honest critic grants that portion first.
Pomposity is not the unavoidable tax on conviction, because conviction does not have to curdle, and most of the time it does not. Two men can speak the same sentence. One says journalism serves the public and means the public. The other says journalism serves the public and means, beneath the words, that he is journalism, that the standard and his person have fused, that to honor the one is to defer to the other.
The objection to Pelley is not that he believes in his craft. Many Americans still respect a journalist who believes in his craft and says so. The objection is that he appears unable to hold the institution and himself apart. When he tells the new owners they show contempt for what journalists do, the defense of the work and the defense of Scott Pelley arrive welded together, and the audience hears the weld. When he answered the claim that the new editor loved the program by saying she was murdering it, that she had been brought in to kill it and was doing exactly that, he spoke as a man defending a body, not a job description. He called himself, in his parting statement, a legend being cast aside, and the word is his own measure of his own height. Whether the perception of fusion is fair is a separate question from whether it has a cause. It has a cause, and the cause is that reverence for the standard and reverence for the self have run together until the listener can no longer separate them.
Notice what keeps other convinced men clear of the charge, because the solvent is visible once you look for it. George Orwell (1903-1950) held hard convictions and turned a colder eye on himself than on his enemies, and the self-suspicion bought his seriousness a pass. Christopher Hitchens (1949-2011) could swell to the grandiose and then puncture his own side and his own pose, and the puncture redeemed the swell. Humor, irony, and self-criticism are the agents that prevent conviction from hardening into sanctimony, because each one signals the same thing. The speaker knows the distance between the ideal he serves and the flawed creature serving it. Martha MacCallum reached for that distinction without naming it. She said Pelley had never once laughed at himself. Self-mockery is not frivolity. It is the public sign that a man sees the gap between the standard and his own performance of it, and a man who shows no such gap invites the suspicion that he has closed it in his own favor, that he takes himself to have arrived where the standard lives. Strip the solvent and devotion to a cause begins to sound like devotion to one’s own moral stature, even when the man means none of it.
There is a second cause, and it has less to do with the self than with the kind of authority a man claims when he speaks. The pompous man treats his seat as an inheritance. He assumes the moral high ground comes with the chair, that his position confers the right to be deferred to, rather than treating that right as something he must keep earning in front of an audience free to withhold it. The assumption grates hardest when the institution behind the chair has lost its old monopoly. When three networks owned the evening, the anchor’s gravity drew on a public that had nowhere else to look, and the gravity passed as earned. Address the same gravity to an audience with a thousand other windows open, an audience that grants the seat no automatic standing, and the bearing curdles into a demand for deference the room no longer feels obliged to pay. Part of what people hear as Pelley’s pomposity is the scrape of an inherited style of moral authority against an age that has taken back the deference the style assumed. He speaks as though the chair still commands the country. The country has wandered off, and resents being told to sit back down.
These two causes meet in a single arrangement, and the arrangement is what pomposity is. The pompous man assumes he embodies the standard completely, and he assumes his audience lacks the capacity or the right to judge him. Two assumptions, and you need both. Drop either and the tone changes. A man can hold a standard with a sense of tragedy, or of burden, or of acute and stated awareness of how far he falls short of it. He can sound unyielding, severe, out of step with his time, and none of those modes is pompous, because each leaves the standard above the man and the man open to judgment. Pomposity is the specific compound of self-coronation and a closed door, I am the standard, and you may not weigh me. The irritation the critics feel is a reaction to that compound, and they feel it whether or not they could put it into words.
So the discipline of standing for something without sounding pompous can be stated, though it is far easier to state than to keep. Hold the standard above yourself, not inside yourself, so that an attack on you is never automatically an attack on it. Keep the gap between the ideal and your service of it in view, and let the audience see you keep it, which is what humor and self-criticism do for the men who survive the charge. Treat your authority as a thing renewed in each encounter rather than a thing owned outright. Grant the people listening the standing to judge you, because the moment you revoke that standing you have told them you sit above judgment, which is the posture they will not forgive. Humility, understood this way, is no retreat from conviction. It is the refusal to confuse the servant with the thing served. The convinced men who escape the eye-roll are the ones who hold themselves to the standard more harshly than they hold anyone else, and who let the harshness show.
The argument needs one more turn, because the charge of pomposity is also a weapon. To a man’s opponents, humility usually means agreement, and any firm non-relativist stance sounds like arrogance to people who reject the standard it rests on. In a culture trained to hedge, to balance, to grant that every view has its merits, the man who declines to bend gets tagged proud by reflex, and the tag tells you more about the age than about the man. The critic’s eye-roll is not evidence of the speaker’s vanity. Often it is the standard’s enemies dressing their rejection of the standard as a complaint about his manner, since the manner is the easier target. The test is whether the substance holds up once the eye-rolling stops. Pelley sits on the line. His manner is florid, his self-regard runs close to the surface, and the fusion of the craft with his own person is real. At the same time the gravest thing he said, that management told him to put falsehoods and unverified claims into a politically sensitive story, is a claim about fact, and his pomposity neither confirms it nor refutes it. The discipline of judgment is to hold the two apart, to grant the pomposity and still weigh the charge on its merits, because the prophets sounded pompous too, and some of them were telling the truth.
The line between principle and pomposity, then, is not conviction and never was. It is humility, and humility is scarcest exactly where conviction is strongest, which is why the men who stand for the most are the ones most likely to sound unbearable and the ones most in need of the solvent they tend to lack. The danger is not in believing that something is worth your comfort, your job, or your peace. The danger is the slow slide from that belief into another one, that you have become the something, that the cause and your career are one body, and that the people who fire you are not making a personnel decision but committing a desecration. Pelley crossed into that second belief, or spoke as though he had, and the country that once sat still for him laughed instead. The standard he served deserved better than to be defended as if it were him. That confusion, and not his seriousness, is what they were mocking.
The Murrow-Cronkite Tradition
Edward R. Murrow and Walter Cronkite were pop news stars. So why the veneration?
To understand the worship, it helps situate them in their genre — commercial broadcast news. Within the constraints of that genre, they could only produce, at best, great broadcast news.
Murrow’s See It Now ran under Alcoa’s sponsorship. He spent his other evenings on Person to Person, walking through movie stars’ living rooms and admiring the drapes, and critics of the day already split him into high Murrow and low Murrow, the scourge of McCarthy on Tuesday and the flatterer of celebrities on Friday. He smoked through every broadcast and died of the lung cancer the medium’s culture sold. He ended his career not as a truth-teller but as head of the United States Information Agency under Kennedy, which is to say he closed out as a state propagandist. The saint’s life does not survive contact with the record.
And he knew the medium better than his admirers do. In 1958 he stood before the radio and television news directors and called television a box of wires and lights that could teach and illuminate, and warned that it was mostly used to distract, delude, amuse, and insulate. He diagnosed the thing as popcorn while he was still inside it. So when a man invokes the tradition of Murrow to mean rigor and depth and moral seriousness, he is invoking a tradition its founder said did not exist, or existed only in rare hours stolen against the grain of the form.
Cronkite is an easier case. The most trusted man in America was a polling result and a marketing line before it was a moral fact. His authority was tonal, the reassurance of a steady uncle reading the day to a tired country, and trust built on manner is not the same thing as truth built on inquiry. His lionized Tet broadcast, the night he called the war a stalemate, is celebrated because he dropped the reporter’s pose and editorialized, and the line about Johnson saying he had lost Cronkite is probably embellished. The man was a real wire-service reporter early on. As an anchor he presented and curated. He did not investigate, and he did not think at depth, because the chair does not allow it. An evening newscast minus the advertising holds fewer words than a single page of the paper. The form forbids the thing his mourners credit him with.
Broadcast news is shallow against print and laughable against scholarship, not because the men were dim but because the medium is built for a mass audience, a clock, a picture, and a sponsor, and those four masters do not permit depth. Neil Postman (1931-2003) made the full argument in Amusing Ourselves to Death, that the form of television bends everything on it toward entertainment, and that serious television is close to a contradiction.
On the other hand, the medium has one organ print lacks. It bears witness by image and sound. Murrow’s audio from the London rooftops during the Blitz, the dogs and fire hoses at Birmingham, the coffins and the burning villages of Vietnam carried into the living room, the migrant families of Harvest of Shame. None of that is analysis and none of it has the depth of an essay, yet it moved a country in ways no essay reached, and the civil rights movement owed part of its victory to footage the newspapers could only describe. The right image is shallow in analysis and sometimes devastating in witness.
A fair defender does not claim Murrow and Cronkite were moral exemplars in their persons. He claims a craft ethic, a wall between the sponsor and the copy, a willingness to air the uncomfortable fact, a public-service framing of the work. That ethic was partly real and it was also the product of a particular settlement and not a timeless standard. The wall stood because federal regulation demanded a public-interest showing, because three networks split a captive audience and could run news as a prestige loss-leader, because the Fairness Doctrine and the license renewal hung over them. The autonomy was bought by an economic and legal regime, and the regime is gone. So invoking the Murrow tradition as a standard to carry forward is not honoring a principle. It is grieving a market structure and dressing the grief as ethics. That is delusional.
Academia is deeper than the paper and the paper is deeper than the broadcast, and none of that tracks truth. Academia is deep and often captured, insular, and wrong, and the paper now runs on its own popcorn incentives, the reader-revenue pull toward validation of its audience. Depth is one axis. Reliability is another. Moral consequence is a third, and they do not line up. A shallow image can be true and a deep monograph can be false.
The Beatles were sovereign within pop, and consulting them on epistemology would be a category error. Murrow and Cronkite were sovereign within broadcast, and treating them as moral philosophers is the same error. Pelley’s pomposity is partly that error performed on himself. He claims the standing of a scholar or a prophet from the seat of a popcorn medium, and the audience feels the mismatch even when it cannot name it. The man speaks as if the chair carries the authority of the academy and the pulpit, when the chair carries the authority of a well-liked broadcast that has lost its monopoly.
The Murrow-Cronkite tradition as a transcendent moral standard is a myth, and the men were able commercial performers in a form that cannot bear the weight their heirs place on it.
We all want status and none of us can admit it, because Social paradoxeswanting status reads as selfish and insecure and therefore low, so we pretend to care about noble things instead. That pretense has a consequence he leans on hard. A status game can run only while the players fail to see it as a status game, and the moment they see it, they stop scoring and start to look vain, so the game disintegrates in the light like a vampire. Status games get played in the dark. The sacred value is the dark. It is the cover story we reach for when we defend a status game from exposure, the claim that our value is precious in its own right, that we are noble souls moved by an impartial love of truth, with no interest in the standing we accrue for loving it. Run Pelley through that and the whole episode rearranges.
Journalism is not a side case for this frame. Pinsof names it directly. When flaunting wealth collapsed into something gross, the cool industries became the ones that forgo money and let you flaunt wit and virtue instead, and he lists the arts, academia, and journalism among them. Journalism, on this account, is already an anti-status game. The reporter trades the salary of finance for the right to display something finer, and the sacred values of the trade, truth and the public’s right to know and holding power to account, are the cover that keeps the game running without anyone naming it. Pelley is a high scorer in that game. Forty years, the awards, the descent from Murrow, the trusted face. His standing is accumulated status in a contest whose first rule is that no one calls it a contest, and his lifelong truth-talk is the medium in which the rule gets kept. He has played beautifully in the dark.
The sacred narrative is his native tongue. Pinsof says we build a story in which we are not vain at all, only impartial servants of the abstract good. Pelley’s witness persona is that story without a seam. The man who reports regardless of popularity, who carries the flame for the public, who serves a truth that stands apart from opinion. Truth Worth Telling is the sacred narrative bound and titled. The frame does not ask whether Pelley believes the narrative. It says the narrative’s job is not description. Its job is to shield the game, and a shield works best when the man holding it thinks it is a creed.
Now the taboo, and the fury it explains. Pinsof says questioning a sacred value is forbidden, and that the guardians of a threatened game answer with anger, the way a duelist answers a mockery of dueling by invoking manly honor. Pelley’s response to the new owners is that anger to the letter. Told the new editor loved the program, he said she was murdering it and had been brought in to kill it. He charged the owners with contempt for what journalists do. The heat is not the heat of a man losing a job. It is the heat of a high scorer watching someone pry the sacred shield off his game, which would let the light in and turn his decades of accumulated standing to vapor. He defends the taboo because the taboo is what his status rests on.
The sharpest tool in the piece is the asymmetry, and it reframes the fight entirely. If you are winning a status game you defend it as noble and aimed at the betterment of mankind, and if you are losing one you attack it as toxic and irrational, and the culture wars are just power struggles between rival subcultures dressed up as clashes of value. Pelley has won the legacy-journalism game for forty years, so he defends it as sacred. Weiss built her name attacking that same game as captured and biased and conformist, the loser’s move turned into a brand, an anti-status game pitched against legacy journalism’s sacred values. So the collision is not truth against corruption, in Pinsof’s reading. It is the incumbent defending his prestige game as holy while the insurgents attack it as rotten, each side’s professed values tracking its position in the struggle rather than the merits. Pelley says truth. Weiss says bias. The frame says they are fighting over who sets the rules of the status game, and both would say exactly what they are saying whether or not anything sacred were at stake.
The week after the firing is a textbook collapse. Pinsof describes the moment players gain common knowledge that a game is a status game, after which they see one another as vain and the game falls apart. The mockery did that to the anchor’s gravity in public. The Fox panel called him pompous and said he had never once laughed at himself. That is the crowd refusing to grant the sacred value, seeing the witness pose in the light and finding it self-absorbed, the precise verdict Pinsof predicts when a game collapses. And the mockers are not standing outside all games. When one of them noted that he can laugh at himself, he was playing the anti-status game Pinsof describes, the plain-spoken regular-guy pose that scores by looking unbothered, which is one more status game with the sign filed off. Even the accusation works this way. Pinsof says we call our rivals status-seekers, you are only virtue signaling, while hiding that the accusation is our own bid for status. The pomposity charge is that bid. It wins points in the anti-pompous game by exposing Pelley’s points in the sacred-value game. The frame turns every figure in the story into a player, including the ones congratulating themselves on seeing through the players.
