• Washington
  • Wall Street
  • A.I.
  • Hollywood
  • Media
  • Fashion
  • Sports
  • Art
  • Join Puck Newsletters What is puck? Authors Podcasts Gift Puck Careers Events
  • Join Puck

    Directly Supporting Authors

    A new economic model in which writers are also partners in the business.

    Personalized Subscriptions

    Customize your settings to receive the newsletters you want from the authors you follow.

    Stay in the Know

    Connect directly with Puck talent through email and exclusive events.

  • What is puck? Newsletters Authors Podcasts Events Gift Puck Careers

July 2, 2025

In The Room
Dylan Byers Dylan Byers

Welcome back to In the Room, and greetings from the San Juan Islands, where I’m blissfully off the grid—writing to you from the corner of a patio where, if you reach your hand out far enough toward the cove, you can get intermittent waves of cell service, depending on the weather.

This morning, the connection held just long enough for me to learn that Shari Redstone’s team at Paramount had finally settled the 60 Minutes lawsuit to the tune of $16 million, presumably clearing the way for Trump to greenlight the Skydance deal. The reverberations from this one will extend well past the holiday, when I’ll be back on the grid from Sun Valley, likely getting an earful from Shari’s fellow media titans at the Konditorei. Until then, my partner Bill Cohan has you covered on Shari’s immediate financial obligations. Meanwhile, my partner Julia Alexander takes the reins on today’s main feature: a typically brilliant and essential analysis of the myriad ways that A.I. is already eating the media industry.

In the Room will be off for the Friday holiday, and back in your inboxes next week. Happy Fourth!

William D. Cohan William D. Cohan
  • Shari bends the knee: Around midnight on Tuesday, Paramount Global announced that it had settled Donald Trump’s ridiculous election interference lawsuit against CBS News for $16 million. Paramount agreed to pay for Trump’s legal fees and “costs,” with the balance of the $16 million going to Trump’s presidential library. As part of the agreement, CBS News does not have to apologize to the president.

    Shari Redstone, of course, was desperate to reach a deal, though anyone with half a brain knew the lawsuit was utterly without merit. Now, presumably, the president will allow his F.C.C. chairman, Brendan Carr, to consider the Ellisons’ recapitalization plan for Paramount Global, which was announced a year ago. That includes the purchase of the Redstone family’s holding company, National Amusements Inc., for $2.4 billion in cash, and the merger of David Ellison’s Skydance Media with Paramount Global, with the latter remaining a publicly traded company.

    I hope Shari can find peace with her legacy of selling out the news division and riding off into the sunset. (I think the $2.4 billion will help.) As I’ve reported, Shari needs the money to pay the $550 million she owes to her creditors—$300 million to Larry Ellison, and another $250 million to her M&A advisor, Byron Trott, and his firm BDT & MSD Partners. The whole thing is a sorry spectacle. I never thought Shari would stand up to Trump, and she didn’t prove me wrong.
Julia Alexander Julia Alexander
  • Spacewalk and chill: While Netflix is slowly becoming more like traditional television—securing sports rights, broadcasting live events, experimenting with a late night show, introducing ads—the company has largely stayed away from news. But the streamer’s new partnership with NASA+ does lend itself to news moments, with Netflix now streaming live rocket launches and space walks. It’s the kind of stuff your dad might watch on network TV, but which most people find on YouTube.

    Netflix probably doesn’t want a CNN live feed—non-breaking news programming doesn’t translate well to streaming—but it has been in experimentation mode recently. In France last month, the company signed a deal with broadcaster TF1 to make its channels available via the Netflix app. The NASA+ partnership is much smaller, and far less risky, but it’s similar in its overall concept: Netflix will be hosting a feed programmed by a third party.

    Anyway, this is probably just the first of these niche streaming partnerships. Depending on how it goes, Netflix could look into syndicating streaming-first financial news, particularly the kind of shows that create habitual viewers, like Squawk on the Street and Closing Bell, which stream on CNBC+ (and air on CNBC for pay TV customers). What about Morning Joe? It’s not the content per se, so much as the expectation of having that content, which could help turn Netflix from an evening routine to a morning and evening habit. Now that Mark Lazarus doesn’t have to necessarily license to Matt Strauss and Peacock, could Netflix be interested in a Versant deal down the road?

