Scott Pelley Has Become the Terry Moran of Dan Rathers

Photo by Charles Sykes/Invision/AP, File

You have to hand it to former 60 Minutes anchor Scott Pelley. If there was ever a question as to the decision-making process by CBS and Bari Weiss to fire him for being utterly insufferable and self-important, Pelley, on his own volition, removed all doubt. And it has been spectacular to witness. 

Pelley has carried the baton at CBS from Dan Rather for two decades since BDS (Bush Derangement Syndrome) caused his mentor Rather to throw his career overboard for a forged Texas Air National Guard letter, purportedly composed in 1972. When the internet fact-checked and proved beyond doubt that the faked gotcha letter had been drafted on a PC as a Microsoft Word document in 2004, complete with the raised and underscored th, Rather's goose was cooked. Everyone knew it except for him. 

That didn't stop him, however, from prattling on for weeks, months, and years into the future, defending the defenseless partisan hit job he presented as legitimate news, and how important his journalism was to upholding democracy. He still believes he is a consummate newsman and above reproach. 

Two decades later, Scott Pelley is here to say, "Hold my beer." And, apparently, pass the box of tissues.

The beginning of the end for Pelley, if we're going to be honest about it, began at a commencement address he gave at Wake Forest about a year ago. Without mentioning President Donald J. Trump by name, it didn't take much intellect to know to whom he was referring in this screed. 

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I'm not saying he ever really wore the mask of non-partisanship very well, if at all, during his tenure as anchor of CBS Evening News and 60 Minutes. But if he ever wore that mask, it fell off and was left on the dais after this preening stemwinder. 

When Bari Weiss was signed from the Free Press to become editor-in-chief of CBS News and all of the programming under that masthead, you just knew it wouldn't be too long before sparks would fly. It was only a question of who was going to light the fuse first. 

In June, 2024, Scott Pelley offered this banger from 60 Minutes to assuage any concerns about Joe Biden's obvious descent into decrepitude. 

Any sentient political observer who had seen Joe Biden mentally and physically deteriorate seemingly by the hour knew this piece was propaganda. Fortunately, the former President proved it with his debate disaster three weeks later. And less than two months after the Pelley 'It's just a stutter,' nonsense, Biden was kicked to the curb. 

Weiss and her team started at the Tiffany network last October. Tensions began to grow instantly. June 1st became the boiling point. 

In an all-staff meeting of 60 Minutes personnel, Weiss' newly-named executive producer, Nick Bilton, was verbally accosted by Pelley. Pelley accused Bilton of not having the qualifications for his post, and accused Weiss of "murdering 60 Minutes". Pelley was fired a day later. 

HotAir is one of several entities owned and operated by our parent company, Salem Media. As producer of the Hugh Hewitt Show, another program under the Salem umbrella, I think I can speak for everyone you read, hear, or see on our various platforms. We have a lot of latitude to express our views, and are very thankful for the opportunities with which to do so. However, if we were to pull a stunt remotely similar to the one Pelley pulled with, *checks notes*, his bosses, we'd be dropped faster than a Graham Platner ex-girlfriend. 

Even Katie Couric, no stranger to either network news, CBS, or media bias, admitted the obvious on her podcast. Insubordination is one of those pesky things that will get you bounced from your contract, regardless of the regard in which you hold yourself. 

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By mid-week, the mourning Pelley called up his friends at the New York Times, and explained how he views his craft as just like wearing the uniform. 

“I have been in combat in Afghanistan,” Pelley told the outlet. “I have been in combat in Iraq. I have been in the war zone in Ukraine multiple times, risking my life and the happiness of my family because of my devotion to the broadcast.”

The late columnist Michael Kelly, who wrote for The Atlantic back when it was a credible publication, died as an embedded reporter when a Humvee he was traveling in across the Iraqi desert towards Baghdad in 2003 hit rough terrain, swerved under gunfire, and overturned in a canal, drowning Kelly and the Marines with whom he was embedded. Kelly told us repeatedly that journalism is not a profession. It's a craft to be practiced. He never got too full of himself, even though he was widely regarded as the country's finest columnist/essayist. 

Pelly, however, drank his own Kool-Aid for so long that he's developed a dependency. Not content with the reaction to his phone call to the Times, he went on camera for a sit-down with Lulu Garcia-Navarro of the Times. Let's begin with the doubling down of his equating actual military service with carrying a microphone...and a comb. 

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Hoo-boy. Hope this episode was sponsored by Kleenex, because we're going to be going through the 3-ply ultra-soft here by the Costco case. Nothing but the best for Scott. 

Newsrooms are sorta like the military...except for the 100% of the time when they're not. He's really not going to let this 'I served, too' bit go. 

More Pelley tear-filled reflections.

'We used to have meetings like this all the time.' No, they didn't. I'm fairly confident no one ever said to CBS management in the past that they're murdering the show, and they have no qualifications to make decisions. Why? Because they were all in the same left-wing club. 

Pelley was so tone deaf and self-absorbed in his Manhattan-Beltway media bubble that he had no idea who Bari Weiss was, even though she used to work at, *checks notes again*, the New York Times for years as the staff editor of the Opinion page - the same outlet he's using for his therapy session. 

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Did Pelley have any clue his outburst in the staff meeting might not be received too well? Nah. 

Bias, this Weiss woman claims we have. I have no idea what she's talking about. Bias? Pshaw. 

Oh, you mean this bias? 

Three different camera angles showed Ms. Good turning the steering wheel into the officer directly in front of her car and hitting the gas. Clear as crystal. She got herself shot because she disobeyed a lawful order to stop and get out of the vehicle, attempted to flee the scene of a crime, and used her car as a deadly weapon, striking an officer while attempting to evade arrest. Pelley would have you believe that's not what your eyes saw on all those videos, and that Bari Weiss was ordering him to lie. No bias there.

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This is not about me, he says. 

As Sammy Davis, Jr. sang,

Whether I'm right or whether I'm wrong
Whether I find a place in this world or never belong
I gotta be me, I've gotta be me
What else can I be but what I am

Ah, yes. Scott Pelley, man of the common people, not making any of this about him. 

Give him a year, and by then, the all-star podfest of ex-anchors will be epic - Pelley, Acosta, Lemon, Moran, Couric. You just know someone will pin a sorta-medal of courage on him, because he's sorta-military, don't you know, and CBS broke his sorta-progressive, left-wing heart. 

But I will give him this much credit. Being sorta-military, he didn't get a sorta-Nazi tattoo on his chest. So he's got that much going for him. 

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