The Commercial Appeal - Go Memphis

‘60 Minutes’ keeps on the news and is rewarded by viewers

- David Bauder

NEW YORK – One of television’s hottest shows is also among its oldest.

It’s not the first time that’s been said about “60 Minutes” since its 1968 debut. In the frenzied news year of 2020, however, the success is a tribute to both durability and adaptabili­ty.

CBS’ pioneering newsmagazi­ne is consistent­ly one of the most-watched programs on television and its viewership is up 9% over last year, the Nielsen company said. That’s more than any other prime-time program on ABC, CBS, NBC and Fox, and also one of only four to show a year-to-year increase.

All that, and a well-publicized dustup with President Donald Trump, too.

After executive producer Bill Owens turned the show primarily over to COVID-19 coverage last spring, “60 Minutes” has returned to its traditiona­l format while being focused on being timely.

“We’re being encouraged, and we do, to look for stories that relate to the week,” said veteran correspond­ent Lesley Stahl. “Certainly for the last few years, every week has been unpredicta­ble. You have to be prepared to jump.

“It’s part of the reason that we have continued to be successful, and continue to get a new stream of young people to come in and watch,” she said. “I also think that people find a certain kind of comfort in the fact that we do it in the same way we’ve always done it. It looks the same, the sensibilit­y is the same, the DNA is the same.”

Anderson Cooper’s report on lingering COVID-19 symptoms received a strong response this fall, and there have been other pandemic-related stories about vaccine developmen­t and problems producing protective equipment. Reporters almost always return from coronaviru­s stories with ideas for others, Owens said.

“The thing about this story is that it really does touch every part of our lives,” he said. “It’s not that we’re looking to just do stories about the pandemic. We want to do relevant stories about the pandemic. But I also think people need a break.”

That has encouraged profiles of Jerry Seinfeld, Viola Davis, David Attenborou­gh and Ken Burns to be mixed in with stories on autism, a growing grizzly bear population and a striking Scott Pelley piece on churches hewn into rock in Ethiopia.

“60 Minutes” this fall has featured interviews with fired government cybersecur­ity chief Chris Krebs, former President Barack Obama and poisoned Russian opposition leader Alexei Navalny.

“In this newsiest of years, it’s fitting that ‘60 Minutes’ became even more responsive to the headlines,” said Andrew Heyward, former CBS News president and now research professor at Arizona State’s Walter Cronkite School of Journalism and Mass Communicat­ion.

Original executive producer Don Hewitt often ran “60 Minutes” as an island unto itself. His replacemen­t, Jeff Fager, pushed the broadcast to be more responsive to the news and Owens has emphasized it even more over the past nine months.

The show’s ticking stopwatch has never changed, and Stahl is a living link to late reporters Mike Wallace, Morley Safer, Ed Bradley and Bob Simon. Yet it’s noteworthy how “60 Minutes” has maintained momentum while turning to a new generation of reporters like Pelley, Cooper, Bill Whitaker and Jon Wertheim, Heyward said.

“The key to the program’s success is really smart story selection, really deep research and really good reporters and producers out there doing the work,” he said.

While Trump’s ongoing effort to stay in office was addressed in the Krebs interview, Owens said he’s chosen not to give additional oxygen to the story.

Stahl’s off-the-rails interview with the president will likely be the season’s most-remembered moment. Trump became disgusted with Stahl’s questionin­g and cut things short.

“I’ve had people say to me, ‘He set you up. He planned that,’” Stahl said. “I am absolutely positive that that’s not the case. It happened organicall­y in the room.”

Owens said “60 Minutes” has had a decent profession­al relationsh­ip with Trump, who gave Stahl his first interview as president-elect in 2016. But this time, “there was a different feeling in the room from the moment we walked in.”

He said he confronted a press representa­tive when he saw Trump’s team was preparing to videotape the interview, reminding them of an agreement not to use the material. When Trump threatened to release the unedited tapes, Owens protested and tried to stop it.

The White House went ahead anyway, allowing outsiders a rare opportunit­y to see how the show crafted raw material into a finished, edited piece. Like the interview itself, that ultimately proved unremarkab­le.

“I was heartened – not surprised, but heartened – that we had almost no criticism over our editing, which people thought was fair,” Stahl said. “That was pleasing. But I knew it would be fair. We’re always fair.”

Owens said that “we didn’t feel good that we were unable to deliver a more fulsome interview. But it also wasn’t of our own choosing.”

How about going back, and offering Trump the first TV interview of his postpresid­ency?

“I haven’t given that much thought,” Owens said. “I have a feeling we wouldn’t be his first shot.”

Stahl, too, has moved on. She’s preparing for an interview with House Speaker Nancy Pelosi.

Stahl said she’s completely healed from her own rough bout with COVID-19 last spring. That contrasts with her husband, who had a relatively mild case, but still feels lingering symptoms, she said.

Her experience hasn’t had much impact on her work, both physically and in influencing the types of stories she wants to do, she said. She does feel a connection to stories about health care workers, because she’s seen how hard they work.

“One person who took care of me said – when I got better – that I was the first person she had taken care of who hadn’t died,” she said.

 ?? RICHARD DREW/AP ?? “60 Minutes” correspond­ent Lesley Stahl poses for a photo in her office at the “60 Minutes” offices in New York in 2017. CBS’ pioneering newsmagazi­ne is consistent­ly one of the most-watched programs on television and its viewership is up 9 percent over last year, the Nielsen company said. That’s not only more than any other prime-time program on ABC, CBS, NBC and Fox, it’s also one of only four on those networks to show a year-to-year increase.
RICHARD DREW/AP “60 Minutes” correspond­ent Lesley Stahl poses for a photo in her office at the “60 Minutes” offices in New York in 2017. CBS’ pioneering newsmagazi­ne is consistent­ly one of the most-watched programs on television and its viewership is up 9 percent over last year, the Nielsen company said. That’s not only more than any other prime-time program on ABC, CBS, NBC and Fox, it’s also one of only four on those networks to show a year-to-year increase.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States