And now, the main event…

Google Zero Dark Thirty

Google Zero Dark Thirty

Traffic is collapsing for publishers as the web reorients around A.I. The market is responding, too, with U.S. advertisers expected to spend over $25 billion, or about 14 percent of their search budgets, on A.I.-powered search by 2029. The good news is that people are making and consuming more media than ever—even if the business itself becomes unrecognizable.

Julia Alexander Julia Alexander

I was having drinks the other day with a top media executive, discussing our excitement and anxieties about the forthcoming A.I. era, when this person made a startling admission. Their business, a major digital-first news company with more than 3,000 employees, was publishing more content than ever. And yet, the executive confessed, their search traffic was collapsing. With Google providing A.I. summaries, there wasn’t much of a reason for users to visit the websites where humans were doing actual reporting. Alas, it was a now familiar story about life in the news business in the age of Google Zero—industry parlance for the search giant’s lurch toward no longer sending traffic to third-parties, thereby ushering in the post-search era.

A generation ago, the internet stole print advertising budgets, spawning a new generation of digital-first publishers that benefited from social media and search traffic. Now, artificial intelligence–based tools like Google AI Overview, Perplexity, and ChatGPT are siphoning off what remains of publisher traffic, providing much of the information users need within their own ecosystems. Since Google introduced AI Overviews in May 2024, the percentage of zero-click news-related queries has increased from 56 percent to nearly 70 percent, according to a new Similarweb report. To take one example, Business Insider, which recently announced it was laying off 21 percent of its staff, has seen its organic search traffic collapse by 55 percent, per The Wall Street Journal.

Of course, the digital advertising market is also being disrupted. Google, which still accounts for 86 percent of search activity in the U.S., has begun testing ads alongside its A.I. results as a way to monetize these shiny new tools. If the past is prologue, the impacts will be significant. According to eMarketer research, U.S. ad budgets allocated to A.I. search will increase from less than 1 percent this year to about 14 percent in 2029, or more than $25 billion. For comparison, Pew estimates that newspaper advertising revenue fell from nearly $50 billion in 2005 to less than $10 billion in 2022. It’s hardly an exaggeration, as my lunch companion may have recognized deep down, that we’re in for a media brand extinction event. The good news, perhaps, is that it was sort of overdue?

Missing Links

Search links, which the News Media Alliance recently called “the last redeeming quality of search that gave publishers traffic and revenue,” aren’t going away. As Alphabet C.E.O. Sundar Pichai has said about Google’s AI Overview product, and Sam Altman has noted about ChatGPT, these “answer engines” still contain citations, sources, and links to related articles. But that doesn’t do diddly for a business model when fewer and fewer people are clicking on them. According to a recent Bain study, close to 60 percent of people who come across news via search, or through social media like X, don’t actually click on the link. Furthermore, around 30 percent of clicks within the new gateway platforms, like Threads, go to sister properties like Instagram, a report from Similarweb found in March.

Last year, ostensibly cognizant of a potential P.R. problem, Google released “Offerwall,” a tool designed to give publishers other options, beyond traditional ads, to monetize their content. They included allowing customers to access content via micropayments, a streamlined newsletter signup process, taking surveys, or even watching shortform ads (like the ones you sit through before connecting to Wi-Fi at the airport). Although Google says that more than 1,000 publishers have tested Offerwall, and participants have seen a 9 percent increase in revenue on average, the potential of the program is unclear.

Of course, news publishers aren’t going to stop publishing on the web. Nor are they going to start ignoring Google, still the strongest driver of traffic on every major digital gateway. But digital-first publishers need to begin scenario planning now for the post-search era. After all, news-related prompts in ChatGPT increased by more than 210 percent between January 2024 and May 2025, according to Similarweb. Searches related to stocks, finance, and sports were the most popular, providing an indication of which types of digital publishers will be at risk from A.I. first.

And those numbers will continue to climb. In the Bain study, researchers found that about 80 percent of people who use search engines rely on A.I.-surfaced results at least 40 percent of the time. Meanwhile, 48 percent of respondents in the study said they now use platforms like ChatGPT as a primary news source. Similarweb’s analysis also showed that traffic referrals from ChatGPT increased 25x year-over-year between May 2024 and May 2025, but if users do click on one of the source links provided in the query response, they’re most likely going to publications that have partnerships with OpenAI.

The Human Factor

For publishers who haven’t already entered into content licensing deals with OpenAI, there are a few alternative strategies. One is to avoid the temptation to scale. A common thread between successful content creators like Casey Newton on Substack, Hasan Piker on Twitch, and Kyla Scanlon on TikTok (and also on Substack) is the intensity of their audiences, not their size. Obviously, of course, this strategy is not available to the vast majority of the market.

