CBS News fired Scott Pelley on Tuesday evening, terminating the most-decorated correspondent in 60 Minutes history less than 24 hours after he publicly accused the network’s new leadership of dismantling America’s most-watched newsmagazine — and received a standing ovation from his colleagues for saying it.
The confrontation erupted Monday at a staff meeting meant to introduce new executive producer Nick Bilton, a technology journalist and documentary filmmaker installed last week by CBS News editor-in-chief Bari Weiss. Weiss had stunned the industry by hiring Bilton — an outsider with roots in tech reporting — to run the show, replacing veteran executive producer Tanya Simon, who was dismissed along with several longtime producers and correspondents Sharyn Alfonsi and Cecilia Vega.
When Bilton told the gathered staff that Weiss loved CBS News and 60 Minutes, Pelley shot back: “She is murdering ’60 Minutes.’ She does not love this place. She was brought in to kill it, and she’s been doing exactly that.” He also attacked Bilton’s “slender qualifications” for the role and said Weiss had “no qualifications” for her own.
Sources told The Guardian that staffers gave Pelley a standing ovation. CBS News managing editor Charles Forelle called Pelley’s conduct rude; Pelley responded that the network had been rude in how it treated Simon. The room then emptied — and so, by Tuesday evening, did Pelley’s desk. In his termination letter, Bilton described the episode as an “ambush” and said Pelley’s “performative display of hostility — enacted in front of the staff instead of in a civil, private conversation — demonstrated that you have no interest in contributing to the future success of the show.”
CBS said Pelley was terminated for cause, with industry analysts immediately predicting legal action against the network. In a statement, Pelley said the show had “lost its DNA” and expressed gratitude to colleagues, many of whom he said risked their lives for their journalism. Former executive producer Bill Owens, who resigned in April 2025 citing a loss of editorial independence, backed Pelley at the New York Press Club the same night. “Scott can smell a fraud from a mile away,” Owens said, adding that Alfonsi and Vega “were fired by people who don’t even know what we do.”
The rupture is the culmination of months of escalating tension since Weiss — a former opinion columnist who founded The Free Press — took control of CBS News under new Paramount Skydance owner David Ellison. Conflict sharpened in late 2025 when Weiss abruptly pulled a 60 Minutes segment about migrants sent to the El Salvador prison CECOT hours before it was set to air. Pelley’s dismissal leaves Lesley Stahl, Bill Whitaker, and Jon Wertheim as the show’s remaining senior correspondents heading into an uncertain Season 59.




















