A commenter on the Pinsof page asks whether, if everything is status-seeking, the label tells you anything at all. It is the right question. A reading that fits Pelley, the owners, the critics, the audience, Pinsof, me, and you with equal ease discriminates among none of them. The frame names a form, the sacred cover over a status game, and by naming it everywhere it settles nothing in particular. It cannot tell you whether the value under the cover is also real, because it was built to dissolve the question of reality, not to answer it.
Pinsof concedes with a grin that his own anti-bullshit project is a sacred value too, a covert status game he plays because he thinks he can win it. So the frame turns on its user. To call Pelley’s truth a status cover is itself a move in the cynic’s status game, the anti-naivety game, and your pointing me at this page and my running it are moves in it as well. The frame grants no view from nowhere. It is one more player climbing in the dark, and it knows it.
The frame debunks the purity of the motive. It does not, and cannot, debunk the truth of the claim.
David Pinsof gives you a two-stage engine, and the stages run in sequence. Dark idealism comes first, the conviction that I am pure and noble and benevolent. That conviction blinds a man to the selfish, groupish ape underneath, and it recasts anyone who opposes him as evil or subhuman. Dark morality is what the blinded idealist then does, the heartfelt rightness that licenses the tribalism and the bullying and the vilification. Idealism is the fuel. Dark morality is the fire. Run Pelley through both and the witness becomes legible as the most dangerous figure in his own story, by Pinsof’s lights, not the most admirable.
Start with the self-image, because Pinsof names it as the worst bullshit story we tell. The story that humans are special, angels rather than apes, something outside the bounds of evolution, and he says this story lets us act like the worst kind of animals while seeing ourselves as saints. Pelley’s persona is that story worn as a vocation. He does not experience himself as a high-status incumbent guarding his turf. He experiences himself as a servant of truth at war with corruption. Pinsof’s description of the zealots of history fits the structure, though not the scale, and the scale distinction has to be kept, since in the theater of their minds they were not apes competing for dominance but heroes against the forces of darkness, and they did not merely think they served the good, they knew it, felt it in their bones. That bone-deep certainty is dark idealism. It is what lets a man torch his employer in front of the staff and feel cleaner for it.
Idealism hides the ape. Pelley cannot see himself as a losing player in a status fight, the reading sacred value offered, because the idealism has already told him the fight is about truth and not about turf. So every move by the owners has to be read through his own purity, and the syllogism writes itself. I am pure. They oppose me. Therefore they are impure. The new managers stop being businessmen with a different editorial vision and become agents of corruption. He says the owner casts the legend aside to curry a moment of favor with the Trump administration, that management instructed him to inject falsehoods and bias. The subhuman coding stays mild but present. They lack the capacity to see what any honest journalist sees. They are barbarians who have taken the temple. The idealism manufactures the villains it needs.
Then the second stage. Pinsof argues morality is not nice but mean, that it evolved as a coordination device for dominating rivals, and that when someone commits a reputation-damaging act, morality lets the group use that act as a focal point to coordinate against him. Pelley’s public statement is that move performed in the open. He converts the owners’ acts, the firings and the editorial pressure, into moral outrages, cruelty and silencing and falsehood, and the conversion builds a focal point around which the newsroom and the profession and the sympathetic public can gather to coordinate against the new management. Pinsof says morality is a numbers game, because bigger mobs get more stuff, and an assurance game, because you need to trust your allies will not defect, which is why tarring a rival as evil is so rewarding, since it reassures the allies they will have your back when it is time to strike. The statement does both. It rallies the larger mob and it signals to the fired colleagues and the staff that Pelley stands with them. The morality is a weapon, and the target is the rival who threatens his standing.
The vilification follows the same logic, and Pinsof’s line is blunt, that morality is the parent of hatred. By one account of the Wake Forest speech, Pelley set the graduates against an enemy he likened to Confederates, Nazis, and segregationists. Tarring a whole political coalition as the heirs of slavery and genocide is dark morality in full operation, the heartfelt rightness fueling the hatred, and Pinsof adds the cold note that the targets need not actually have an antisocial character, since the group gains from coordinating against them regardless. The owners get the same treatment in miniature. Liars, incompetents, men of contempt. The nice part sits on the surface, service to the public, and the mean part runs underground, the coordinated move to dominate and expel the people who took his game away. Independent Sentinel
Watch what the idealism does to the chance of a deal, because Pinsof lists it. Moralizing reduces compassion and prevents groups from compromising and making peace. Bilton offered a path. He wrote that he had hoped they could find a way forward together and that Pelley made clear he wanted no such path. The idealist could not take the deal, because you do not negotiate with the devil, and the moral war he had built forbade the handshake that an ordinary employee would have weighed. Dark morality forecloses the compromise that self-interest alone would have left open. The purity costs him the exit.
Step back and the whole episode reads, in this frame, as two moral mobs rather than a clash of truth and corruption. Pelley brandishes the social weapon, the viral statement on the world’s stage, and the counter-mob picks up its own pitchforks, the panels and the partisans moralizing his firing as the righteous expulsion of a biased hack. Both sides run dark morality. Both are certain of their nobility. Both tar the other as evil. And Pinsof’s closing inverts the sympathy you are tempted to feel. He says we fear the cynic and should fear the idealist, that the mob and the higher purpose and the feeling of being part of something larger than ourselves is the thing that should terrify us, because the starry-eyed dreamers are what let the Machiavellian operators seize power. So the frame flips the valence of the story. The man of conscience becomes the dangerous one, his certainty the license for the cruelty and the foreclosed peace, and the cost-cutting owners become almost reassuring by comparison, because at least they seem to know they are apes after money and do not imagine they are angels.
Gemini says: Here is a breakdown of the National Press Club luncheon featuring Scott Pelley (b. 1957) from May 22, 2019.
Key Time Stamps
0:00 – 2:22: Introduction by NPR correspondent and National Press Club President Allison Fitzgerald Kojak. Pelley opens with a lighthearted remark about his wife rarely letting him eat chicken-fried steak in Texas, making the lunch a treat.
2:23 – 3:54: Pelley explains the unusual structure of his memoir. He organized it as an anthology of short stories centered on human virtues—such as gallantry, duty, and valor—rather than a standard chronological autobiography about himself.
3:55 – 6:23: Discussion of the opening chapter on September 11. Pelley details his use of extensive post-event research, including a ten-year study by the National Institute of Standards and Technology and newly unsealed 9/11 radio transmissions, to contextualize what he saw as an eyewitness.
6:24 – 10:27: Pelley reads an excerpt from the book featuring a 24-minute 9/11 call from Melissa Doy, a financial analyst on the 83rd floor of the South Tower, and describes Chief Orio Palmer’s rapid ascent up the only surviving staircase to try to reach survivors.
10:28 – 15:13: Pelley addresses the current state of political discourse. He shares a private exchange with Donald Trump regarding anti-press rhetoric and notes that the FBI later informed him that the 2018 MAGA bomber had compiled a dossier on Pelley’s family.
15:14 – 17:06: Analysis of the shift from the Information Age to the Disinformation Age. Pelley argues that while distribution methods have changed, the fundamental ethical rules of content remain permanent.
17:07 – 21:54: Pelley details a 60 Minutes experiment where his team purchased 5,000 Russian bots for a few hundred dollars to demonstrate how easily fake news trends and manipulates social media algorithms. He urges readers to rely on brand-name media that bear reputational risk.
21:55 – 23:19: A reflection on Walter Cronkite and the end of the era of a single, universally trusted anchor. Pelley calls this shift a positive development, encouraging the public to substitute cynicism with constructive skepticism.
23:20 – 25:32: Concern over the decline of local journalism and its impact on civic accountability in smaller towns, using his own residence in Darien, Connecticut, as a rare counterexample.
25:33 – 27:36: Pelley shares a personal story about lying about his age at 15 to secure a job as a copy boy at the Lubbock Avalanche-Journal, which launched his reporting career.
27:37 – 29:30: A comparison of presidential untruths, contrasting the single-subject focus of Bill Clinton during the Lewinsky scandal with broader policy falsehoods.
29:31 – 35:08: Examination of former Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke (b. 1953) during the 2008 financial crisis. Pelley explains how Bernanke used secret emergency powers to flood the global economy with liquidity to avoid a repeat of the Great Depression.
35:09 – 41:16: Behind-the-scenes breakdown of an investigation into civilian casualties in Afghanistan and the Pentagon’s internal formulas regarding acceptable civilian loss during high-value targeting operations.
41:17 – 48:28: Pelley reads an extended narrative about smuggling a wireless microphone into Purple Bamboo Park in Beijing in 1998 to interview Chinese dissident Bao Tong (1932-2022). He recounts running from the secret police only to discover the man chasing them was a park ranger shouting to keep off the grass, though the true consequences hit their local producer months later.
48:29 – 51:10: Thoughts on leadership changes at CBS News under Susan Zrynski, endorsing Norah O’Donnell for the evening news and John Dickerson for 60 Minutes.
51:11 – 56:00: Constitutional discussion on social media regulation. Pelley asserts that government control violates the First Amendment and argues instead for human editors over artificial intelligence to filter information streams.
56:01 – 57:35: Advice for local journalists investigating voting system vulnerabilities at the state level.
57:36 – 60:05: Closing remarks. When asked which person living or dead he might choose to share a meal with, Pelley selects Donald Trump, citing a desire to understand his psyche in a setting without an audience.
Summary of Core Ideas
The Architecture of Witness Testimony
Pelley argues that eyewitness reporting is inherently incomplete. An anchor on the scene sees the immediate destruction but lacks the systemic context. True journalism requires returning to an event years later to marry personal observation with empirical data, engineering reports, and public records.
The Institutional Shield of Reputation
In addressing the rise of automated disinformation, Pelley places the burden of defense on institutional accountability. The primary value of legacy media is not an absence of errors, but the existence of severe reputational and financial consequences when errors occur. This exposure acts as an incentive for accuracy that decentralized platforms and anonymous operations lack.
Technical Power and the Unilateral State
Through the example of Ben Bernanke, Pelley highlights how crisis shifts power to insulated technocrats. When partisan bodies experience total gridlock, unilateral figures can invoke obscure legal instruments—such as the 13(c) emergency powers of the Banking Act of 1935—to run parallel governance systems outside public view to prevent economic collapse.
Analytical Thoughts and Surprising Revelations
The Paradoxical Security of Public Exposure
The most striking anecdote is the delayed retaliation by the Chinese security apparatus following the Bao Tong interview. The immediate players—Pelley, his American producer, and the high-profile dissident himself—remained untouched because their prominence made them inconvenient targets for immediate state violence. Instead, the state delayed its response by three months and targeted Natalie Liu, the local Beijing producer whose lower international profile allowed the state to exact a penalty with minimal diplomatic friction.
The Mathematical Calibration of Attrition
Pelley’s breakdown of the Pentagon’s high-value targeting metrics reveals a cold, utilitarian logic embedded within military operations. The revelation that the military operated on a specific baseline allowance of 20 civilian casualties before requiring cabinet-level authorization strips the abstraction away from modern warfare. It illustrates an operational framework where human collateral is managed through strict bureaucratic thresholds, balancing immediate tactical losses against theoretical long-term strategic outcomes.
The Material Reality of Rhetoric
The transition from verbal hostility to physical threat is demonstrated by Pelley’s interaction with the FBI. While public figures often treat political rhetoric as a theatrical device for mass mobilization, the discovery of a operational target file on Pelley’s family by a domestic extremist shows that mass communication regularly decodes performance into literal execution. This highlights a fundamental breakdown in the traditional barrier between public political theater and private physical safety.
‘MS NOW hosts react to CBS News’ firing of Scott Pelley’
Gemini says: Here is the breakdown of the news segment covering the sudden termination of Scott Pelley from CBS News and 60 Minutes.
Key Time Stamps
0:00 – 1:32: Rachel Maddow opens the segment with the breaking news that veteran correspondent Scott Pelley has been fired by CBS News following a sharp confrontation in a staff meeting. She links the firing to a broader transformation at the network under new ownership seeking federal regulatory approval for a major media consolidation.
1:33 – 4:51: Jen Psaki reads Pelley’s official departure statement. The statement highlights a recent 9% jump in viewers for 60 Minutes before accusing new management of casting the program’s legacy aside to curry favor with the Trump administration, forcing the insertion of unverified assertions, and allowing politicians to select their own interviewers.
4:52 – 6:11: Maddow compares the current management approach at CBS to recent operations within government agencies, where outside leadership entered without institutional knowledge and disrupted foundational systems.
6:12 – 7:27: The panel discusses the ethical dilemmas facing professional civil servants and legacy journalists regarding when to remain within a compromised institution and when to exit.
7:28 – 9:26: Miles Taylor highlights the danger this environment poses to a younger generation of media professionals, noting that top-down pressure to alter content risks reshaping the future of journalistic standards. He highlights a recent industry awards ceremony where a young CBS journalist openly criticized corporate interference.
9:27 – 10:20: Psaki addresses potential political criticism, noting her firsthand experience being aggressively questioned by both Pelley and Cecilia Vega while serving in Democratic administrations, rejecting claims that their reporting lacked independence.
10:21 – 12:45: The host provides detailed context behind the firing, noting that Pelley clashed directly with Nick Bilton—the new executive producer handpicked by Editor-in-Chief Bari Weiss—during a staff meeting regarding the recent dismissals of senior leaders and correspondents.
12:46 – 14:31: A review of conflicting narratives. The segment contrasts Weiss’s claim that the foundation of trust was broken by Pelley with Pelley’s counter-assertion that management was openly hostile and raised termination within the first fifteen seconds of their meeting.
14:32 – 16:13: Jim Acosta and Don Lemon join the table. They place Pelley’s departure alongside recent pressures faced by independent journalists and express concern that institutional priorities have pivoted away from protecting news brand credibility toward corporate compliance.
16:14 – 21:04: Acosta argues that the primary driver behind management decisions is not profitability or audience metrics, but an ideological alignment intended to construct a friendly mass media apparatus to secure regulatory clearance for a upcoming multi-billion dollar merger with Warner.
21:05 – 24:45: The panel examines the policy changes inside the Department of Justice during the administration’s first year, specifically highlighting a quiet memo that rescinded special legal protections for journalists facing leak investigations.
24:46 – 28:43: An analysis of the regulatory leverage at play. The discussion centers on how the administration uses antitrust scrutiny and regulatory approvals as a tool to influence corporate media behavior and personnel decisions.