Digital publishers have also been building moats around their businesses by pivoting from search and social traffic–fueled advertising toward subscription and direct-sold revenue models. Global analysts have tracked the convergence of two separate revenue sources: Onscreen advertising has continuously contracted over the past couple of years, while subscription revenue has slowly increased. In Q1, about 70 percent of U.S. publishers said that subscription revenue was becoming a bigger and more important part of their business, up from 56 percent in the same period the year prior, according to a recent Digiday survey. That signals a significant shift in where consumers are willing to spend.

Of course, if companies like OpenAI and Google can unlock true superintelligence, the implications for news, content, and everything else are hard to predict. There will be more websites powered by A.I. content, including aggregated human reporting and other hybrid models. These new players will compete for space within search results, making the market for attention far more competitive. A news environment suffused with A.I. could either improve consumer trust in the media, or obliterate it entirely. In the latter scenario, verified, human-reported news could become more valuable than ever. In a world where human connection is being erased with every prompt, we may see higher demand for smaller, more subject-focused publications and top reporting talent. That may not reverse ad market trends, but it opens the door to more creative monetization opportunities.

And yet there’s no denying that, for many publishers, the A.I. era will lead to an apocalypse, the nature of which is already becoming clear. For generations, text-based media properties—glossy magazines, periodicals, local papers, etcetera—made their money by super-serving highly intentional, affinity-driven audiences. The rise of search engines and social platforms misled many onto a growth-at-all-costs path in which they used similar tools to scale. All of a sudden, very different media properties found themselves covering the same generic stories, using the same traffic-dependent business models, and over-reliant on the same third-party distribution channels… which have all proven entirely vulnerable to the rise of LLMs.

There is undoubtedly a tragedy baked into all this—people will lose their jobs, businesses will fold, once-loved brands will disappear. On the flip side, though, the industry may have a chance to learn from the carnage and rediscover what worked in the first place.

The Grill Room

Finally, a media podcast about what’s actually happening in the media—not the oversanitized, legal-and-standards-approved version you read online. Join Dylan Byers, Puck’s veteran media reporter, as he sits down with TV personalities, moguls, pundits, and industry executives for raw, honest, sometimes salacious conversations about the business of media and its biggest egos. New episodes publish every Tuesday and Friday.

The Varsity

A professional-grade rundown on the business of sports from John Ourand, the industry’s preeminent journalist, covering the leagues, players, agencies, media deals, and the egos fueling it all.

Stories
Netflix’s YouTube Envy

Netflix’s YouTube Envy

JULIA ALEXANDER

Angus King Speaks!

Angus King Speaks

JOHN HEILEMANN

Full-Blown Yuskavage

Full-Blown Yuskavage

JULIE BRENER DAVICH

Puck
Facebook Twitter Instagram LinkedIn

Need help? Review our FAQ page or contact us for assistance. For brand partnerships, email ads@puck.news.

You received this email because you signed up to receive emails from Puck, or as part of your Puck account associated with {{customer.email}}. To stop receiving this newsletter and/or manage all your email preferences, click here.

 

Puck is published by Heat Media LLC. 107 Greenwich St, New York, NY 10006

SEE THE ARCHIVES

SHARE
Try Puck for free

Sign up today to join the inside conversation at the nexus of Wall Street, Washington, A.I., Hollywood, and more.

Already a member? Log In


  • Daily articles and breaking news
  • Personal emails directly from our authors
  • Gift subscriber-only stories to friends & family
  • Unlimited access to archives

  • Exclusive bonus days of select newsletters
  • Exclusive access to Puck merch
  • Early bird access to new editorial and product features
  • Invitations to private conference calls with Puck authors

Exclusive to Inner Circle only



Latest Articles from Media

Katie Kingsbury
Dylan Byers • July 3, 2025
The Times’ Ruemmler in the Jungle
Weeks after the Kristof vs. Bibi kerfuffle, the Times newsroom is again in an uproar over an Opinion story, this time allegedly attempting to rehabilitate the reputation of an Epstein associate. Big deal? Little deal? No deal?
Mark Thompson
Julia Alexander • July 3, 2025
The Wellness Wars
CNN is chasing The New York Times to tap into the wellness-obsessed world of peptides and GLP-1s as its next great subscription engine. Can legacy media compete with an army of TikTok doctors? And, perhaps more to the point, should they?
bari weiss
Dylan Byers • July 3, 2025
The Bari Matchmaking Sweepstakes
By all accounts, Bari Weiss could use some help running CBS News. But hiring the right executive with the right skills will be tricky, especially when the usual suspects are probably too cautious, myopic, or smart to join the gang.


