FCC Chair Brendan Carr criticizes veteran journalist Scott Pelley as emblematic of legacy media's disconnect, responding to Pelley's expressed surprise at his recent firing from CBS' "60 Minutes."
Media Confidential
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Monday, June 8, 2026
FCC's Carr: Pelley, Journalists 'Out of Touch'
FCC Chair Brendan Carr criticizes veteran journalist Scott Pelley as emblematic of legacy media's disconnect, responding to Pelley's expressed surprise at his recent firing from CBS' "60 Minutes."
Pelley Calls for Bari Weiss' Ouster
In his first interview since being fired, longtime "60 Minutes" correspondent Scott Pelley accused CBS News Editor-in-Chief Bari Weiss of “putting a thumb on the scale” for the Trump administration and called for her removal.
YouTube Surpasses Netflix in Average Daily Usage
Google-owned YouTube has overtaken Netflix in average daily viewing time per account, according to new data from London-based analytics firm Digital i.
Perspective: Radio Keeps Studying Instead of Listening
By Dave Van Dyke,
President
Radio has never had more data.
We know what people listen to. We know when they listen. We know how long they stay. We know their age, gender, location, and device. We conduct perceptual studies, music tests, focus groups, audience surveys, and analytics reviews.
Yet somehow, despite all of this information, many broadcasters seem less connected to their listeners than ever before.
That's because somewhere along the way, research became a substitute for listening.
Research is valuable. I've spent much of my career studying audience behavior. Good research helps remove assumptions and reveal patterns. But research was never meant to replace human observation. It was meant to support it.
News Source Trust Diverges Sharply Along Partisan Lines
Trust in news sources diverges sharply along partisan lines in the United States, with Democrats far more likely than Republicans to trust major national outlets, according to Pew Research Center surveys.
Recent Pew data shows Democrats and Democratic-leaning independents express significantly higher trust in information from national news organizations. As of late 2025, 69% of Democrats report at least some trust in national news, compared to just 44% of Republicans and Republican-leaning independents.
MLB Blackouts To Get Worse, Before They Get Better
Major League Baseball’s first labor proposal includes an offer from owners that could eventually dismantle the territorial TV rights system responsible for out-of-market “blackouts,” allowing local team broadcasts to be consolidated into a single streaming service over time.
Good Morning! The Pulse Is Ready for Monday, June 8
Radio Broadcasting
Trust In Media: Trust in news sources diverges sharply along partisan lines in the United States, with Democrats far more likely than Republicans to trust major national outlets, according to Pew Research Center surveys.
Perspective: Radio Keeps Studying Listeners Instead of Listening to Them. Radio has never had more data. Yet somehow, despite all of this information, many broadcasters seem less connected to their listeners than ever before. More HERE
AI Attracts: Entravision is pointing to strong audience growth for "Al Aire y Sin Permiso," its innovative Spanish-language radio program that pairs a human host with what the company describes as the industry's first Latino AI-powered radio personality.
CBS Shake-Up Leaves '60 Minutes' With Trust Crisis
The firing of longtime "60 Minutes" correspondent Scott Pelley and other recent shake-ups at the CBS newsmagazine have left only Lesley Stahl, Bill Whitaker, and Jon Wertheim as remaining correspondents.
Trump Abruptly Storms Off MTP Sit Down Interview
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| MTP Moderator Kristen Welker |
President Donald Trump abruptly ended a pre-recorded interview with NBC’s “Meet the Press” moderator Kristen Welker after roughly 50 minutes, citing repeated disruptions from rain pounding a metal barn roof and growing frustration during a tense exchange over election integrity claims.
The sit-down, conducted Friday, June 5, 2026, at Custer Farms in Chippewa Falls, Wisconsin, was arranged at the White House’s request and took place inside a barn before Trump appeared at a farming roundtable. Heavy rain created loud interruptions on the metal roof, delaying segments multiple times along with a technical issue.
FCC Considering EAS Upgrades
The FCC is set to adopt new cybersecurity rules requiring broadcasters and other Emergency Alert System (EAS) participants to protect their equipment with network firewalls (or equivalent segmentation) and strong, unique passwords.
Report: ESPN Bracing For More Layoffs
ESPN is bracing for another round of layoffs this summer, sources told Front Office Sports.
The cuts are expected to affect both talents and non-camera-facing employees, sources said.
An ESPN spokesperson declined to comment.
Annoying Kars4Kids Jingle is back
The long-running Kars4Kids jingle is back on the air in California after a court lifted a temporary ban, allowing the ads to continue while the charity appeals a false advertising ruling.
R.I.P.: Stacey King, Chicago Bulls Broadcaster
Chicago Bulls broadcaster Stacey King died Sunday at age 59, the team announced.
R.I.P.: Craig Carpenter, Former SoCal Radio Personality
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| Craig Carpenter |
Radio History: June 8
➦In 1947...Lassie debuted on ABC radio. It was a 15-minute radio juvenile adventure program. It was broadcast on ABC from June 8, 1947 until May 30, 1948, and on NBC from June 5, 1948, until May 27, 1950.
➦In 1967...The Beatles thematic album 'Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band' quickly climbed to number one after being released just a week earlier. It was their 8th studio album and spent 15 weeks at number one in the U-S. In the U-K, the album went to #1 after just one week, where it remained for an incredible 27 weeks. It was the first album to print the lyrics on the sleeve.
It was lauded by critics for its innovations in production, songwriting and graphic design, for bridging a cultural divide between popular music and high art, and for providing a musical representation of its generation and the contemporary counterculture. It won four Grammy Awards in 1968, including Album of the Year, the first rock LP to receive this honor.















