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GOOOOAAAAALLLLLLL

31,592 просмотров • 3 лет назад •via X (Twitter)

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Фото профиля Solar Heavy
Solar Heavy1 год назад

- All I Knew

Фото профиля Sam the Down Bad Man
Sam the Down Bad Man3 лет назад

Just struttin

Фото профиля N1ght_
N1ght_3 лет назад

My species and my country mentioned uwu ✨

Фото профиля Hyaku5595
Hyaku55953 лет назад

LOOK AT THAT POSS OUT EXPLORING HAVING FUN

Фото профиля Jaguazaumlokaum
Jaguazaumlokaum3 лет назад

Gamba brasileiro s2

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EYE ROLL: Scott Pelley says “it was fate” that he chose to tear into his new bosses to their faces and cries AGAIN when saying “newsrooms are sort of like the military” and have “life-threatening job[s]” with “very strong bonds” that demand “people…go to war zones when…pregnant” He adds Bari Weiss, Nick Bilton, and their lieutenants “have never felt that” in their lives… Lulu Garcia-Navarro: “Why did you feel compelled to speak up?” Pelley: “It was fate. First of all, our entire senior staff had been wiped out there and out there. I looked around the room, I’m the only correspondent there, which surprised me very much. I learned that my colleagues were out shooting stories as they should be in the month of June. But I’m the only correspondent there, which surprised me. And I looked around at my friends and colleagues in the room and realized I was the senior person. Only I could do it. None of them could be asked to take that risk. So, when I saw Nick Bilton’s email and then saw him reading to my broken-hearted people off his phone, I felt that somebody had to stand up for the broadcast, not just the broadcast, but the people. There are people in that room who go to war zones when they are pregnant. [SOBBING] Newsrooms are sort of like the military or the police or the beautiful people at the FDNY down the street. It is a life-threatening job in many instances. And very strong bonds, very emotional bonds are found or are developed in that kind of setting. And to have people running CBS News who don’t know that, have never felt that, and don’t understand it, is a tragedy I never expected to see.”

Curtis Houck

15,048 просмотров • 7 дней назад

Lulu Garcia-Navarro: “But it really didn’t occur to you that you could be fired after so many of your colleagues had been let go after you’d had this, you know, very contentious interaction with your new boss?” Scott Pelley: “You know, some reporter, I turned out to be. I just didn’t connect the dots. I mean, was this meeting contentious? Yes, but 60 Minutes is known for two things, a ticking stopwatch and hard questions. And we ask ourselves those hard questions in the shop because they sharpen us and make us better. There was a screening once with Mike Wallace and Mike and the executive producer and founder of 60 Minutes, Don Hewitt, got into a big argument about a script. Wallace jumps up in the middle of the screening, throws his script up in the air and yells at Don. Well, then you write the f’ing thing. One of those pieces of paper comes down and slices an associate producer across the face. He’s bleeding now. He’s got a paper cut on his face. That was about a story. The meeting that I was in was about whether 60 Minutes was going to even survive or not.” Garcia-Navarro: “So, you walk in, and what was the energy of the room?” Pelley: “Hostile, dismissive before I could take my seat. Tom Cibrowski said, this is a firing offense. I was confused. I wasn’t sure who he was talking about in the room, but it became plain very quickly that they were talking about me, and they were unhappy about the meeting that had occurred, a meeting that had ended in thunderous applause for me, if I may say so, because somebody had stood up for the broadcast.”

Curtis Houck

25,466 просмотров • 7 дней назад