Peter Rothpletz headshot
Julia Alexander • July 3, 2025
All Tuckered Out
A conversation with Peter Rothpletz, founder of the newly launched Verbatim Media, which hopes to do for progressive creators what Fox’s Red Seat Ventures has done for Tucker Carlson and Megyn Kelly.
Lesley Stahl
William D. Cohan • July 3, 2025
Lesley’s Choice
In a candid chat, the longtime 60 Minutes star correspondent explained her fraught decision to stay on after perhaps the most bizarre week in the show’s history. “It’s just been obviously the hardest chapter of my career,” she said. “This was by far the worst experience I’ve been involved in, or even witnessed.”
Lesley Stahl
Dylan Byers • July 3, 2025
Lesley Stahl & The ‘60 Minutes’ Guys Are Staying
In a brief manifesto, Stahl, Bill Whitaker, and Jon Wertheim acknowledged deep frustrations with the new leadership of the show, but worried that leaving now would make things even worse. An earlier draft of the memo was even more critical.


Scott Pelley
Dylan Byers • July 3, 2025
The ‘60 Minutes’ Adult Daycare Era
Bari Weiss’s takeover of CBS News, just eight months ago, has somehow already produced a decade’s worth of mess, reaching embarrassing new lows with Scott Pelley’s self-mythologizing tantrum and subsequent firing. How long before David Ellison sends in a pro to clean up after her?


Get access to this story

Enter your email for a free preview of Puck’s full offering, including exclusive articles, private emails from authors, and more.

Verify your email and sign in by clicking the link we just sent.

Already a member? Log In


Start 14 Day Free Trial for Unlimited Access Instead →



Latest Articles from Media

Elon Musk
Julia Alexander • July 3, 2025
Elon’s Everything Network
In many ways, Elon’s ambitions for X are actually bigger than his terrestrial competitors could ever fathom. The question is whether he can execute on a plan that sounds crazy for anyone but him.
Nick Bilton
Dylan Byers • July 3, 2025
Big Nick Energy
In tapping tech columnist/aspiring screenwriter Nick Bilton to run ‘60 Minutes,’ CBS’s Bari Weiss is once again playing the outsider card. But what exactly qualifies him to remake America’s top-rated news show? Just ask him.
Ben Shapiro
Dylan Byers • July 3, 2025
Last Action Shapiro
Apart from the many distractions and side projects of The Daily Wire’s now former co-C.E.O.—cigars, a D.T.C. razor business, and a big-budget fantasy series—his biggest business obstacle at Ben Shapiro’s media empire might have been Shapiro himself.


Byron Allen
Dylan Byers • July 3, 2025
Life of Byron
Byron Allen, the stand-up comic turned consummate media-deal hunter, defends his post-Colbert CBS late-night deal, his investing philosophy, and his ambition to somehow make BuzzFeed a YouTube competitor.
sundar pichai
Julia Alexander • July 3, 2025
Call My Agentic!
Agentic search will, at least in theory, spell doom for many of the billions of sites on the open web, and usher in a strange back-end micropayment marketplace where agents trade commissions piecemeal. But is that theory undervaluing the power of people and the publishers who know how to connect with them?
james murdoch
Dylan Byers • July 3, 2025
The Wolf of Broad Street
James Murdoch’s acquisition of Vox Media’s prime cuts is now official and the end result is far more favorable than it might have been: Eater, The Verge and other Vox sites will get spun off; Bankoff and Wasserstein will stay on; and New York and the podcast networks get an owner who, thankfully, has something to prove.


Bari Weiss
Dylan Byers • July 3, 2025
Bari My Heart at 57th Street
As it closes in on its acquisition of Warner Bros. Discovery, Paramount leadership has had informal discussions about changing Bari Weiss’s mandate at CBS News (and, eventually, CNN) in ways that would give her less control over TV.
Get access to this story

Enter your email to get access to one article and free previews of our private emails from Puck authors and editors.