28:44 – 31:40: Media analyst Ken Auletta compares the friction to historical corporate mergers, noting that while aging audiences require digital adaptation, summary dismissals of core talent undermine the trust necessary to run a credible news operation.
Summary of Core Ideas
The Utility of Regulatory Leverage
The segment demonstrates how executive branch powers over corporate mergers act as an indirect tool for altering newsroom behavior. Parent companies seeking favorable antitrust rulings or federal approvals face structural incentives to neutralize critical reporting and alter editorial leadership long before any direct state action occurs.
The Institutional Transition to State Favor
The discussion outlines a shift in media management where traditional performance indicators, such as a 9% audience growth or multi-season profitability, are secondary to political utility. Under this model, the value of a news asset shifts from its independent market success to its capacity to shield or promote specific political figures.
Structural Vulnerability via Policy Revision
The panel connects public personnel changes to quieter institutional rollbacks. By rescinding internal Department of Justice guidelines that previously required high-level authorization to investigate working journalists, the state lowers the bureaucratic cost of tracking whistleblowers and accessing reporter files.
Analytical Thoughts and Surprising Revelations
The Relinquishment of Financial Logic
The most notable aspect of the corporate takeover is the deliberate disruption of a highly profitable asset. Historically, corporate interventions in news divisions were driven by cost-cutting or a desire to maximize ratings. Here, the new management appears entirely willing to erode the brand equity and viewer loyalty of 60 Minutes—a historic financial engine—to secure a broader, cross-industry corporate consolidation. Political compliance serves as a non-monetary currency used to purchase regulatory permission for larger market expansions.
The Paradox of Independent Media Spaces
The commentary from Lemon and Acosta highlights a structural inversion in modern journalism. While legacy networks once provided the legal defense funds and institutional protection necessary to withstand political hostility, they have become highly vulnerable to top-down corporate capture. Consequently, the burden of critical reporting is pushed onto independent digital spaces and subscription platforms. These spaces possess greater editorial autonomy but lack the collective reach and infrastructure of a major broadcast network.
Bipartisan Risk in Precedent Setting
The segment concludes with a structural warning regarding the long-term consequences of using regulatory power to shape news content. When corporate media operations establish a precedent of altering editorial staff to satisfy a current administration, they formalize a mechanism of compliance that subsequent administrations can use. This turns newsrooms into permanent regulatory dependencies, regardless of which party holds executive power.
Reactions to Scott Pelley’s firing reveal a stark right-left divide.
On the left, the response centers on a defense of journalistic independence and the First Amendment. Commentators like Rachel Maddow frame Pelley’s ouster as the structural “bulldozing” of a legacy news institution by corporate owners eager to secure federal regulatory approvals for market consolidation. Figures like Jen Psaki, Don Lemon, and Jim Acosta elevate Pelley as a symbol of professional courage, defending his refusal to insert unverified claims or yield editorial control to political figures. The narrative from this side positions the firing as a “five-alarm warning” regarding the rise of an engineered state-media apparatus designed to suppress dissent and manage public information.
Conversely, the perspective from the right frames the conflict as an issue of internal professionalism and institutional trust rather than political censorship. Weiss asserted that the foundation of “trust and mutual respect” within the newsroom was broken by Pelley’s confrontational behavior during staff meetings. This viewpoint suggests that the network changes are a necessary modernization of an aging broadcast format. Rather than viewing Pelley as a suppressed truth-teller, this side interprets his resistance as an entitled defense of the old guard against legitimate corporate restructuring, viewing accusations of political bias as an ideological shield used by legacy journalists to deflect from management’s right to manage.
When applied to the Pelley controversy, the competing reactions map to specific propagandistic biases used to manage alliances:
1. Alliance Theory notes that liberals and conservatives possess the same basic cognitive toolkit for conflict. They are equally hostile to their political rivals and equally protective of their allies. The Left’s Reaction: Journalists, legacy network anchors, and major media brands are strongly associated with the liberal super-alliance (as illustrated by the high thermometer ratings for journalists and networks among Democrats). Because Pelley is a prominent ally, the left deploys “victim biases” on his behalf—expanding the narrative to view his firing as a systemic assault on the First Amendment and an effort to silence truth-tellers. The Right’s Reaction: Corporate executives, right-leaning media entrepreneurs (like Bari Weiss), and the current political administration are core allies of the conservative coalition. Consequently, the right applies “perpetrator biases” to network management, downplaying the harshness of the sudden terminations, framing the ouster as a standard resolution to an employment dispute, and shifting the blame to Pelley for breaking workplace trust.
2. The theory emphasizes that moral principles are not so principled; they are flexible tools used to signal allegiance or mobilize third-party support. The Pelley conflict exposes the ad-hoc nature of these principles on both sides:
The Left’s Inconsistency: The left defends Pelley using the absolute value of editorial independence and freedom of speech, arguing that corporate management has no right to alter an anchor’s reporting. However, as noted in the Alliance Theory framework, this devotion to free expression and non-interference routinely vanishes when the speaker is an ideological rival. The left has historically supported the restriction, deplatforming, or corporate discipline of conservative figures or business entities that violate progressive social norms.
The Right’s Inconsistency: The right defends the firing by invoking the principles of managerial authority, corporate property rights, and the necessity of structural uniformity. Yet, this deep respect for top-down authority is highly selective. Conservatives aggressively attack, defund, or disobey traditional authority structures—such as the FBI, the WHO, or federal regulatory agencies—whenever those institutions investigate or challenge conservative leaders like Donald Trump.
3. Finally, Alliance Theory illuminates why both sides frame the dispute as a profound moral battle rather than an ordinary clash of factions. Partisans systematically attribute noble motives (like truth and fairness) to their allies while accusing their rivals of base motives (like political corruption or bad faith). The left claims it is fighting to save an iconic American institution from nefarious political subversion, while the right claims it is restoring professional boundaries against self-serving insubordination. According to Alliance Theory, neither side is operating from a detached, foundational philosophy. The primary difference driving the entire debate is not what values the two sides hold, but whom they recognize as their allies in the struggle for institutional power.
Pinsof’s claim compresses to five words, behavior is determined by incentives, and the payload is in how wide he stretches the word. Incentives are things in the world that human primates evolved to want, food and status and safety and territory and intergroup domination dressed as a romantic ideology, and, he adds, the appearance of having nicer incentives, which we call values, than the ones we actually have. The arrangement of those wants across people and time is an incentive structure. Behavior tracks the structure. Apply that to Pelley and CBS and the first thing it does is take his own story away from him, because his story is the rival worldview Pinsof exists to attack.
That rival is likability determinism. We prefer to think in stories with a cast of likable heroes and unlikable villains who use their free will to save or ruin the world, and we explain bad outcomes by bad people and good outcomes by good people, so that the fix is always to put the likable people, meaning us, in charge. Pelley’s firing statement is a clean specimen of the form. Good people were silenced, he says, colleagues who stood for fairness against the forces of political bias and for professionalism against chaos, while the new owner casts a legend aside to curry favor with the administration and instructs him to inject falsehoods. Heroes of truth, villains of corruption, the good thing ruined by bad men using their power. Pinsof’s whole point is that this is the comforting story and not the explanation. It puts the cause in the character of persons and never looks at the structure that produced them.
The standards Pelley mourns were not the achievement of good men. They were the output of an incentive structure that rewarded them, or at least allowed them. A network oligopoly, a public-interest mandate hanging over the license, news running as a prestige loss-leader paid for by entertainment profits and broadcast advertising, a single mass audience with nowhere else to look. Under those incentives the appearance of impartiality and grave authority paid off in status and reach, which is exactly the appearance-of-nicer-incentives that Pinsof says we chase. Then the structure changed. A conglomerate owner who needs regulatory approval and political goodwill. An attention economy where engagement rules and the old mass audience has shattered. A revenue model that, as Mir argued, pays for validation and heat rather than for verification. A political setting where crossing the administration carries a price. Feed those incentives in and the owners’ behavior is what the structure produces. Settle the suit. Reshape the program. Accommodate power. Not because Ellison and Weiss and Bilton are villains who wandered in to wreck a sacred thing, but because the incentives flipped and behavior follows incentives.
The line that decides the CBS case is Pinsof’s bluntest. People are only as good as their incentives, so that if the incentives reward hurting others, even good people hurt them, and the good members of a death cult are the ones who volunteer for the bombing. Turn it on the institution and on Pelley both. The old CBS could afford its virtue because the structure rewarded it. The same building, under a structure that now rewards political accommodation and engagement, produces accommodation and engagement, and the personnel did not have to become worse people for the output to change. Turn it on Pelley and it cuts closer. His own virtue, the impartial witness, was incentive-supported for forty years. Being the grave truth-teller paid in status, security, awards, and a near-monopoly share of the national narrative. He was not a saint resisting the market. He was a man whose behavior fit an incentive structure that paid handsomely for that behavior. When the structure that rewarded the witness collapsed, the witness was expelled, and the expulsion needs no villains. It needs only a change in what the institution is paid to do.
His faith about the words is the next thing the frame deflates, because Pelley is a righttalkist. Righttalkism, after Robin Hanson, is the view that the world is fixed by making people say the right things, that good people talk right and bad people talk wrong and if everyone talks right then all is well. The witness’s whole creed is righttalkist. Say the true thing loudly and correctly and you shame the corrupt and save the republic. His firing statement is the creed in action, the right words about truth and bias broadcast at volume in the belief that the saying will move the outcome. But Pinsof says to change the world with words you need three things, something new no one else would say, an incentive for people to listen, and an incentive for them to respond as you intended, and you control only the first. Pelley controlled what he said. He controlled neither whether the owners had any incentive to listen, which they plainly did not, nor whether the wider audience would respond as he meant, which split along the lines their incentives already drew. So the words got the people already on his side to nod and got the other side to cheer his exit, which is to say they changed nothing. The frame predicted the futility before the statement was posted.
People who say things for a living, Pinsof writes, pretend that what they say is all that matters, that history is about ideas, because it flatters them and because the feeling of being important is a large human incentive. Pelley says things for a living, and his entire self-understanding rests on the belief that the saying is what counts, that journalism’s words shape the nation. Truth Worth Telling is the monument to that belief. Incentive determinism answers that the saying is the one ingredient he controls and the least of the three the world requires, and that the overrating of the saying is the occupational vanity of everyone whose trade is words.
Pinsof’s thin hope is that becoming aware of our incentive structures incentivizes us to choose them more wisely. Applied to journalism this is the only useful lever. If you want truthful reporting you do not install good people in the chair and pray. You design the incentives. Funding that does not pay for validation and anger. Ownership insulated from political leverage. Protections that make verification rational rather than expensive. The CBS collapse is a failure of incentive structure, and the repair is structural. By personalizing it into good people against bad people, Pelley aims everyone at the wrong lever, because the next owner under the same incentives will behave the same way whatever his character. That redirection, from the villains to the structure that manufactures them, is the frame’s real gift on this case, and it systematizes into a law what Mir gave as an economic engine and what the field reading gave as the conquest of the autonomous pole by money.
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Eric Schulzke (b. 1965) is an American political scientist, journalist, and nonprofit founder whose working life crosses three fields that rarely meet in one biography. He trained as a scholar of American political thought. He earned a doctorate in political science from the University of California, Berkeley, completed in the fall of 2002. He then built a career that joins the study of political ideas, the daily practice of journalism, and the founding of a reentry charity for former prisoners. The combination gives his profile an unusual shape. He belongs to no single guild.
I remember Eric as brilliant, moral and funny while Rob struck me as a good man with great people skills and an open heart. Both of them mastered the alliance game at an early age, while I couldn’t help going my own way, losing friends in the pursuit of stories and interests.
Our journalism teacher Bob Burge wrote in my 1984 Yearbook that no other student had challenged him as much as I did.
Eric tried several times to pull me back to the reality of alliances. When I insisted on writing a particular story he opposed, Eric asked me, “Do you consider me your friend?” I said yes. He followed up, “Did I defend you when the Beast Bunch (the football team’s offensive line) wanted to kill you?” I said yes. “Then how can you do this?” I accepted his point.
All sorts of things that normal people took for granted weren’t easy for me.
We were all sure we were going places. That the world was our oyster. That we would leave our small town of Auburn far behind and make our mark on the world.
When we were together, we didn’t compete much because there was a clear hierarchy. Eric was the oldest and the smartest, and I was next in line to run the newspaper.
Rob and I never tried to argue Eric out of his Mormon faith while two evangelical girls on the staff tried and failed.
Rob and Eric carried their religion lightly. They didn’t proselytize. And they didn’t compromise their standards.
From day to day, I didn’t know who I was. Running in circles, I was constantly embracing new enthusiasms. I feared I was quite unstable compared to my grounded colleagues.
As I got older, I realized that other people prefer that one be predictable so they don’t have to think hard.
Schulzke’s scholarship grows out of American political development and the theory of executive power. His doctoral research and later articles examine Woodrow Wilson (1856-1924) and the idea of crisis leadership. In Wilson’s writing on the presidency, crisis offers a way past institutional gridlock. Schulzke reads this against Wilson’s vision of the organic state, a polity held together by a deep and almost mystical popular unity that emergency brings to the surface. The reading places him among scholars who treat the early twentieth-century progressives as architects of the modern presidency. His other work reaches into federalism and the structure of American government, subjects that ask how power divides across levels and branches and how that division shapes self-rule.
Schulzke carried this scholarship into the classroom. He taught political science at Brigham Young University and worked within BYU Broadcasting in Provo, Utah. Student accounts describe a demanding teacher who prized mastery of concepts over memorization and who welcomed political argument. The setting suited a scholar of American institutions who also held strong views about public life. His later career kept this double character of the analyst who does not stand apart from the questions he studies.
Around 2013 he turned toward journalism. He covered national politics and policy for the Deseret News in Salt Lake City from 2013 to 2017. The beat let him write across a wide field. He covered faith in American public life, the treatment of college students with mental illness, prison education, parenting and shared domestic labor, and the moral questions raised by new technology. His range marks him as a writer drawn to subjects where policy meets conscience. One of his pieces opened with a warning to readers about a court case touching what he called America’s darkest industry, a sign of his willingness to take on hard moral material rather than soften it. After leaving the Deseret News staff he continued to publish, with bylines in Deseret Magazine, at KBYU, and in outlets such as Yahoo, U.S. News & World Report, the Washington Times, and New Atlas. The journalism reflects the same cast of mind as the scholarship. He thinks about institutions and the people inside them.
