The Journal. - Will Paramount Settle With Trump?
Episode Date: February 27, 2025Paramount Global is wrestling with whether to settle President Trump’s lawsuit against its CBS unit. At the same time, the company is waiting for regulatory approval from the Trump administration fo...r its merger with Skydance Media. WSJ’s Jessica Toonkel explains. Further Reading: -CBS Owner Discusses Settling Trump Suit, With Merger Review on Tap -FCC Requests ‘60 Minutes’ Harris Interview Material as It Reviews Paramount-Skydance Merger -Paramount Executives Ask: Could They Be Sued for Settling Trump’s $20 Billion CBS Lawsuit? Further Listening: -Mayhem at Paramount as Merger Looms -Why Buying Paramount Global Won’t Be Easy Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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This is raw video footage from 60 Minutes, the long-standing news magazine show on CBS.
Last fall, veteran correspondent Bill Whitaker sat down with Democratic presidential candidate
Kamala Harris.
You good?
I'm good.
All right.
Well, Madam Vice President...
Whitaker kicked the interview off
with questions about the Middle East
and pressed Harris on the Biden administration's relationship
with Israel's prime minister.
But it seems that Prime Minister Netanyahu is not listening.
The Wall Street Journal said that he that your administration has repeatedly been blindsided
by Netanyahu.
And in fact, he has rebuffed just about all of your administrations and treaties.
Well, Bill, the work that we have done has resulted in a number of movements in that
region by Israel that were very much prompted by or a result of many things, including our advocacy for what needs to happen in the
region.
And we're not going to stop doing that.
We're not going to stop pursuing what is necessary for the United States to be clear about where
we stand on the need for this war to end.
This answer and how it was edited has become the center of a storm involving President
Trump, claims of election interference, and questions about media independence.
This storm is also threatening an $8 billion merger that CBS's parent company Paramount
Global desperately wants to get done.
Welcome to The Journal, our show about money, business and power.
I'm Kate Leinbach. It's Thursday, February 27th.
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Soon after 60 Minutes aired its interview with Harris, her opponent, Donald Trump, took to the stage at a campaign rally and asked his supporters a question.
So you know what?
If you want me to, I will sue them, should I?
Because they are among the most, see the media, they're among the most dishonest people that
we have.
Trump did sue CBS for $10 billion.
And our colleague Jessica Tunkel has been following the case.
So Trump files this massive lawsuit.
And you know, frankly, at the time, I'm not sure everyone took it super
seriously because they felt like it was grandstanding. But in the claim, what he says is that there
was a promotion for the interview on Face the Nation.
Face the Nation is another CBS show and it aired a preview of the interview.
And then when you actually saw the interview, it was much more, it was a cleaner answer,
it was a more succinct answer. Here is Harris's answer as it aired on Face the Nation.
But it seems that Prime Minister Netanyahu is not listening.
Well, Bill, the work that we have done has resulted in a number of movements in that
region by Israel that were very much prompted by or a result of many things, including our
advocacy for what needs to happen in the region.
And here's what aired on 60 Minutes.
We're not going to stop pursuing what is necessary for the United States to be clear about where
we stand on the need for this war to end.
When you actually saw the interview on 60 Minutes, it was a much more succinct answer.
And so Trump is saying, this was deceitful.
You did this to favor her campaign over mine.
How did CBS respond?
So CBS was pretty vehement.
They said, you know, it's the same question, same answer,
different portions of the response,
and this is a frivolous lawsuit.
And like sort of stepping back in media generally, what is best practice when it comes to this
kind of editing?
I think the best practice is to make sure that whatever the promotion is, is in line
with what the answer was on the interview.
I want to clarify that 60 minutes is unusual in that it is like an hour worth of footage
that they like cut down to 21 minutes.
So there is an expectation there's going to be a lot of editing of that interview.
But sources have told me that since this happened, they are going to be more rigid about making
sure that it's exactly the same language that's used in promotions.
And I would say that this is a tricky area in media, editing politicians.
Yes, this is a complete minefield.
It's damned if you do, damned if you don't, you know, because they do so much editing
to get a longer interview down to just around 20 minutes.
It's tricky.
After Trump won the election, several companies that he sued announced settlements.
In December, ABC said it would pay Trump $15 million
to settle a defamation lawsuit.
The case involved an inaccurate statement
by anchor George Stephanopoulos
about a sexual abuse case against Trump.
In January, Metta settled a case over Trump's suspension on Instagram and Facebook, paying him $25 million.
X also settled a similar case for $10 million.
So since then, it felt like CBS was not publicly as vehement in its outrage over the lawsuit.
And they've been going back and forth in court.
Trump recently a few weeks ago amended his complaint to increase the amount to $20 billion.
$20 billion?
Yes. What have legal experts said are the chances that Trump's lawsuit would succeed in court?
So it kind of depends who you talk to.
I will say that First Amendment attorneys say this is completely frivolous and ridiculous
and that has no standing.
I mean, you know, when I talk to sources close to Paramount, I think
the concern is even if they were to win this, ultimately, it could mean years in court battling
the president of the United States, could be hundreds of millions of dollars. And what
would it mean for CBS News then? And if they choose to settle, what do legal experts say that would show?
