The veteran 60 Minutes correspondent Sharyn Alfonsi expressed concern about “the spread of corporate meddling and editorial fear” at CBS News and her uncertainty about whether she will keep her job after she pushed back on a directive to change her December segment on Venezuelans who were sent to the Cecot prison in El Salvador.
Alfonsi spoke about the incident for the first time on Thursday evening after receiving the Ridenhour prize for courage at the National Press Club in Washington. Her comments come as the Trump administration has piled pressure on US media and follow CBS News editor Bari Weiss’s decision to shelve the segment on the flagship news program.
Alfonsi had alleged at the time that Weiss had “spiked” the story for political purposes, a significant accusation of journalistic impropriety. Weiss argued that the segment was delayed because it did not sufficiently include the perspective of the Trump administration.
The segment was originally supposed to air on the 21 December edition of the show. It ultimately aired about a month later, on the 18 January edition, but was not meaningfully different from the original report and lacked an on-air interview with a Trump administration official.
“I will not linger on the internal mechanics of the dust-up at CBS that led to our Cecot story being pulled, but we have to be honest about what it represents,” she said on Thursday. “It wasn’t an isolated editorial argument. In my view, it was the result of a more aggressive contagion: the spread of corporate meddling and editorial fear. It’s hard to watch.”
She joked that her view was “for the attorneys”. CBS has been approached for comment.
Alfonsi’s future at the network is said to be in jeopardy; it is unclear whether she will return for the show’s 59th season, which begins in September. She acknowledged that uncertainty in her remarks.
“Thank you for this award. I didn’t know that the theme was hope. My hope recently has been that I still have a job,” she said. “And every morning I wake up to another headline that says I’ve been fired.”
But, recalling an early job as a waitress that she lost, she said: “If I am fired, it will not be the first time.”
While not naming her bosses at CBS News, Alfonsi spoke about “corporate calculations” happening at media companies these days. The crowd booed when an earlier speaker mentioned Weiss’s name.
“Some executives are asking not, ‘Is the story true?’ But, ‘Is it good for business?’” she said.
Alfonsi confirmed that she was asked to try again to book an administration official to comment for the Cecot piece, which was unsuccessful. “But rather than just running the story, they asked us to change it. I refused,” she said. “Not because I’m a pain in the ass, which I am, but because the story was factually correct, and I argued that any change to it might reflect poorly on CBS and 60 Minutes.”
Alfonsi said that she worried that viewers would compare a recording of the original story, which inadvertently aired only in Canada, to the final product. “Because our audience is smart, they would view any change to the story as capitulation or censorship,” she said.
“My stance did not make my new bosses very happy … I believe I was doing my job, but I’d be lying if I said I wasn’t scared. Fear is a funny thing – it can paralyze you, or it can point you to exactly what needs to be protected. Right now, our industry is afraid of the wrong things. We’re afraid of offending power. We’re afraid of losing access. We’re afraid of another baseless lawsuit. But what we should all be afraid of is silence. Because as I learned [at her first job as a waitress], there is a fine line between being a team player and being an accomplice.”
She said that her producers had “offered to hold [her] hair when [she] was so nervous she was puking about what [she] had done”.
Alfonsi acknowledged for the first time that someone falsely sent a SWAT team to her house a few days after the segment was delayed.
“I guess they were trying to scare me into silence,” she said.
Alfonsi was preceded in her remarks by Bill Owens, who resigned from his job as executive producer of 60 Minutes in April 2025, citing corporate interference. Owens also received a Ridenhour prize for courage.
“I always said I’d follow Bill over a cliff, and apparently I did,” she said.
The Guardian wp:paragraph
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