The third strand of his career, and the most personal, is The Apollo 13 Project. Schulzke founded and directs this nonprofit reentry initiative, based at Utah Valley University and presented online as Youturn.org. The project takes its name from NASA’s 1970 lunar mission, the near-disaster recounted in the 1995 Ron Howard (b. 1954) film Apollo 13. Schulzke draws a lesson from that story. When the odds looked hopeless, a ground crew worked without rest to bring the astronauts home. He wants the same kind of ground support for men and women leaving prison.
The project rests on a clear reading of the reentry problem. The hardest barriers a former prisoner faces are not always legal. Many are cultural and organizational. Employers fear liability, workplace safety risks, and damage to reputation, so qualified people meet a wall long after they finish their sentences. Schulzke answers this less through new legislation than through a change in public attitude. He aims to lower the perceived risk of a second-chance hire, to build relationships between employers and the formerly incarcerated, and to show the gains that follow successful reintegration. He places special weight on the stories of prisoners themselves, told through blogs and short video, on the theory that a human face changes public feeling more than argument does. He grounds the appeal in religious language as well, calling the New Testament a reentry manual at its core. The project drew an advisory board that included the sociologist Miriam Boeri of Kennesaw State University, whose interest in alternatives to incarceration had personal roots. Alongside the project Schulzke has worked on a book about incarceration policy.
A single intellectual signature runs through these three pursuits. Schulzke studies institutions and the moral life that goes on inside them. As a scholar he asks how crisis and structure shape the use of power. As a journalist he asks how faith, family, and policy press on ordinary lives. As a reformer he asks how a community changes its mind about people it has written off. The thread joining them is a conviction that public attitudes, not only laws, decide outcomes, and that careful persuasion can move those attitudes. He treats reform as a problem of culture and belief first and statute second.
The public record on Schulzke remains thin for a man of such varied output. He lives in Pleasant Grove, Utah, in the corridor between Provo and Salt Lake City that has shaped much of his work. Given his formidable rhetorical skills, he likely could be as famous as he wants, but instead he has chosen a career that has unfolded outside the national prominence that generates detailed biography. This obscurity fits the pattern of his work. He has spent his energy on the study of American government, on reporting that asks moral questions, and on a charity built for people the public prefers not to see. The value of his career lies in that consistency of purpose.
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Rob Stutzman belongs to a generation of California political strategists whose work spans the move from late twentieth-century campaign politics to the modern public affairs industry. For more than three decades he has worked as a campaign consultant, a government communications official, a media strategist, a corporate adviser, and a commentator. His path tracks larger changes in American political life. Consulting once turned on elections. It grew into a permanent trade that shapes public opinion, corporate reputation, regulatory fights, litigation, ballot measures, and the conduct of government. People know Stutzman first for his part in Arnold Schwarzenegger’s rise and then for his Sacramento consulting career. His wider importance sits at the crossing of politics, media, government, and corporate advocacy during a long realignment of the state.
A third-generation Californian, Stutzman was born in 1968 and raised in the state. He graduated from Placer High School in Auburn in 1986 and then took a degree in philosophy from Point Loma Nazarene University in 1990. Many consultants come out of campaign organizations, newsrooms, or law schools. Stutzman came out of philosophy, and the training served him. Philosophy teaches argument, persuasion, logic, and the weighing of rival claims. Those skills carry into a trade built on narrative, strategic communication, and the management of public perception.
I was two years ahead of Stutzman in high school. He was fit and slim and on the freshman basketball team. When I saw him for the last time in 1991, he had gained about 80 pounds, and that’s been his shape ever since.
In 1991, he was writing op-eds for the Sacramento Union, which closed in 1994.
He entered high-level California politics through Dan Lungren (b. 1946), a leading state Republican of the 1990s. Lungren served as California Attorney General from 1991 to 1999, and he embodied the law-and-order conservatism that ran through much of the state party in those years. Work inside the Attorney General’s office taught Stutzman the practical grammar of government communications. He learned how public institutions defend themselves under scrutiny, how legal controversy turns into public narrative, and how messaging meets law, regulation, and policy.
The Lungren years gave him a working education in difficult subjects: criminal justice, consumer protection, litigation, and public accountability. That education later shaped his crisis work and his public affairs practice. The job also placed him inside a network of Republican operatives, elected officials, advocates, and communications professionals who formed the institutional wing of California conservatism in the closing decade of the century.
After Lungren’s failed run for governor in 1998, Stutzman kept building his name within the state party. By the early 2000s he had established himself as a communications specialist who could work in both campaign and government settings. His defining chance arrived in one of the strangest episodes in modern state politics, the 2003 recall election against Governor Gray Davis (b. 1942).
The recall pulled together political anger, economic fear, celebrity, and media spectacle. Schwarzenegger entered the race with universal name recognition and no record in office. The campaign faced a reputational problem as large as the electoral one. It had to turn a movie star into a plausible governor.
As co-communications director, Stutzman became a principal architect of that turn. The task ran beyond the ordinary. A typical gubernatorial campaign deals with political reporters, editorial boards, and policy analysts. The Schwarzenegger campaign drew all of those and then drew entertainment reporters, celebrity outlets, foreign correspondents, photographers, and the tabloid press. The communications team had to move through two separate media worlds at once.
The hardest moment came in the final days, when the Los Angeles Times published accounts from several women about Schwarzenegger’s past conduct. The story threatened to sink the campaign at its weakest point. Stutzman and the rest of the communications team went into rapid response. Rather than let the accounts swallow the race, they pushed attention back toward the grievances that had fueled the recall: the budget crisis, the energy mess, and broad anger at the Davis administration. The effort did not erase the controversy. It kept the controversy from drowning the campaign’s core story, and it held Schwarzenegger’s outsider appeal through election day.
Victory carried Stutzman from campaign strategist to senior official. He went into the governor’s office and rose to deputy chief of staff for communications. From that post he ran one of the most visible communications operations in American state government, though the work differed from the same job under a conventional governor. Schwarzenegger stayed a global celebrity through his whole tenure. Every policy launch drew the kind of scrutiny that usually attaches to a president. The office had to coordinate press relations, speechwriting, public appearances, crisis management, and message design while it balanced competing pictures of the man: Republican reformer, environmental moderate, fiscal conservative, bipartisan dealmaker, and international star.
The administration also exposed strains inside the state party. By the middle of the decade, demographic and political change had made statewide Republican wins harder to find. Schwarzenegger answered by moving toward the center, a shift that sharpened after several ballot measures failed in the 2005 special election. Observers at the time often read Stutzman as a voice of the older Republican wing, which produced occasional friction between movement conservatives and the architects of the centrist turn.
He left the administration in 2005 and entered a phase of his career that reflected a wider shift in the trade. Experienced operatives kept leaving government to start public affairs firms that served corporations, trade associations, advocacy groups, and nonprofits. The line between campaign consulting and public affairs blurred. Organizations outside politics borrowed campaign methods to move public opinion and public policy.
Stutzman built a consulting practice in this period and came to be associated with Navigators Global, a prominent bipartisan public affairs firm with work in Sacramento and Washington. The bipartisan setting marked a change in his outlook. California’s political ground kept shifting. Democratic control deepened. Corporate clients could no longer lean on Republican relationships alone to advance their interests.
The bipartisan work sharpened his reading of public affairs as a post-partisan craft. Success came to depend on knowledge of government institutions more than on winning partisan fights. Clients needed advisers who could move through regulatory agencies, legislative committees, opinion campaigns, media controversies, and stakeholder coalitions whatever party held power. That reading sits at the center of his later philosophy. His clients ranged across technology, health care, manufacturing, agriculture, finance, aerospace, entertainment, consumer products, and nonprofit advocacy. Their common problem had little to do with elections. It had to do with institutional navigation. Public affairs came to resemble a permanent campaign run outside the election calendar.
His campaign skills stayed in demand even so. He served as a senior adviser and communications strategist for Meg Whitman’s 2010 run for governor, among the most expensive self-funded campaigns in American history. He worked as a senior California adviser to Mitt Romney’s presidential efforts. Both engagements showed his continued standing in establishment Republican politics, even as the state turned harder against statewide Republican candidates.
A defining trait of his career has been a willingness to criticize his own party in public. That trait grew sharper with the rise of Donald Trump (b. 1946). Many Republican consultants made their peace with Trump’s movement. Stutzman became one of California’s most prominent anti-Trump strategists. His opposition ran deeper than dislike of a candidate. It marked a clash between two ideas of conservatism. Institutions, governance, coalition-building, business interests, and traditional campaign politics had shaped his political identity. Trump’s populism challenged those premises.
The stance carried professional risk. State Republican politics grew more polarized along national lines. Stutzman stayed tied to a center-right faction that prized institutional stability, pragmatic governance, and broad coalitions. His case shows the bind of the establishment strategist in a party redefined by anti-establishment energy.
His career also shows a talent for adaptation. He did not retreat from politics. He widened his reach through public affairs, media commentary, and analysis. His expertise held value because the state’s political system still needed interpreters who could explain its peculiar institutions and its elections.
His tie to the California Target Book offers the clearest example of that institutional standing. The publication serves as a central reference in state politics. Campaigns, journalists, consultants, lobbyists, advocacy groups, and donors lean on its analysis of legislative and congressional districts, voter registration trends, election results, demographic change, and campaign finance. Its value runs past the data. It forms part of the informational backbone of California politics. Stewardship of such a work places its editors and owners near the center of the state’s political intelligence network. Through that role Stutzman became a curator of the information other actors depend on, not merely a player among them.
His influence widened again through commentary. Over the past decade he has become a frequent analyst on television, radio, podcasts, and public panels. His appearances often pair him with Democratic strategists such as Garry South, a sign of analysis grounded in institutional knowledge rather than partisan pleading. The conversations turn on the machinery of state politics: the top-two primary, the independent redistricting commission, demographic change, campaign finance, and electoral realignment. The bipartisan cast of these appearances reflects a larger truth. As one-party control grew, sound analysis came to require knowledge of the state’s institutions more than defense of a party line. Stutzman became a leading interpreter of that world.
The most revealing chapter of his later years may be his friendship with Democratic Congressman Ami Bera (b. 1965). The two men spent years on opposite sides of House campaigns before they built a personal bond rooted in mutual respect and shared worry about polarization. Their friendship stands for an older political culture, one where rivals could compete without treating each other as enemies.
Seen across its whole length, Stutzman’s career traces several large shifts in American politics. He began in an era of traditional campaign communications. He rose through government in the age of celebrity politics. He adjusted to the spread of permanent public affairs campaigns. He watched Republican competitiveness collapse in California. He moved through the rise of polarization and populist insurgency. And he helped build the consulting industry that now mediates among government, corporations, media, advocacy groups, and the public.
His larger significance rests in none of these alone, in no single campaign, client, or scandal. He stands as a representative figure in the rise of California’s professional political class. His career opens a window onto how influence operates in modern politics, through communications, coalition-building, institutional knowledge, strategic messaging, and the management of public narrative. In that sense his life doubles as a history of political consulting, the trade’s passage from an occasional electoral business into a permanent feature of governance, advocacy, and public life.
David Pinsof, with David Sears and Martie Haselton, argues that political belief systems carry no deep moral thread. Beliefs track alliances. People choose allies by similarity, by transitivity, and by interdependence, then they defend those allies with a standard kit of biases that Pinsof calls propagandistic: they downplay an ally’s transgressions, embellish an ally’s grievances, and credit an ally’s advantages to merit while blaming an ally’s setbacks on circumstance. Values come second. They get confabulated to dress the alliance in moral clothing. Applied to a political consultant, the theory turns almost recursive. Pinsof treats these tactics as evolved equipment that fires in every one of us for free. Stutzman sells them by the hour.
Start with the anti-Trump break, since it anchors his public identity. Stutzman casts the stance as principle: institutions, governance, coalition-building, the older Republican craft. Alliance Theory reads the same stance as a signal of allegiance. His career bound him to a coalition of business elites, governance Republicans, and the consultant class that serves them. Trump’s movement drew its strength from a rival bloc, the rural and working-class White voters Pinsof groups under the losers of globalization. When that bloc captured the party, Stutzman’s coalition lost the house it had built. His institutionalism reads as the belief-content that allegiance generates, not the premise that produced the allegiance. Pinsof’s claim about elites does the work here. He holds that elites are no more coherent than ordinary voters, only better tuned to the alliances around them. A consultant is the limiting case of that claim. Stutzman reads the alliance map for a living, so he tracks the lines of loyalty with a precision the average partisan never reaches.
His bipartisan turn shows transitivity at work, and transitivity is the sharpest tool the theory hands you for this subject. Pinsof’s rule runs simple: the enemy of my enemy becomes my friend, and the ally of my ally becomes my friend. His Putin example runs one direction. Trump praised Putin, and Republican warmth toward Putin tripled, because a leader’s friend slides into the coalition behind him. Stutzman’s case runs the other direction. The populist capture of his party converted his former rivals into usable partners. Establishment Democrats and establishment Republicans share a common enemy in the anti-institutional insurgency, so they drift toward each other. His panels alongside the Democratic strategist Garry South stage that drift in public. Two men who spent careers on opposite sides now read the state’s politics from the same institutional priors, against the same disruptive force. Chapais, whom Pinsof cites, gives the name for this: a bridging alliance, where high-ranking actors from across an old divide combine to hold their rank against a revolutionary challenge from below. Stutzman’s center-right and the establishment center-left form that bridge. Trump’s coalition forms the revolution.
The theory also dissolves the puzzle of his post-partisan consulting philosophy. Stutzman describes public affairs as a craft that floats above party, a practice tuned to institutions rather than to red and blue. Pinsof would not read this as a conversion to neutrality. He would read it as relocation inside a shifted alliance structure. California’s Republican collapse changed the map. The old link between party and corporate interest frayed, and a consultant who wanted to keep serving corporate clients had to learn the new lines. Pinsof stresses that alliance structures are contingent and partly stochastic, that small shifts snowball into arrangements with no deeper logic than the cliques of a high school. Stutzman lived through one such snowball, the long realignment that turned the state one-party. His philosophy names the new terrain. It does not rise above terrain as such.
