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I promise I did this much work: Special correspondent at Vanity Fair, Nick Bilton speaks onstage at the Vanity Fair New Establishment Summit 2018. (Photo by Matt Winkelmeyer/Getty Images)

Welcome to the latest edition of Breaker. If this email has been forwarded, you can subscribe here and send your questions and complaints here. If you have a tip contact the 24/7 Breaker Tip Hotline via text or Signal # 551 655 2343. Anonymity guaranteed!

In tonight’s edition, Thursday’s bloodbath at “60 Minutes” has left seasoned execs and correspondents rattled, with one telling Breaker it’s an “execution” of the legendary show. CBS News Editor-in-Chief Bari Weiss named Nick Bilton as the new EP, despite having no prior broadcast experience. We’ll look back at Bilton’s “colourful” career history, and speak to one legendary former “60 Minutes” correspondent who says Trump's DNA is all over the firings.

Also, what was it that drew Sam Altman to front up the cash and snap up the TBPN? We have the backstory on OpenAI’s acquisition of the popular YouTube tech show.

Plus, tonight it’s the Breaker Pod season three finale, this week we were joined by comedian Matt Friend overlooking the Hudson from the BILT rooftop. Friend rolled out several of his impressions, and we discussed the future of late-night and political comedy. 

Finally, it’s Thursday, which means Journo (and Comms) Jobs is back. Tonight we have gigs at: Variety, Barron’s, Fox News, New York Post, GQ, and The Wrap.

Mentioned tonight: Jordi Hays, John Coogan, Sam Altman, Bari Weiss, David Ellison, Draggan Mihailovich, Sharyn Alfonsi, Cecilia Vega, John Carreyrou, Nick Bilton, Steve Kroft, Tom Cibrowski, Tanya Simon, Lawrence Ingrassia, Mark Guiducci, Antonious Porch, Makan Delrahim, Waleed Diab, Andy Cohen, Rami Malek, David Letterman, Jimmy Fallon, Sean Walsh, Ankur Jain, Brian Williams, Tom Brokaw, Santiago Campos, Robert Allbritton, Katie Robertson, Dovid Efune, Andrew Deck, David Folkenflik, Mia Sato, Shannon Thaler Cherry. Will Oremus, Nick Tattersall, Simon Robinson, Brian Steinberg, Terry Moran, Dominic Ponsford, Rupert Murdoch, Hamish McKenzie, Chris Best, Hanne Winarsky, Matt Starr, Adam Mendelsohn, Ryan Jones, Derek Blasberg, Chris Cillizza, Eric Newcomer, Matt Yglesias, Max Stein, Pablo Torre, Tim Miller, Charlotte Klein, Alex Weprin, Lucia Moses, Richard Rushfield, Emily Sundberg, Dyal Abruscato, and more.

The Breaker Pod with Matt Friend: The Future of Late Night, Fox News & CNN, Political Comedy After Trump

For our season three finale, Breaker was joined by comedian and impressionist Matt Friend. 

At just 27 years old, he’s bridged a priceless gap between social media virality, old-school late-night charm, and genuinely laugh-out-loud political comedy. 

From the BILT Rooftop (Cheers to BILT CEO Ankur Jain and CCO Sean Walsh for having us down), we covered everything from Donald Trump impressions to the decline of late-night TV, performing at the White House Correspondents’ Dinner, and impersonating King Charles to his face.

Friend, who now boasts more than six million followers on social media and has more than 250 celebrity impressions in his arsenal, explained how the pandemic and TikTok accidentally created a completely new lane for comedians. “The issue with late night is in the title,” he said. “Late night. No one’s watching things late at night. We’re watching things all the fucking time.”

This isn’t to say Friend doesn’t have massive respect for the genre. He interned at The Tonight Show Starring Jimmy Fallon while in college and grew up idolizing Johnny Carson and David Letterman. He believes that a new internet-first ecosystem has allowed creators to build audiences without actually ever appearing on network television.