I think if they choose to settle, the concern is that all news outlets are sort
of at the whims of the president of the United States. And if he feels like what is being said is unfair or not accurate,
regardless of whether it is or not, they could risk litigation.
So it does feel like we are entering this era of media versus the president.
But in the case of CBS, there's this other layer.
In the case of CBS, they have to get this merger done.
This merger.
CBS parent company Paramount is trying to get an $8 billion merger completed.
But first, it needs approval from the Federal Communications Commission,
which is now run by a Trump appointee.
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Paramount is a huge media conglomerate. It not only owns CBS, it also owns Showtime, Paramount Pictures,
and its own streaming platform. And the company has been struggling for years.
Long before the Harris interview aired, Paramount's owners had started merger talks
with a production company called Skydance.
The controlling shareholder, Sherry Redstone, did not want to sell.
She had a lot of belief that the company could turn around until finally in comes David Ellison,
who runs his own production company, which is much smaller than Paramount, by the way.
But his father is Larry Ellison, who's a billionaire.
He has this vision of taking tech and, you know, making Paramount
a new media company, and he has billions of dollars to back it up.
David Ellison and Skydance seemed like a perfect suitor for Paramount and Sheri Redstone.
But talks dragged on for more than a year.
And there were ups and there were downs.
You know, the deal was canceled, then it was back on,
then it was off, then it was on,
and then you had other suitors coming in
and saying they wanted to buy Paramount.
I mean, it was very dramatic.
You really didn't know until the very end
if this deal was actually going to be announced.
The deal was announced last summer,
but to be finalized, it needed government approval,
specifically the FCC.
All my sources were telling me this is just going to fly through.
The election will happen and it will fly through because people at that point were thinking
Trump was going to win and that the deal would happen.
That is not what happened.
What's holding up the deal at this moment?
So that is not what has happened.
And what's holding up the deal primarily
is this concern around bias at CBS News.
So the FCC has first said, we want
to see the transcript of the interview with Kamala Harris.
We want to see the raw footage. interview with Kamala Harris. We want to see the raw footage and we want to review all of that.
The FCC also reopened a third-party complaint against CBS News about bias,
which the Biden administration had tossed out.
So the FCC has made it very clear that this is a focus for them.
They are reviewing bias at CBS News as part of their review.
And that is totally separate from the Trump lawsuit.
On paper, that is totally separate.
There is our separate filings, a separate docket for the FCC
review, then from Donald Trump's personal lawsuit.
So whether Paramount settles with Trump
should not have any impact on the FCC review?
Theoretically, it should not have any impact.
If there is a settlement, it should not impact the FCC review.
Is that unusual for the FCC, the Federal Communications Commission, to bring up the idea of bias as part of a merger review.
I do not recall a time when you've seen the FCC
look at this issue of bias.
The FCC usually looks at the stations
and like whether two companies, if you put them together,
they own too many stations and that will be an issue.
I don't recall a time where I've seen bias be this much of an issue with the FCC in a
merger.
And what about people inside Paramount?
How are they thinking about all of this?
We had heard that there were discussions internally at Paramount to settle the lawsuit. And that has caused a lot of controversy within Paramount, within CBS News,
specifically within 60 Minutes, because you have journalists and executives at the company who do
not want to settle, who think it's a terrible precedent. And you have a controlling shareholder, Sherry Redstone, who is starting to see that
the only option to not be in litigation for the next several years is by settling this
lawsuit.
Since CBS and Paramount have been so vehement that this case is frivolous, If they do settle, could it be interpreted as a quid pro quo for
approval for the merger? Well that's the concern. The concern is if the settlement
is viewed as a quid pro quo for getting the merger approved, that these
executives could then be sued for bribing a public official. I reported a few weeks ago that one major concern among executives
at Paramount is if Paramount settles this lawsuit.
And then a few weeks later or whenever, the FCC and the other regulators
approved this deal with Skydance.
Some state attorney general could file criminal charges for bribing a public
official.
I've heard people talk about jail time.
A spokesperson for Paramount Global said, quote, this lawsuit is completely separate
from and unrelated to the Skydance transaction and the FCC approval process.
We will abide by the legal process to defend our case.
And what has Skydance said?
Skydance has not said anything publicly. Skydance does not own Paramount, so they really technically can't get involved in any of this.
Would Skydance go ahead with the deal if the Trump lawsuit is still out there?
So sources have told me that Skydance wants Paramount to get rid of this before they buy
the company. They don't want to deal with this. And yesterday, there was an indication that a
deal could be in the works. Trump told reporters that settlement talks are underway in his case against CBS.
So we sued and we are in discussions of settlement.
When you look at this, do you think it's more of a media story or a business story or a politics story?
Everything is so intertwined. I think it's all three of those things. It is a media story,
obviously, because of the precedent it could set and because of the controversy within news
organizations around the globe. People have very strong feelings about whether Paramount
should settle or not.
I think it's a business story because you have Paramount,
which is in the middle of this merger
with Skydance Media, and that merger in and of itself
has been through many, many iterations and challenges.
And then you have it as a politics story because of the Trump of it all, of course.
That's all for today, Thursday, February 27th. The Journal is a co-production of Spotify and The Wall Street Journal.
Additional reporting in this episode by Joe Flint and Drew Fitzgerald.
Thanks for listening.
See you tomorrow.