His tie to the California Target Book. Pinsof builds his argument on two figures, maps of the American alliance structure that show which groups read as liberal and which read as conservative. He notes that liberals and conservatives agree about who sits on which side at a correlation of .97. People hold common knowledge of the structure, and that common knowledge lets the whole system run. The Target Book is that map made explicit and sold to the people who need it. Districts, registration, group allegiance, the shape of every local conflict. Stutzman as steward of the Target Book is custodian of the society’s alliance map, the keeper of the common knowledge Pinsof treats as the substrate of political life.
Crisis communications, in Pinsof’s vocabulary, is the manufacture of perpetrator biases on commission. Downplay the client’s responsibility, raise the mitigating circumstances, embellish the good intentions, shrink the harm. The recall campaign’s final week shows the pattern in full. The Los Angeles Times ran accounts of Schwarzenegger’s past conduct, and Stutzman’s team moved the story off the conduct and back onto the budget, the energy crisis, and the grievance against Davis. Pinsof describes that move as a species-typical reflex. Stutzman ran it as paid technique under deadline. Public affairs extends the same craft to corporate clients: victim biases when a client claims unfair treatment by regulators, attributional biases when a client credits its success to merit and its troubles to a hostile environment. The consultant is a merchant of the very tactics the theory says evolution gives away.
His friendship with the Democratic Congressman Ami Bera offers the one place where the frame turns gentle. Pinsof ends by proposing that political alliances are friendships, that parties are cliques, that the two sides of an ideological dispute resemble the two sides of a falling-out between friends. Distrust your friend’s version of events and he stops counting you as a friend. Distrust your fellow partisan’s version and he stops counting you as an ally. Stutzman and Bera spent years on opposite sides of House campaigns, then built a bond across the divide. Read through Pinsof, their friendship is a personal alliance that cuts against the partisan super-alliances, a small surviving piece of the cross-cutting structure that prevailed before the two coalitions hardened. They trust each other’s story even while their coalitions refuse to trust each other’s.
Rob’s Set
Stutzman’s set is not the Republican Party, and it is not the Sacramento lobby alone. It is a cross-party guild of campaign professionals, public affairs operators, and the reporters and analysts who trade with them. The guild runs on two axes between Sacramento and Los Angeles. One axis holds the veteran consultants who learned the trade before the populist turn. The other holds the press corps and the commentariat that needs them for copy. Stutzman sits where the two cross.
Name the members and the shape comes clear. His podcast partner is David Kochel, the Iowa hand who ran ground for Romney and Jeb Bush. His closest counterpart and friend on the other side of the consulting wars is Mike Madrid, the former California Republican Party political director, a student of the Latino vote and author of a 2024 book on that electorate, who helped found The Lincoln Project and paid for it with his standing in the state party. Above them both sits Mike Murphy, the Los Angeles strategist who delivered Republican wins in blue states for Schwarzenegger, McCain, and Romney, now an anti-Trump broadcaster and the keeper of a political center at USC. Steve Schmidt ran strategy for Schwarzenegger before he too went to the Lincoln Project. Meg Whitman is the patron and the type specimen, the moderate billionaire whose 2010 race Stutzman helped run and whom the trade press uses as shorthand for his wing. Mitt Romney is the national version of the same figure. His later clients run the same lane: Michael Shellenberger against Newsom, Anne Marie Schubert for attorney general.
Across the aisle, the guild is just as populated. Garry South, who made Gray Davis governor, is Stutzman’s regular foil on the recall panels and the radio hits. Karen Skelton, a Democratic consultant, joins him in Mark Halperin’s studio alongside George Skelton, the columnist the trade calls the dean of the California press corps. The California Target Book binds the whole set together. Allan Hoffenblum, a Republican, founded it in 1994. Darry Sragow, a Democratic strategist and USC professor, publishes it now, with Rob Pyers running the research. The book is bipartisan by design, and so is the world that reads it. Ami Bera, the Democratic congressman who became Stutzman’s friend after years as his target, marks the far edge of the same culture, the place where rivalry turns into fellowship.
What this set values, before anything, is competence. They prize the man who knows how the thing works, who can read a district off the registration tables, who can turn a movie star into a governor or resurrect a dead campaign in the last week. Effectiveness ranks above purity. A consultant who wins ugly stands higher than an ideologue who loses clean. They value the inside game and the standing that comes from playing it well, the access to principals, the call from the reporter on deadline, the seat on the panel. They value governance over performance, the deal over the rally, the broad coalition over the pure remnant. And they value the lifestyle that sits on top of all this. Stutzman’s own podcast frames itself as a bar crawl across America. The signature drinks, the wine, the cocktail bars of downtown Los Angeles, the easy banter between professionals who have seen everything. The good life of the trade is sociable, well-paid, and a little knowing.
Their hero system braids two ideals that do not always sit together. The first hero is the master operator, the man who wins the race no one thought winnable. Murphy carrying Republicans through hostile country. South pulling off what the California press called one of the great resurrections in the state’s history. The scalp on the wall is the proof of a life well spent. The second hero is newer and answers to the Trump years. He is the man of conscience who breaks with his own tribe and pays for it. The trade press writes Stutzman as a charter member of the Never Trump wing, and notes in the same breath that the stance has cost him business. That cost is the point. In this set, a man earns moral standing by losing money for a principle. Stutzman holds both heroes inside one career, the winner and the dissenter, and the strain between them gives his public self its charge. He squares it with a third figure, the patriot-consultant. He has said the profession deserves the cynicism it gets, then added that its members are patriots anyway, loyal to what they take to be the country’s good. The hero, in the end, serves the republic through the back rooms.
The status games run on visibility and on having been right. The currency is the quote, the byline, the panel seat, the prediction that came true. Stutzman writes op-eds in the Sacramento Bee and The Washington Post, hosts a podcast, and turns up on KCBS, KQED, and Halperin’s nightly show. The Capitol Weekly Top 100 ranks the players by influence, and a man’s number on that list is a real wound or a real prize. Proximity confers rank: Schwarzenegger’s deputy, Romney’s California adviser, Whitman’s strategist. So does the honorific, the dean of the press corps, the founding publisher. The Target Book is the purest status object in the set, because it converts inside knowledge into a thing other people pay to read, and stewardship of it places a man near the center of the state’s intelligence network. There is also a subtler game, the practiced self-deprecation about the trade. To call your own profession cynical, as Stutzman does, is to stand a little above it, and standing above the game is itself a move in the game.
Their normative claims are the claims of people who want the contest kept inside bounds. Politics should be a fight among competent adults, not a holy war. Institutions should hold. Rules should bind. Civility should survive disagreement, which is why the Bera friendship reads to them as a moral exemplar and not a curiosity. The voter is sovereign and should be courted with some honesty, not flattered into delusion, which is why Stutzman scolds his own party over its refusal of vote-by-mail. Parties ought to be broad coalitions that can govern, and a faction that shrinks the tent deserves the defeats it earns. The professional carries a duty to the country that outranks his duty to the party, and when the two collide the country wins. These are the norms of a governing class that wants the machine to run no matter who holds the wheel.
Underneath the norms sit a few essentialist convictions, things the set treats as fixed features of the world. California has a real center, knowable and stable, and the progressive leadership has drifted off it. Stutzman returns to this again and again: the dominant Democrats are out of step with where the voters truly are, and the ballot measures keep proving it. The electorate has a true location, and the expert can find it. Human political behavior is legible to the trained reader, and the data does not lie, which is the faith the Target Book runs on. There is a permanent division between serious people and unserious ones, between the adults and the performers, and the line is close to a fact of nature. Trump, in this view, is an accelerant rather than the disease, a force that sped a decline already written into the party’s refusal of reality. The set holds that reality has a shape, that the shape can be measured, and that their measurements track it.
Their moral grammar runs on a small set of oppositions, and once you hear them you hear them everywhere in the set’s talk. Serious against clownish. Adult against child. Responsible against reckless. Patriot against partisan. Candor against flattery. The cardinal sin is selling out, abandoning the principle for the base, lying to voters past the point a professional should go. The cardinal virtue is keeping your word and putting the country first, with the capacity to disagree without hatred close behind. Distress is the proper register for the party’s fall, and Stutzman uses it. Honor gets claimed through loss, through the business that walked out the door. The grammar lets a man be cynical about the craft and reverent about its purpose in the same sentence, and the set hears no contradiction.
The civility that binds these rivals is partly principle and partly a shared interest. Stutzman, South, Madrid, Murphy, Sragow, and the reporters who quote them all make their living from the game as the professionals play it. The populist insurgency threatens more than their candidates. It threatens the standing of the expert, the value of the inside read, the whole premise that the trained operator knows the country better than the crowd does. When this set closes ranks across party lines against the disruptors, it defends a republic it loves and a guild it belongs to at once. Both things are true, and the set tends to name only the first.
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Catherine Seipp (1957-2007) watched American media change from inside a city the rest of the press treated as a backwater. She held no large platform. She edited no major paper, hosted no national broadcast, owned no media company. She worked as a freelancer, a columnist, a critic, and, late in her short life, a blogger. From that modest perch she became a hub for a loose network of journalists, lawyers, academics, and commentators who built much of the early intellectual furniture of the online public sphere.
Her importance rests less on any single piece than on a habit of mind. She read institutions the way a sociologist reads them, as arrangements of incentives that shape the people inside them. She saw authority leaving large organizations and gathering instead around individuals linked by conversation and reputation. She analyzed that shift. She also helped cause it.
She was born in Winnipeg, Manitoba, on November 17, 1957. Her family moved to Los Alamitos, in Orange County, when she was small. She enrolled at the University of California, Los Angeles at sixteen and took a degree in English. Her first jobs ran through the trade and daily press: a stint at the Associated Press, work at the fashion trade paper California Apparel News, then four years as a fashion writer at the Daily News in the early 1980s.
Southern California formed her more than any newsroom did. Los Angeles lacked the thick hierarchy of New York journalism. It had fewer prestige outlets, weaker gatekeepers, and a looser market for writers who moved among newspapers, magazines, television, public relations, and the studios. The place rewarded improvisation. It bred a writer skeptical of official accounts and curious about the social machinery that produced them.
Seipp first drew real attention at Buzz, the Los Angeles magazine that set itself against the Los Angeles Times and the city’s media establishment. For five years through the 1990s she wrote a column under the name Margo Magee. She chronicled the inner life of the Times: its newsroom quarrels, its editorial fashions, the gap between what the paper said about itself and what it did. Her targets were rarely abstractions. She named editors, named stories, traced incentives, followed decisions. Colleagues called her malicious and unfair, and some called her worse. The anger told her she had hit something.
The Staples Center episode of 1999 gave her critique its sharpest case. The Los Angeles Times published a special magazine on the new arena and, without telling its readers, agreed to split the advertising revenue with the arena it covered. When the arrangement surfaced, it became a national argument about journalistic ethics. Seipp saw past the single lapse to the strain underneath it. A modern paper sells itself as a neutral arbiter of public life while it leans more and more on commercial partnerships. The Staples affair exposed that strain, and she returned to it for years.
Her journalism read more like sociology than like political commentary. She treated newspapers, universities, charities, advocacy groups, and studios as systems that produce predictable behavior. She asked who gains, what incentives operate, which pressures stay hidden, what reputation buys. That cast of mind set her apart from the ideological writers of her time. She cared little for theory and a great deal for organizations and the people who staff them. Her work anticipated later talk of elite signaling and status competition, though she got there by watching rather than by building models.
Her largest influence ran through people rather than print. She hosted parties, dinners and salons. Writers, bloggers, lawyers, radio hosts, and academics came to trade information, argument, gossip, and professional intelligence. Hugh Hewitt (b. 1956) and Mickey Kaus (b. 1951) passed through, along with the law professor Stephen Bainbridge, the writer Ken Layne, and others who would soon make their names online. The same circle gathered after her death to mourn her in print, among them Matt Welch, Amy Alkon, Kate Coe, and Sandra Tsing Loh (b. 1962). These dinners worked as a physical rehearsal for the networked communities that blogs, podcasts, and newsletters later built in software. Before the social web existed, Seipp ran one at her table. She introduced strangers, moved information, and made a small reputational market. She connected a reporter to an academic, a blogger to a lawyer.
She grasped blogging early, when most editors still waved it off as a hobby for cranks. Her own blog, Cathy’s World, gathered readers around politics, media, and Los Angeles life, and she answered them in her own voice. The blog carried a larger argument inside it. Information no longer ran one way, from institutions down to an audience. A single writer could publish, gather readers, and join conversations that once stayed locked inside professional walls. She likened the established press’s contempt for blogging to the last moans of a dying brontosaurus. Podcasts, Substack newsletters, independent commentary, the whole personality-driven press that followed all grew from the shift she named before her profession admitted it.
Her national readership came through From the Left Coast, the weekly column she wrote for National Review Online, and through a monthly column for the Independent Women’s Forum. Reviewers filed her under conservative, and the label never fit well. She wrote less about doctrine than about manners. She used Southern California as a field site for reading the country: Hollywood, schools, celebrity, philanthropy, city hall, the slow drift of social norms. Elite hypocrisy drew her eye. She tracked Arianna Huffington (b. 1950) from conservative socialite to progressive media entrepreneur and read the change less as conviction than as a study in how an elite identity bends to its surroundings. Her Hollywood pieces dwelt on the galas and the fundraisers and the celebrity causes rather than the films, because the social world around the movies showed the workings of status and influence.
She insisted that Los Angeles deserved study on its own terms. The Eastern press treated the city as an entertainment colony or a lesser New York. She rejected the frame. Her Los Angeles had its own institutions, its own power centers, its own rankings of prestige: studios, school boards, papers, real estate money, the foundations. Her columns often read as field notes on that ecology. She mapped how influence moved among stars, reporters, politicians, donors, and nonprofits, well before network analysis became a fashion.
In 2002 doctors found lung cancer in her, though she had never smoked. She turned the disease into one more subject for criticism. She refused the sentimental script. She mistrusted the therapeutic culture around illness, the awareness campaigns sold like products, the demand that a patient narrate her sickness as a journey toward moral growth. She faulted the cancer-awareness industry for its compulsory optimism, which she said failed the people it claimed to serve. Her essays from those years hold up as some of the sharpest illness writing of their moment because they refuse both pity and uplift. She kept her post to the end: observer, critic, skeptic of institutions.
