A report from Puck News shed light on the behind-the-scenes drama unfolding at CBS News over the growing controversy of its "60 Minutes" interview with Kamala Harris.
Federal Communication Commission chairman Brendan Carr said that Americans deserve to see the unedited transcript at the ...
The latest development comes as Paramount Global lawyers engaged in preliminary talks to settle the lawsuit Trump filed in October over his objection to edits to the '60 Minutes' interview with Harris ...
President Trump filed a $10-billion lawsuit alleging CBS deceptively edited the Kamala Harris interview. CBS took the rare ...
The Federal Communication Commission (FCC) released the unedited transcript and video handed over by CBS News of its controversial "60 Minutes" interview with then-Vice President Kamala Harris.
However, in his first week, Carr reopened the CBS “60 Minutes” case and two other election season bias complaints. Trump’s complaint and the FCC action have stoked fears by some journalists ...
It’s not the first time 60 Minutes has faced accusations of putting their thumb on the scale against Trump. In October 2020, CBS anchor Lesley Stahl interviewed Trump and dismissed allegations ...
The outcome of Carr’s investigation has broader ramifications for Paramount, people close to the FCC told The Post.
However, in his first week, Carr reopened three of the cases that alleged liberal media bias, including the CBS "60 Minutes" complaint. In a separate online statement, CBS said it was taking the ...
including during his first term. The difference this time is that Brendan Carr, who he appointed FCC chair, revived a conservative group’s complaint against CBS over the 60 Minutes edit ...