OR

Already a Member? Sign in



Latest Articles from Media

Nicholas Kristof
Dylan Byers • July 3, 2025
Will There Be “Blood Libel”?
Nick Kristof’s exposé on Israeli prison abuse has brought the threat of a potential “blood libel” case from Netanyahu and another epic internal schism on Eighth Avenue, once again pitting the Opinion section against the newsroom. Here’s how it’s playing on the inside.
Byron Allen
Dylan Byers • July 3, 2025
Byron’s BuzzFeed Mercy Play
Byron Allen is betting $20 million that he can resuscitate the faded quiz-and-listicle destination with a… wait for it… pivot to video. Is this the most foolhardy investment since Rupert’s bet on Vice, or does Allen know something we don’t?
Ben Shapiro
Dylan Byers • July 3, 2025
The Ben Commandments
The sudden, precipitous decline of Ben Shapiro’s Daily Wire—with its sweeping layoffs and a steep drop-off in audience—has actually been a long time coming. And while it’s easy to point to MAGA’s shift away from Israel, its co-C.E.O.’s dream of producing an Arthurian fantasy series isn’t helping either.


James Murdoch
Dylan Byers • July 3, 2025
James Murdoch’s School of Hard Vox
The least objectionable of Rupert’s sons is closing on a deal to buy much of Vox Media in order to complement his current holdings—Art Basel and Tribeca Enterprises—as well as his ambition to build a global TED-meets-Burning Man events brand. Is this the first step toward real cultural influence, or simply his own Penske-esque captive investment?
Sharyn Alfonsi
Dylan Byers • July 3, 2025
World War Alfonsi
After going toe to toe with Bari Weiss over her “Inside CECOT” story, veteran correspondent Sharyn Alfonsi became the face of fourth-estate resistance at 60 Minutes. But as she prepares a heroic exit, a mass exodus is unlikely to follow. After all, where’s a well-paid TV journalist to go?
Jeff D'Onofrio
Dylan Byers • July 3, 2025
Teflon D’Onofrio
Months after another round of deep cuts and Jeff Bezos’s overdue jettisoning of Will Lewis, ‘The Washington Post’ is grappling with the harsh realities of rebuilding the brand—beginning with naming Lewis’s permanent successor.


Bari Weiss
Dylan Byers • July 3, 2025
Bari’s Post-WHCD Purge
After partying with the president, Pete Hegseth, and Stephen Miller at an event ostensibly celebrating a free press, Weiss will return from Washington with immediate plans to further overhaul 60 Minutes—and to implement another round of layoffs at CBS News.


  • Terms
  • Privacy
  • Contact
  • FAQ
  • Careers
© 2026 Heat Media All rights reserved.
Create an account

Already a member? Log In

CREATE AN ACCOUNT with Google
CREATE AN ACCOUNT with Google
OR YOUR EMAIL

OR

Use Email & Password Instead

USE EMAIL & PASSWORD
Password strength:

OR

Use Another Sign-Up Method

Become a member

All of the insider knowledge from our top tier authors, in your inbox.

Create an account

Already a member? Log In

Verify your email!

You should receive a link to log in at .

I DID NOT RECEIVE A LINK

Didn't get an email? Check your spam folder and confirm the spelling of your email, and try again. If you continue to have trouble, reach out to fritz@puck.news.

CREATE AN ACCOUNT with Google
CREATE AN ACCOUNT with Google
CREATE AN ACCOUNT with Apple
CREATE AN ACCOUNT with Apple
OR USE EMAIL & PASSWORD
Password strength:

OR
Log In

Not a member yet? Sign up today

Log in with Google
Log in with Google
Log in with Apple
Log in with Apple
OR USE EMAIL & PASSWORD
Don't have a password or need to reset it?

OR
Verify Account

Verify your email!

You should receive a link to log in at .

I DID NOT RECEIVE A LINK

Didn't get an email? Check your spam folder and confirm the spelling of your email, and try again. If you continue to have trouble, reach out to fritz@puck.news.

YOUR EMAIL

Use a different sign in option instead

Member Exclusive

Get access to this story

Create a free account to preview Puck’s full offering, including exclusive articles, private emails from authors, and more.

Already a member? Sign in

Free article unlocked!

You are logged into a free account as unknown@example.com

ENJOY 1 FREE ARTICLE EACH MONTH

Subscribe today to join the inside conversation at the nexus of Wall Street, Washington, A.I., Hollywood, and more.

START 14-DAY FREE TRIAL

  • Daily articles and breaking news
  • Personal emails directly from our authors
  • Gift subscriber-only stories to friends & family
  • Unlimited access to archives
  • Bookmark articles to create a Reading List
  • Quarterly calls with industry experts from the power corners we cover