Her writing joined a reporter’s eye for detail, a columnist’s wit, and a sociologist’s patience with institutions. She distrusted grand theory and preferred to pile up examples. A newspaper scandal. A celebrity benefit. A campus fight. A media campaign. A political conversion. Set side by side, the cases showed patterns. She handled them with humor rather than zeal, which left her hard to file. She belonged to no camp. Her loyalty ran to observation.
She married Jerry Lazar in 1986. Their daughter, Maia, arrived in 1989. The marriage ended in divorce in 1990, and she did not marry again. She wanted to see Maia off to college, and she nearly made it. Catherine Seipp died at Cedars-Sinai in Los Angeles on March 21, 2007, at forty-nine.
She died as the forces she had charted picked up speed. The social web was about to remake journalism. Blogs were moving to the center of political talk. Institutional authority kept fragmenting, and independent writers kept challenging the old gatekeepers. Seen from here, she looks less like a late figure of the print era than an early figure of the next one. She read the decentralization of authority before most reporters saw it. She prized networks before network theory arrived. She treated institutions as systems of incentives while that habit still looked eccentric.
Her lasting mark lies in what she wrote and in what she built. She bridged the metropolitan newsroom and the blog, the hierarchy of the twentieth century and the looser circuits of the twenty-first. Few writers show the change in American public talk across the first internet decade as clearly as she does. She did not only witness it. She helped make it.
Catherine Seipp held no title and ran no institution, yet she stood at the center of the network that built the early intellectual architecture of the blogosphere. Accounts that start from her writing miss the source of that standing. Randall Collins gives a better one. Read through interaction ritual chains, her authority came from a recurring ritual she hosted, and the theory names the parts.
Collins, in Interaction Ritual Chains, builds his account from four ingredients. People assemble in bodily co-presence. A barrier marks who belongs and who stays outside. The group fixes its attention on a shared object or activity. And the members come to share a mood. When these combine, they feed one another. Mutual focus sharpens the common mood, the common mood deepens the focus, and the talk and laughter fall into rhythm. Collins calls this entrainment. A gathering that reaches it stops feeling like a set of separate people and starts feeling like one body.
The macherocracy dinners satisfy every ingredient. The guests came in person, around a table, night after night over years. Invitation drew the line between the circle and the rest of the Los Angeles trade. The talk fixed on a shared object, the press and its sins, the targets, the gossip, the inside knowledge of how the city’s newsrooms ran. And the mood was shared and strong: the pleasure of insider talk, the wit, the common contempt for the establishment the guests had gathered to dissect. The dinners were not occasions for the ritual. They were the ritual.
Collins names what a successful ritual produces. It makes solidarity, a felt membership in the group. It charges each member with emotional energy, the confidence and drive that send a person back into the world ready to act. It mints symbols, the emblems and words and shared references that members come to treat as sacred and feel bound to defend. And it sets a moral standard, so that an attack on the symbols draws righteous anger. Seipp’s salon produced all four. The name macherocracy is the membership emblem, a private word that marks the holder as one of the circle. The Los Angeles Times and its managerial reformers served as the negative sacred object, the thing the group defined itself against. Reputations circulated as the currency of the table. And the fury her column drew from other journalists is the moral standard at work from the far side: she had violated their symbols, and they defended them by calling her malicious.
Emotional energy in his account is not evenly shared. It stratifies. Some people leave an encounter charged and some leave drained, and the ones who reliably raise the charge in others accumulate it. They become what Collins calls energy stars. Their pull is charisma, and charisma in this account is not a trait carried into the room. It is an effect produced by the room, renewed each time the ritual succeeds. The host of a recurring high-charge gathering sits at the focus of attention and at the source of the invitations. She gathers the most energy and holds the gate. Seipp’s standing was charismatic, manufactured and recharged at every dinner, which is why it needed no masthead behind it.
People do not stay at one table. They carry their charge and their symbols from situation to situation, and each new encounter is a small market where they spend what they have and seek a better return. A guest left Seipp’s dinner charged and carried that energy into a column, a broadcast, a blog post, another room. The network spread because its members were moving outward all week, lit by the same source. Seipp’s introductions did more. When she put a reporter next to an academic, or a blogger next to a lawyer, she spliced two chains that had run apart. In The Sociology of Philosophies Collins argues that creativity and influence concentrate in face-to-face networks, in the chains of personal contact that link masters to pupils and rivals to rivals. The hub of such a network shapes far more than its own output. Seipp occupied that hub. A woman with no platform helped set the terms of a coming media world because she sat where the chains crossed.
The blog complicates the picture. Collins is skeptical that interaction at a distance carries the charge of bodily co-presence. Bodies in a room entrain. Readers at screens do not, or do so faintly. So the blog and the column read best as distribution rather than as source. The charge began at the table and the text carried it out. Seipp saw the power of blogging before most of her trade, and she ran her own blog with skill, but the theory suggests the live gathering still did the generating. Her case sits on the hinge between a press built on co-present ritual and a press built on mediated networks, and it shows what the new arrangement gained in reach and risked in heat.
The cancer years. An awareness campaign is a ritual too, with its assembled crowd, its barrier of the initiated, its fixed object, and its prescribed mood of compulsory optimism. Seipp refused it, and Collins explains the refusal. A ritual can be forced, and a forced ritual produces performance rather than charge. The patient is handed a script and told to feel a feeling on cue. The emotional energy never arrives, only the show of it. Seipp had spent a career watching real assemblies make real heat, so she recognized the hollow ones, and she would not perform.
Collins also predicts the aftermath. Symbols decay when the rituals that charge them stop. A sacred object left without renewal fades into a dead word. When Seipp died, the dinners ended, and the theory expects the charge to drain and the emblems to dim. The crowd of blogs that gathered to mourn her is itself a last ritual, a final assembly around the symbol of her name, a recharge before the slow fade. The network outlived her for a while on banked energy and shared memory. But without the table to renew them, Collins holds, even the strongest symbols cool. Her authority lived in a ritual, and a ritual lives only as long as it meets.
The Observer’s Allies: Catherine Seipp Through Alliance Theory
Alliance Theory makes a blunt claim. Political belief systems do not flow from abstract values like equality or authority. They flow from whom a person treats as an ally and whom as a rival. Pinsof, Sears, and Haselton build the account on two assumptions: people carry a psychology for choosing and detecting allies, and people use propagandistic tactics to defend those allies and attack their rivals. The tactics have shapes the paper names: perpetrator biases that excuse an ally’s wrongs, victim biases that magnify an ally’s grievances, attributional biases that credit an ally’s gains to virtue and blame an ally’s losses on circumstance. Read this way, a belief system is not a philosophy. It is a patchwork of justifications assembled to serve a coalition. Applied to Catherine Seipp, the frame explains her subjects, explains her position, and then turns back on her in a way she might have disliked.
The choosing runs on similarity, transitivity, and interdependence, with a large measure of accident. People ally with those like themselves, with those who share their rivals, and with those who supply them benefits, and each pull feeds the next until coalitions harden into clusters with shared loyalties and shared enemies. The paper insists the tactics are symmetrical. Left and right run the same plays on different targets. Elites are no more consistent than the masses; they are only better tuned to the contingent alliances of their society. Keep that symmetry in view, because it is where the frame eventually catches Seipp.
Start with her subjects. Seipp treated the press as a trade with interests, not as a neutral window on the world. Alliance Theory supplies the seam she worked. The paper describes a split that opened in the late twentieth century between intellectual elites, the knowledge workers like journalists and academics, and business elites, the corporate owners and executives. Seipp’s beat sat on that fault. She covered the Los Angeles Times as its reporters fought its corporate managers, and she read journalists as a status class with allegiances of their own. Alliance Theory predicts that such a class will cover the world to favor its allies and bruise its rivals, and that its members will call the result objectivity. Seipp spent a career cataloguing the favoritism case by case. She lacked the paper’s vocabulary. She tracked the thing the vocabulary names.
The Staples Center scandal. The paper sold a special section on the arena while it split the revenue with the arena, then presented itself to readers as an impartial judge of the city. Alliance Theory treats the profession’s claim to neutrality as the same kind of moral self-description it finds on every side of every conflict, a flag run up to draw third parties rather than a report on reality. The outrage that followed, and the newsroom’s defense of its threatened honor, look like coalition behavior. Seipp saw a structural strain under a single lapse. The frame sharpens her reading into a claim: the press defends its standing the way any alliance defends a sacred symbol.
Seipp followed Huffington from conservative socialite to progressive media entrepreneur and read the change as identity bending to its surroundings rather than as conviction. That is Alliance Theory in plain speech. The paper argues that allegiance comes first and values follow, citing longitudinal evidence that prior party identification predicts later moral commitments and not the reverse. Huffington swapped one coalition for another, and her beliefs realigned to fit her new allies. Seipp intuited the order of operations the data later confirmed.
Hollywood drew the same eye, and the frame rewards it. Seipp wrote less about films than about the galas, the fundraisers, and the celebrity causes, because the social world around the movies showed her how status got displayed and traded. Alliance Theory treats moral and egalitarian rhetoric as a tactic for mobilizing support around allied groups, not as a principle held across the board. The paper offers a clean example: voters call a corporate executive’s millions unfair and a movie star’s millions fine, or the reverse, depending on which earner their coalition claims. Seipp circled that double standard for years. The frame names the engine she watched running.
Her network fits the choosing rules. The mackerocracy formed by similarity, a circle of media skeptics who thought alike about the trade. It cohered through transitivity, the shared rivalry against the establishment press that made any enemy of the Times a friend of the table. It held together through interdependence, the steady trade of information, introductions, and reputation. When Seipp put a reporter next to an academic or a blogger next to a lawyer, she raised the transitivity of the whole cluster, knitting separate loyalties into one coalition. Alliance Theory would call her salon a small super-alliance of contrarians, built by the same rules that build any faction.
Then there is Seipp. Reviewers filed her as conservative, and the label never sat right, which puzzled people who expected beliefs to track a creed. Alliance Theory dissolves the puzzle. Ideology is whom you stand with, and Seipp’s rivalries did not line up with the Republican coalition. She warred with the progressive media class and the therapeutic establishment, which placed her near the right on those fights. She showed little interest in the rest of the conservative program. By the paper’s account she is a strange bedfellow in the literal sense, a person whose heterogeneous allies and rivals produce a belief profile that looks incoherent only to someone expecting a philosophy. She is the paper’s thesis walking around Los Angeles. Alliance Theory holds that everyone runs propagandistic biases, the bias-hunter included. Seipp made her name catching her rivals applying perpetrator and victim biases, excusing their allies and embellishing their favored groups’ grievances. The frame asks the question she could not have asked of herself with the same edge: did she catch her own side’s propaganda as keenly? An analyst who exposes the liberal media class while standing inside an anti-establishment coalition has every reason, by this account, to magnify her rivals’ double standards and to wave through her allies’. Her cherished stance, loyalty to observation alone, is the impartiality claim the paper treats with most suspicion, because it is the claim every coalition makes. The frame does not call her a fraud. It argues that her detachment was a position in the fight, and that her motivated reading of her rivals was, in the paper’s terms, an honest signal of loyalty to her allies. She was a sharp observer and a skilled partisan, and Alliance Theory says the second description does not cancel the first.
The frame strains in one place. Her cancer writing, her refusal of the awareness industry and its compulsory optimism, does not reduce to political alliance.
Cultural Capital Without a Masthead: Catherine Seipp Through Pierre Bourdieu
Pierre Bourdieu (1930-2002) treats any social world as a field, a structured space of struggle with its own stakes, its own rules, and its own forms of capital. The journalistic field is one such space, and in his account it is weakly autonomous, pulled between two poles. At one end stands peer recognition, the judgment of other journalists by professional standards. At the other end stands the market, the pull of circulation, ratings, and advertising. The history he tells in On Television is the history of the second pole growing strong enough to bend the first. Read through this frame, Catherine Seipp’s beat, her standing, and her unclassifiable politics all come into focus, and her cherished pose comes into question.
Her media criticism is a running report from the bend. When she chronicled the Los Angeles Times, she watched the commercial pole gain on the professional one. The traditional reporters answered to peer standards and to the craft. The corporate managers answered to circulation and the balance sheet. Bourdieu names that contest. The more a field’s rewards flow from the market, the more its internal standards give way, and the people who hold those standards lose ground to the people who hold the money. Seipp catalogued the surrender case by case across two decades. She lacked his vocabulary. She tracked the process the vocabulary describes.
The Staples Center scandal is heteronomy made visible. The paper sold a special section on the arena and split the revenue with the subject it covered. The commercial logic walked through the front door of the space that claimed to serve the public without a price. Bourdieu argues that a weakly autonomous field cannot hold the line once its commercial pole grows dominant, and the Staples affair is that failure caught in the open. Seipp read a structural strain beneath a single lapse. Bourdieu supplies the structure: a field whose market end had grown strong enough to override its professional end, then to dress the override as ordinary business.
The seam she worked her whole life is what Bourdieu calls the field of power, and the actors on it carry different capital. Journalists and academics hold cultural capital, the education and craft and taste that confer standing, but they hold less economic capital than the owners and executives above them. Bourdieu calls them the dominated fraction of the dominant class. They sit near the top of society and near the bottom of their own institutions. The Los Angeles Times reporters against the corporate managers are that arrangement in miniature, holders of cultural capital subordinate to holders of economic capital inside one building. Seipp’s beat traced that fault. Her interest in who holds prestige and who confers it, the status signaling she returned to again and again, is the traffic of cultural and symbolic capital watched up close.
Her salon converted that interest into power, and Bourdieu explains how a person with no title and little money came to hold it. Social capital is the resources a person draws from a durable network of relationships. The mackerocracy turned a series of dinners into such a network, and Seipp sat at its center, the node who could grant access, move information, and supply introductions. Over time the social capital hardened into symbolic capital, the prestige that let her judgment raise or bruise a reputation. A field has its instances of consecration, the actors who confer legitimacy and value, and Seipp became a small one. Her notice marked people. Her table admitted them. Bourdieu accounts for the puzzle that her career poses to anyone who expects power to come from a masthead: she amassed the forms of capital a field actually trades in, and she occupied a position from which she could consecrate.
Her trajectory shaped her stance, as Bourdieu says trajectories do. She came from the margins of the field, from Southern California rather than the consecrated Eastern houses, from the trade press and fashion pages and a column written under a borrowed name. Bourdieu holds that newcomers and the under-capitalized pursue subversion against the orthodox holders, because they have little stake in the established order and much to gain by upsetting it. Her insurgent posture follows from her location. Buzz against the Times, and later the blog against the legacy gatekeepers, are the heterodox moves of a player rich in cultural capital and poor in inherited position. Her contrarianism reads less as temperament than as a position-taking determined by where she stood.