“You can’t do the things that I’m doing,” he said, pointing to his set at the 2024 WHCD, hosting a CNN comedy special, and touring nationally as a comedian, “in any other era without being on SNL.” 

As his celebrity impressions started to gain traction online, Friend blew up even further when he randomly encountered some of his subjects on the streets of NYC, like Andy Cohen and Rami Malek. All of a sudden, he said, “The Golden Globes happened, and I started to impersonate them next to them.” 

Friend even recalled doing an impression directly to King Charles last month during a surreal appearance at the British ambassador’s residence in Washington. “I’ve been studying your voice, and I’ve been trying to do an impersonation of you,” he remembered telling the King in the King’s voice — to which Charles replied, “Keep trying."

As for Friend’s Trump impression, it’s one of the best in the game — cadence-wise, vocab-wise, all of it. But unlike many political comics, Friend has zero interest in becoming ideologically boxed in.

“I’m doing the same thing when I go on Fox News or CNN,” he said. “I don’t like when people shape-shift comedically,” adding that “if you’re a comedian and all you’re doing is Trump, I would say you’ve got to do more than that.” 

His willingness to mock just about everyone seems to explain why Friend has gained fans across wildly different audiences. As he described it, his crowds can include “the 75-year-old Republican who votes for Trump” sitting next to “the 24-year-old TikToker,” all laughing at the same jokes.

“If you’re still in power, whether you’re a Republican or a Democrat,” he concluded, I’m allowed to make fun of you.” 

Catch more in this week's episode of The Breaker Pod. Make sure you check us out and subscribe on YouTube, Spotify, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your pods.

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The 60 Minutes “Execution”

On Wednesday night at the downtown events space, Tribeca 360, media power players gathered for the Volunteer Lawyers for the Arts annual awards and gala. 

Amongst the honorees: YouTube's Global Head of Recorded Music Business Development, Waleed Diab, Paramount's Chief Legal Officer, Makan Delrahim, and CondÊ Nast's General Counsel, Antonious Porch. 

“My colleagues at VF and all of our sister publications feel so lucky to work at a company that requires no FCC license, that is not engaged in mergers and acquisitions that require FCC approval, and is privately owned by a family that does not interfere editorially – ever,” Vanity Fair’s Global Editorial Director Mark Guiducci told the audience as he paid tribute to Porch. 

Paramount executives, there to honor Delrahim and sitting towards the front of the room, looked on awkwardly as the audience broke out in applause. 

Just hours later, the person Paramount CEO David Ellison installed to run CBS News was meeting with “60 Minutes” Executive Producer Tanya Simon, CBS News President Tom Cibrowski, and HR officials.

In a meeting that lasted just minutes, Bari Weiss and her colleagues informed the daughter of legendary “60 Minutes” correspondent Bob Simon that while her work was exceptional, they were changing direction and she was out of a job, according to people briefed on the meeting.

“I was on the show for 30 years and wondered what would happen to it, but I never expected it to be executed,” former legendary correspondent Steve Kroft told Breaker on Thursday. “There is no smoking gun, but Trump’s fingerprints and DNA are everywhere.”

That “change of direction” is the appointment of former New York Times and Vanity Fair (where Breaker is a contributing editor) writer, Nick Bilton, who, in what is becoming a prerequisite under Weiss to work at CBS News, brings with him zero broadcast experience (and no management background). 

Among people who previously worked with Bilton at Vanity Fair, the news was met with…

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Terminally Bullish Podcast Network

When the popular tech streaming show TBPN was acquired by OpenAI, questions abounded about what had occurred behind-the-scenes. Why would Sam Altman want to buy Jordi Hays and John Coogan’s fast-growing tech media startup? 

TBPN’s president Dylan Abruscato has revealed that OpenAI's interest actually extended well beyond TBPN’s audience reach, and that …

Support fearless independent journalism.

The rest of this newsletter is for paid subscribers.

⁘ Unlock full access to our twice-weekly newsletter and archive.

⁘ As credited in The New York Times, CNBC, Axios, The New York Post, CNN, Bloomberg, The Guardian, and more.

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