The blog extends the same logic. Bourdieu shows a field policed by barriers to entry and by a near-monopoly on consecration held by its established houses. The web lowered the cost of entry and broke the monopoly, letting players build standing without an institution to credential them. Seipp grasped that the field was opening before her trade admitted it. Bourdieu might frame her foresight as a clear read of the field’s changing structure, a recognition that the houses were losing their grip on who counts as a journalist and whose judgment carries weight.
Her method is a strike against what Bourdieu calls symbolic violence. The journalistic field imposes categories of perception, ways of seeing that the public and the covered fields accept as natural, and that imposition serves the field’s interests while passing as plain description. Seipp spent her career denaturalizing the press’s account of itself, exposing the interests behind the disinterested pose. Bourdieu names the move she kept making. She refused to let the field’s self-image stand as neutral fact and insisted on the position behind the report.
The frame also dissolves the puzzle of her politics. Reviewers filed her as conservative, and the label fit poorly, which confuses anyone who reads beliefs as a coherent creed. Bourdieu locates a person’s stances in field position rather than in a value system. Seipp stood as an under-capitalized insurgent against the consecrated press establishment, and that position produced a profile that looked conservative on some fights and unreadable on others. The field explains the shape of her opinions better than any ideology does.
Bourdieu insisted that the analyst occupies a position too, that critique is also a play for capital, and that the loudest claim to stand above the game is often the shrewdest move inside it. Seipp’s prized stance, loyalty to observation alone, is by his account a position-taking. The claim to disinterest is a bid for the prestige of the autonomous pole, the purest symbolic capital the field offers, the standing of the one who serves no master and reports without fear. Whether her detachment was real disinterest or a refined form of interest is the question Bourdieu’s reflexivity forces, and the frame leans toward the second answer without quite settling it. Her independence bought her authority. Authority is the prize. A player who renounces the smaller stakes to win the largest one is still playing.
Cathy’s Set
Cathy Seipp sat at the center of a loose set of Los Angeles writers who came up in the late 1990s and made their names in the first years of the blog. They were freelancers and columnists more than staff employees, and they shared a distrust of the institutions that hired their kind. Around her table and across the early blogosphere you found Matt Welch (b. 1968), then moving from the alternative weeklies toward Reason, and his fellow contrarians Mickey Kaus and Ken Layne, who ran some of the first political weblogs. You found Hugh Hewitt and the orbit of National Review Online, where Kathryn Jean Lopez edited her column and gave her a national pulpit. You found the law professor Stephen Bainbridge, the advice columnist Amy Alkon, the FishbowlLA media reporter Kate Coe, the film-industry journalist Anne Thompson, the writers Nancy Rommelmann and Emmanuelle Richard, the crisis-communications man Allan Mayer, and the performer and essayist Sandra Tsing Loh. They did not agree about politics. Welch and Kaus leaned libertarian or heterodox-liberal, Hewitt and the National Review crowd leaned right, and Loh and Alkon fit no slot at all. What held them was not a platform. It was a temper.
What they valued first was independence. The writer without a masthead, who answered to no editor and needed no permission to publish, was their model of a free person. They prized the freelancer’s nerve and the blogger’s standing army of one. Close behind independence came candor. They hated euphemism, public relations, the official line, the press release dressed as news. They loved the person who said the thing the rest of the room would not say. They valued wit and style as coin of the realm, the well-turned line and the deflating joke, and they valued reality over sentiment, the concrete detail over the soft abstraction. Underneath all of it ran loyalty to friends and to the table, a hospitality that bound the set together even as its members made a public show of having no illusions about anyone.
Their hero was the independent truth-teller with a good prose style and the nerve to use it. H. L. Mencken was the patron saint of the type, the press critic who skewered the boobs and the cant from outside the club. The admirable life, by their lights, belonged to the writer who built a name and a readership without an institution to credential him, who told it straight against the herd, and who carried himself with humor rather than self-importance. The hero faced hardship dry-eyed. When Seipp wrote that having cancer had not made her a better person, she gave the set its purest act, a refusal of the redemptive script that the world presses on the dying, and the friends who called themselves Team Cathy honored exactly that refusal. The anti-hero of their world was the credentialed grandee who mouths pieties, the prize-hungry establishment journalist, the sentimental writer who turns every hardship into a journey of growth. Phoniness, in any form, was the thing a hero stood against.
Their status games ran on wit and on being right, or first. A sharp post raised you. A scoop or a prediction that came true raised you. Dullness, earnestness, and error sank you. In the early blogosphere the visible scoreboard was the link and the blogroll, the inbound traffic, the nod from a bigger site, and the set traded in those marks the way an older world traded in bylines. Access to the table was its own currency, since an invitation to Seipp’s dinners conferred membership and she held the gate. The takedown was a status move above all others. Bagging a large target, the Los Angeles Times most of all, raised a writer’s standing more than any quiet good work could. So did insider knowledge, the air of someone who knew the real story behind the official one. To be known as independent and uncaptured, not a drone of the mainstream press, was the badge they competed to wear.
The oughts they pressed followed from the things they prized. A writer ought to stay independent and resist capture by sources, advertisers, and editors. A writer ought to tell it plain and refuse the comforting lie. One ought not take oneself too seriously, since earnestness shaded quickly into the pomposity they mocked. The press ought to disclose its interests and stop claiming a neutrality it did not possess, the lesson Seipp drew from the Staples Center affair. One ought to face trouble without self-pity. And merit and candor ought to beat credentials and connections, a rule that flattered a set of outsiders making their way without the usual passes.
Their claims about fixed natures were just as firm. The mainstream press was liberal by its nature, in their telling, not by accident, and the Times and The New York Times were captured houses rather than neutral ones. Los Angeles was a real civilization with its own centers of power, not a lesser version of New York, and Seipp built much of her work on that conviction. Character, they held, is largely set, and adversity reveals what a person is rather than remaking him, which is why the cancer line landed as a creed and not only a quip. Uplift and the journey narrative were dishonest by nature, scripts laid over experience to make it palatable. Talent and nerve were real things, unevenly handed out, and the good writer showed early and could not be credentialed into being. These were not arguments they often defended. They were the floor they stood on.
The grammar that organized their praise and blame turned on a single opposition: honest against phony. Phoniness was the cardinal sin, whether it wore the dress of public relations, of establishment piety, or of the sentimental. Candor was the cardinal virtue, and it covered a multitude of other faults. Around that center sat the familiar pairs: independence against capture, wit against earnestness, nerve against cowardice, the insider who knew the real story against the dupe who swallowed the press release. The grammar was ironic and adversarial. Praise came wrapped in a joke, and the highest compliment one of them could pay another was that she had no illusions. Affection moved through teasing rather than tribute, so the warmth of the set hid behind its dry surface, and an outsider might miss how much these people loved one another.
The set preached independence and made a virtue of contrarianism, yet they formed a tight and loyal club with an orthodoxy of its own. You belonged by sharing the right enemies, the captured press and the therapeutic culture and the sentimental script, and by speaking in the approved key of dry irony. The maverick creed coexisted with a quiet conformity. The contrarians had their own party line, and dissent from it inside the circle was no easier than dissent anywhere else. Every set that prides on having no illusions keeps one about its own freedom, and theirs was the belief that a circle bound by a shared temper and a shared list of enemies was not a circle at all but a gathering of independent minds who happened to agree.
What is more striking to me is the muted interest of the rest of the world, which every four years for decades seemed almost to pause for a month to engage in a truly global but appealingly low-stakes performance of tribal nationalism…
In theory, national teams should offer a different appeal, one that is less arbitrary. And a way for those who feel their countries have been drained of patriotism and national identity to enact their fantasy of replenishing those feelings. In the time of Marine Le Pen, you might expect French football fans to be especially animated about Les Bleus, for instance, rather than raging about criticism from the team’s Black star Kylian Mbappé. In Britain’s Reform era, you might expect a kind of national revival of the proud hooliganism of earlier, less globalized eras. You might see that hooliganism on the streets of Tommy Robinson’s “Unite the Kingdom” rallies, but when it comes to soccer London seems more worked up about Arsenal than about the Lions.
…what we identify as nationalism in global affairs might be better described as a form of parochialism, with populists making particular claims not about the nation per se so much as the ways it should be reformed — presumably toward some reactionary ideal, its contours often more local than genuinely national. In this reading, globalization hasn’t just generated a backlash among those who resent deindustrialization, capital flight and the stateless lives of the world’s billionaires. It has also made the nation itself seem like a somewhat untrustworthy unit of political and social organization to many people on the right. For them, what might once have served as a source of patriotism and pride now produces feelings of resentment and regret. Not that liberals aren’t queasy about nationalism these days, either. For all of us, rooting for Arsenal or P.S.G. might now be more appealing precisely because it’s essentially meaningless.
He’s describing something real. As of June 3, 2026, I feel no excitement about this World Cup, and I love the World Cup. I don’t know why I currently don’t feel anything.
My thoughts are jumbled.
I like his point about the turn from nationalism to parochialism. Wallace-Wells notices that the populist right does not trust the nation as it exists, because the nation’s team now looks like its diasporas, so the right retreats into a fantasy of a reformed nation that no eleven men on a field can represent. Mbappé and Le Pen carry the point for him. That observation cuts against the lazy assumption that political nationalism and soccer nationalism rise together.
Wallace-Wells is really writing about the collapse of national belonging as spectacle. The World Cup used to convert national identity into harmless collective theater. This no longer works because the nation has become contested terrain.
What we identify as nationalism in global affairs might be better described as a form of parochialism.
The World Cup depends on a shared fiction that “France,” “England,” “America,” or “Argentina” can still appear as one body. That fiction is harder to sustain when national identity has become internally litigated.
Club fandom is easier because it asks less of the fan. Arsenal does not require metaphysical agreement about nationhood. It offers style, stars, colors, weekly rituals, and low-cost belonging.
A Frenchman watched France because France felt partly constitutive of who he was. The national team represented an extension of the self. The victory belonged to him in some symbolic sense.
A buffered self approaches the nation differently. Nationhood becomes one affiliation among many. The person can be simultaneously an Arsenal fan, a software engineer, a vegan, a resident of London, a member of an online gaming community, and a citizen of Britain. No single identity necessarily dominates.
The contemporary right often calls for stronger national identities, but many of the social conditions that produced porous national identities have weakened. Religious participation is lower. Local communities are weaker. Geographic mobility is higher. Intermarriage is higher. Social life is more online. Consumer choice saturates everyday life. As a result, nationalism often becomes ideological rather than lived.
People talk about the nation constantly while feeling less embedded in national institutions and traditions.
If the right feels betrayed by the multiethnic national side, that explains alienation from Les Bleus or the Three Lions. It does not explain why club soccer fills the gap. Club teams are more multiethnic, more for-hire, more corporate, as he says himself. His two examples of club passion, the New York mayor and Dave Portnoy, are not aggrieved populists pining for blood and soil. They are men who picked a foreign team for no reason and enjoy it.
The empirical base is thin. Unsold tickets at punishing prices, canceled hotel blocks, a boycott aimed at Trump. He admits interest will surge once the games begin. None of that shows a worldwide decline in national-team feeling. A boycott of a US-hosted tournament is a host-country effect, not evidence about how Brazilians or Argentines or Englishmen feel.
The largest gap is the format. This is the first 48-team World Cup. More teams, more mismatches, more filler in the early rounds. That dilution explains pre-tournament apathy better than any theory about the nation, and it sits right in front of him. He writes “drained of meaning” and then reaches past the structural answer for cultural ones.
He says rooting for Arsenal appeals because it means nothing. But he spent the essay arguing club tribalism carries real feeling, and he cites Foer to call club loyalty a check on globalism. Both cannot stand. Either club fandom is empty and the World Cup’s fade is a loss, or club fandom is full and his frame about displaced nationalism needs rebuilding.
He reads the political weather well. The right quarrels with the nation as it is, not with the idea of nations.
The new club fandom Wallace-Wells describes is buffered. Portnoy picks Tottenham. The New York mayor picks Arsenal. Nothing in birth or blood hands him the team. The self selects it and assigns it whatever weight he likes. Wallace-Wells calls this arbitrary and treats the arbitrariness as a puzzle. Arbitrary intense attachment is the mark of the buffered self, which makes its own meaning and knows it made it.
Wallace-Wells asks why political nationalism rises while soccer nationalism does not. Charles Taylor might say that modern men are buffered, even the nationalists, and a buffered self cannot relate to his nation porously no matter how badly he wants to. The right-wing dream of national replenishment is the buffered self trying to will porousness back into existence. It fails by its own form. Enchantment you select is not enchantment. Belonging you design is not belonging.
Wallace-Wells says populists make claims about how the nation should be reformed rather than about the nation as it stands. A buffered self relates to the nation as a project, an object held in the mind and measured against an ideal. The porous self has no project. The nation inhabits him. So the program of reform gives away the buffered character of the men running it. They crave porous belonging and can produce only a buffered blueprint.
The Mbappé episode reads the same way. A porous nationalism takes whoever wears the shirt as the nation made flesh. Le Pen’s people judge the team against a template in the head and find Mbappé wanting. That judging stance, holding the real team at arm’s length against an interior ideal, is buffered to the core, even while it wears the costume of blood and soil.
He says club fandom appeals because it means nothing. The buffered self cheers hard and stays detached at once, because it knows the meaning is its own and could have landed elsewhere. Intensity and arbitrariness sit together with no strain.
FIFA’s corruption, host politics, ticket pricing, and corporate bloat are not side issues. They drain the sacramental quality from the event. A World Cup that feels like an extractive mega-event cannot easily serve as popular nationalism.
The modern buffered individual treats identity as a project of personal curation. Fandom is no longer a matter of geographic or tribal destiny; it is a choice. A fan in Los Angeles or Lagos can choose to support Arsenal or Paris Saint-Germain based on tactical aesthetics, a specific player, or a digital subculture.
Because the buffered self relies on autonomy, this choice feels authentic precisely because it is arbitrary. It carries no inherent moral duty or existential risk. If the club fails, or if its corporate ownership becomes unpalatable, the individual can detach or recalibrate his consumption. Club fandom satisfies the modern need for connection without compromising individual sovereignty. It is a controlled, low-stakes simulation of community.
International football operates on an older, porous logic. It demands that the individual surrender his curated identity to the accident of birth. You do not choose your national team; you inherit it.
During a World Cup, the boundaries of the buffered self temporarily dissolve. The individual is re-embedded into a collective body, vulnerable to a shared national fate that he cannot control. This porous experience requires a thick, underlying social consensus to function smoothly. The collective ritual only works if everyone agrees on what the national emblem represents.
The current friction surrounding the World Cup reflects the difficulty modern individuals face when trying to inhabit this porous state. When national teams become battlegrounds for domestic culture wars, the shared social matrix fractures. The individual can no longer easily slip into the collective identity because the definition of that identity is contested.
Wallace-Wells notes that rooting for a corporate club is appealing because it is essentially meaningless. In Taylor’s terms, club soccer is the ideal playground for the buffered self because it offers the thrill of tribalism without the weight of belonging.
The muted anticipation for the World Cup is not a sign that nationalism is dead, but rather that the porous demand of international sports is increasingly difficult to sustain in a hyper-individualistic, buffered age. When the tournament begins, the raw visceral pull of national alignment may still break through the buffer, forcing a temporary return to that older, porous reality. Until the whistle blows, however, the modern fan prefers the safety of a self-constructed, corporate alignment.
Most rich men quarrel with reporters as subjects of coverage. Sheldon Adelson (1933-2021) did that, and then he did more. He sued reporters. He bought the newspaper that covered him. He founded a newspaper in another country and ran it at a loss for political ends. By the end of his life he had occupied almost every position a man can hold opposite the press at once. He was a subject, a plaintiff, an owner, a competitor, and a builder of media institutions. That range, more than any single lawsuit, makes his career a case study in how great wealth meets the work of reporting.
The reporters who first took his measure wrote in a familiar key. Connie Bruck’s 2008 profile in The New Yorker, “The Brass Ring,” traced a relentless drive for influence that ran from the casino floor to the White House to Jerusalem. Evan Osnos returned to the same figure in The New Yorker in 2012, this time through Macau, where Adelson built the gambling fortune that funded everything else. These pieces set the baseline. They presented a self-made man of enormous energy and a temper for control, and they raised the questions that later litigation would answer in a harder form.
The man the reporters met
The early business press wrote Adelson as a classic American striver. He grew up poor in Dorchester, a working-class section of Boston, and he liked to tell the story of borrowing two hundred dollars from an uncle at twelve to sell newspapers on a corner. He moved through dozens of ventures before he found the one that made him. COMDEX, the computer trade show he built in the 1980s, became the largest event of its kind in the world, and its sale gave him the capital to enter the casino business.
What he built next changed Las Vegas. The Venetian shifted the economics of the Strip away from the gambler and toward the convention, the business traveler, and the large corporate event. He carried that model to Asia. The Sands Macao and the Venetian Macao turned a Portuguese backwater into the richest gambling market on earth, and Marina Bay Sands did the same for Singapore’s tourist economy. By the late 2000s he sat among the richest men alive.
Wealth on that scale drew a different kind of attention. Reporters stopped asking only how he made his money. They began to ask how he used it, in American politics, in Israel, and in Macau, where the company he controlled faced United States investigations into possible violations of the Foreign Corrupt Practices Act. The adversarial coverage that followed gave Adelson his reasons, or his pretexts, for the legal campaign that came to define him.
Sharks in the Desert and the bankrupting of John L. Smith
The central conflict of Adelson’s life with the press centered on one Nevada columnist. John L. Smith of the Las Vegas Review-Journal had already written Running Scared in 2001, a hard book about Steve Wynn that drew a libel claim from Wynn over promotional copy. Smith left that suit because he had not written the offending material. In 2005 he published Sharks in the Desert: The Founding Fathers and Current Kings of Las Vegas, a survey of the men who built modern Las Vegas. Two pages concerned Adelson’s Boston years, his early move into vending machines, and the presence of organized crime in that trade. The book made no firm claim that tied Adelson to the mob, and Smith later conceded it contained errors, but Adelson read the passage as an attack on his name.
He sued for fifteen million dollars. He filed in Los Angeles in 2005 and named both Smith and the publisher, Barricade Books, the house of the late Lyle Stuart. What happened next reveals more about libel litigation than any verdict could. Barricade buckled under the cost of defense. Smith moved the case to Nevada in 2007 and filed for Chapter 7 bankruptcy. He fought the suit while his young daughter, Amelia, underwent surgery, chemotherapy, and radiation for brain cancer. Adelson offered, by Smith’s account, to place two hundred thousand dollars in a medical and education account for the girl if Smith would admit libel and apologize in court. Smith refused. He has written that the case was never about defamation. He believed Adelson meant to make him an example for any reporter who dared to write about the billionaire.
In 2009 Adelson dismissed the suit with prejudice. Judge Bruce Markell deemed Smith the prevailing party and required Adelson to pay Smith’s costs. On paper the columnist won. By then the publisher lay in ruins and the writer had declared bankruptcy. The judgment could not undo either fact.
This is the lesson the case taught reporters across the country, and it has nothing to do with who held the better legal argument. A defamation suit is a contest of endurance before it is a contest of truth. A billionaire commands a depth of resources that a columnist, a local paper, or a small press cannot reach. Winning a lawsuit and surviving a lawsuit are separate things. The process is the penalty, and the penalty falls before any court rules.
A pattern, not an episode
Smith was not alone. Adelson sued the Las Vegas Sun reporter Jeff Simpson (1960-2011) twice over gaming columns. Both claims failed, and Simpson has described the weight of the litigation even so. Adelson sued the Daily Mail in London, which published an apology and settled in 2008. The frequency tells its own story. His defenders read the suits as a man guarding his reputation against careless reporting. His critics read the pattern as a method, the use of law as a club. One need not settle that question to see the effect on the work.
Editors and reporters who covered Adelson learned that an aggressive story might bring years of legal trouble. That knowledge entered the room before a word reached print. Lawyers reviewed copy. Fact-checking expanded. Publishers priced the risk. Some stories ran anyway, and many did. But the cost of producing them rose, and the suits became part of the weather in which journalism about Adelson took place. The point holds whether or not he won. He shaped the conditions of coverage by raising its price.
The most instructive of the later suits crossed an ocean. Kate O’Keeffe of The Wall Street Journal reported on the Macau operations and on Adelson’s litigation with Steven Jacobs, the fired president of his Macau unit, whose wrongful-termination filing carried the allegation that Adelson had approved a prostitution strategy at the casinos. In a 2012 article she co-wrote with Alexandra Berzon, O’Keeffe described Adelson as “a scrappy, foul-mouthed billionaire from working-class Dorchester, Mass.”
Adelson sued over the word foul-mouthed. He filed in February 2013, not in an American court, but in Hong Kong’s Court of First Instance, a city where he owned casinos and where the law treats libel plaintiffs more kindly than American law does. He named O’Keeffe alone. He left out Berzon, who was based in the United States, and he left out Dow Jones, the deep-pocketed parent that could fund a defense.
The venue was the message. American reporters enjoy unusual protection at home. Under New York Times Co. v. Sullivan (1964), a public figure must prove actual malice to win a defamation claim, a burden that defeats most such suits. Hong Kong, with its roots in British common law, sets a lower bar for the plaintiff. The First Amendment guards a reporter inside the United States. It does not follow her abroad. Global business lets a wealthy plaintiff shop for the forum that suits him, a practice media lawyers call libel tourism or jurisdictional arbitrage. Power crosses borders, and so can the lawsuit that answers it.
O’Keeffe fought back through American courts. She used the federal discovery statute, 28 U.S.C. § 1782, to gather evidence in the United States for use in Hong Kong. She subpoenaed Adelson’s former driver, Kwame Luangisa, in New York, and an architect who had worked with Adelson, Nikita Zukov, in Florida. The Second Circuit and the Eleventh Circuit each let the discovery proceed. The Journal argued in court filings that the suit carried an ulterior aim, to push O’Keeffe off the Macau beat. The case settled in January 2017, with each side bearing its own costs. Adelson, as one writer put it, sued for years and walked away with nothing. The outcome mattered less than the method. The threat to the reporter was no longer simple domestic censorship. The threat now traveled.
The National Jewish Democratic Council
The asymmetry showed plainest against an advocacy group with no newsroom behind it. In the months before the 2012 election, the National Jewish Democratic Council urged Republican candidates to refuse Adelson’s money, calling it tainted, and pointed to the Macau prostitution allegations that had already surfaced in mainstream reporting and in the Jacobs filing. Adelson sued for sixty million dollars.
A Manhattan federal court dismissed the claim. The judge held that calling a donor’s money dirty or tainted, in that context, amounted to constitutionally protected opinion rather than a false statement of fact, and he ordered Adelson to pay the council’s legal fees. The case turned in part on Nevada’s anti-SLAPP statute, the kind of law built to throw out suits filed to silence public speech, and the appeals court sent a question about that statute to the Nevada Supreme Court before the dismissal stood.
On the law the defendants prevailed. On the ledger the picture is less clean. Years of legal expense fell on a small organization, and the council wound down its operations in 2016. Its allies tied the decline in part to the burden of the fight. Anti-SLAPP laws help. They cannot give back the years and the money a defendant spends before the protection arrives, and they vary by state and reach almost nothing abroad. A group can win the argument and still lose the capacity to keep going.
The Review-Journal taken from within
Litigation shows wealth acting on the press through the courts. The purchase of the Las Vegas Review-Journal shows wealth acting on the press through ownership, and it produced the strangest chapter of the whole story.
In December 2015 a newly formed company called News + Media Capital Group bought Nevada’s largest newspaper for a hundred and forty million dollars, a markup of roughly thirty-seven percent over the price the paper had fetched earlier that year. The buyer hid behind the shell. The only name in the filings belonged to Michael Schroeder, a Connecticut newspaper executive who declined to say who stood behind the money. For a week, the reporters and the readers did not know who owned the paper.
So the reporters investigated their own newsroom. Three of them, Howard Stutz, James DeHaven, and Jennifer Robison, found the thread. A small Connecticut paper Schroeder controlled, the New Britain Herald, had run a September article attacking a Clark County judge, Elizabeth Gonzalez, who oversaw Adelson litigation and who had cut him off in open court with the line, “Sir, you don’t get to argue with me.” A Connecticut paper had no reason to assail a Las Vegas judge unless someone wanted it done. The reporters traced the common ownership, and on December 16 they named Adelson in their own pages. The family confirmed it the next day in a statement printed on page two.
The cost came fast. The editor, Michael Hengel, who had backed the internal investigation, took a buyout and left within weeks. Staff reported that a quote questioning the new ownership had been cut from a story without the reporter’s knowledge. A later editor, J. Keith Moyer, told a journalists’ panel that Smith would not write about Adelson while he held the chair, and he extended the ban to Steve Wynn. Smith, the man Adelson had once sued into bankruptcy, now found himself working for Adelson, forbidden to write about him. He resigned in 2016. Within about a year, all three reporters who exposed the sale had left the paper.
The episode turned the Review-Journal into a national lesson in media ethics. The old question had been whether a billionaire could bend journalism through the courts. The new question was whether he could bend it through the deed of sale, and the answer, in Las Vegas, came quickly.
Israel Hayom and the building of a press
The American record alone misses half of the man. To see the whole, look to Israel. In July 2007 Adelson founded Israel Hayom, a daily tabloid, and he gave it away. Free distribution removed the price barrier, and within weeks the paper reached a circulation its rivals could not touch. By the 2010s it had the widest readership in the country.
He did not run it to make money. By one accounting reported in Haaretz, the paper lost roughly a hundred and ninety million dollars from its launch through 2014, and Adelson covered the gap year after year. He ran it for politics. Israelis named it the Bibiton, a pun on Benjamin Netanyahu‘s nickname and the Hebrew word for newspaper, because it praised Netanyahu, defended him through his scandals, and attacked his rivals. The Israeli right had long held that the established press despised Netanyahu, and the paper offered the corrective they wanted. The relationship grew close enough to surface in a criminal investigation, the recorded talks in which Netanyahu and a rival publisher discussed trading coverage for limits on Israel Hayom.
Here the comparison with Steve Wynn falls apart. Wynn built resorts and fought the reporters who covered them. Adelson built resorts, fought the reporters, and then built the press itself. Many rich men seek favorable coverage. Adelson invested in the production of coverage. He grasped a newspaper as a source of power and not merely an obstacle to it, which places him in a longer line that runs through William Randolph Hearst, Robert Maxwell, and Rupert Murdoch. His significance reaches past Nevada and past the casino floor. He belongs to the history of men who set out to own the institutions that decide what the public knows.
The shape of the whole
Read together, the episodes describe a single fact rather than a string of separate fights. The fact is asymmetry. Adelson did not always win. He lost to Smith, lost to O’Keeffe, lost to the Democratic council, and saw his own reporters expose his secret purchase. The common thread is not victory. It is the scale of the resources he could bring, on a level no columnist, no small press, no advocacy group, and no local paper could meet. That gap shaped every contact. It shaped the suits, the venue choices, the ownership, and the daily calculations inside newsrooms about what they could afford to print.
A few lessons follow. National organizations may outlast prolonged litigation, while local papers, independent publishers, and individual reporters often cannot. Anti-SLAPP statutes give real defenses, yet they differ by state and offer little against a suit filed overseas. Ownership changes editorial culture faster than most readers expect, as the Review-Journal showed in a matter of weeks. And the protection a reporter relies on at home, the high wall built by Sullivan, ends at the border, while the wealth that funds a transnational suit does not.
The old picture of the press casts the reporter as the one who investigates the powerful. The Adelson record complicates the picture without erasing it. The powerful man here investigated the reporters. He sued them. He bought their paper. He founded papers of his own. He moved his claims across jurisdictions, and he reached into the institutions that define public reality. For that reason his quarrel with journalists amounts to more than the biography of a casino magnate. It is a study in the strain that great private wealth places on the work of public knowledge, and in the stubbornness of reporters who, in his case more than once, did the work anyway.
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"This guy knows all the gossip, the ins and outs, the lashon hara of the Orthodox world. He’s an [expert] in... all the inner workings of the Orthodox world." (Rabbi Aaron Rakeffet-Rothkoff)