• 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
Good evening, and welcome back to In The Room. Tonight, news and notes on Tucker Carlson’s fundraising plan and Fox’s new primetime strategy.
 ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌  ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌  ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌  ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌  ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌  ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌  ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌  ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌  ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌  ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ 
In The Room

Good evening, and welcome back to In The Room. Tonight, news and notes on Tucker Carlson’s fundraising plan and Fox’s new primetime strategy.

Tucker’s New Mediaco
Tucker’s New Mediaco
Life inside the Fox News bunker, the Watters-Hannity-Gutfeld Cerberus, and news on Tucker Carlson’s new media ambitions.
DYLAN BYERS DYLAN BYERS
On Monday morning, while Fox News C.E.O. Suzanne Scott was announcing the network’s new evening lineup—confirming Jesse Watters’ long-anticipated ascension to 8 p.m., and gently nudging Laura Ingraham out of the official primetime window—she was also discreetly showing Tucker Carlson’s old production team the door. Two of Carlson’s top producers had already decamped weeks earlier after one of them had memorably gone rogue and labeled Biden a “wannabe dictator” on the chyron—a ridiculous stunt but also perhaps the latest example that the network’s untrammeled id really does defy Onion-level parody.

The eight remaining members of the Tucker Carlson Tonight team were told Monday that they would need to leave by mid-July, with the option to reapply for new positions. Such an outcome doesn’t seem terribly likely, of course. I am told that the vast majority of these employees will instead reunite with Tucker, who is currently posting Twitter videos from his barn in Maine, with bigger media ambitions afoot.

Fox’s effort to make a clean break from Tucker is understandable, especially given their ongoing legal battle with their former prime-time star. Earlier this month, Fox accused Tucker of breaching his contract by launching the Twitter show. Tucker’s lawyer, Bryan Freedman, returned fire by accusing the company of trying to deny the pundit his freedom of speech—an obvious misappropriation of the First Amendment, but whatever. (Freedman is a willing and occasionally excellent practitioner of the media arts.)

In any event, the reputational battle lines were drawn long beforehand, from the moment the Murdochs decided that there was a limit to how much rogue behavior they were willing to tolerate from a nativist, conspiratorial, defamation-adjacent modern-day Father Coughlin with a soft spot for Putin, even if he did rate. Tucker’s subsequent decision to compete with the network by trying to outflank it on the right, via Elon, all but necessitated Fox’s dissolution of his remaining loyalists.

Tucker’s prospects at Twitter remain an open question. His inconsistent, ten-minute video monologues ostensibly play to audiences in the tens of millions but lack an obvious monetization strategy. Even if Elon-buddy David Sacks has protested on the platform that his view count reaches nine-figures, CPMs are preposterously lower in digital media, and Twitter has yet to command the sort of premium advertising that newly appointed C.E.O. Linda Yaccarino fantasizes about. (For a grim look at the company’s debt picture, read my partner Bill Cohan’s latest piece, which is making the rounds on Wall Street.) It’s increasingly possible that the Twitter show is a top-of-funnel play for other things Tucker may soon have cooking.

In fact, I am told he is raising capital to launch a new company that may yet prove more influential. He’ll certainly benefit from an incongruous number of ultra wealthy conservative media investors and a scant (though growing) number of opportunities, as Glenn Beck and the tandem of Ben Shapiro and Jeremy Boreing have demonstrated. A decade ago, the Mercers seemed like lone wolves in their patronage of Breitbart. These days, conservative mediacos are popping up more rampantly, as capital finds opportunities and the conversation moves further and further to the fringes.

Tucker, the movement’s biggest star in a generation, may be able to test the boundaries. It will certainly represent the latest iteration, for better or worse, in the creator economy. And while it might sound slightly insane, given the differences in their politics and audiences, Tucker’s new media play might—if executed adroitly—serve as a paradigm for a generation of TV news personalities with huge followings and fandoms who remain marooned to their desks amid shrinking audiences. Fox will obviously be paying breathless attention to his developments, despite protestations to the contrary, but so will executives and CNN and MSNBC.

Post-Tucker Stress Disorder
The near-term damage at Fox, meanwhile, is quite evident. The network’s prime time has lost about a third of its total audience since Tucker’s ouster, though it has shored up some of the leakage by wooing back Tucker-averse advertisers. His absence has also been a blow to the network’s streaming gambit, Fox Nation, which relied on his interview series and controversial documentaries to drive audiences. (Fox Nation has been enduring its own layoffs of late, as The Daily Beast reported earlier this week.) More broadly, Tucker’s own rhetoric about his former employer has made it harder for the network to claw back the Tucker faithful.

Fox believes they can reverse the slide with their new primetime lineup, which will go into effect July 17 and feature Watters at 8 p.m., Hannity at 9 p.m., and Greg Gutfeld at 10 p.m. And, despite the irreversible loss of some Tuckerites, there’s good reason to believe that this slate of smug hippy-punchers will be appealing enough to Fox’s septuagenarian and octogenarian base, and that the talent can draft off the tailwinds of a competitive Republican primary cycle and the right’s anti-Biden fervor to restore ratings.

After all, Fox has always shown an incredible knack for in-house talent development, and the promotion of Watters (who got his start as Bill O’Reilly’s lib-baiting man on the street) and Gutfeld (who once hosted the overnight Red Eye show) are testament to their internal incubation and inculcation factory. Watters has proven quite capable of stoking right-wing grievances and anti-liberal suspicions in a more legally responsible fashion than his predecessor. Gutfeld’s cringey, quasi-comedic trolling of liberals now outrates Fallon and Kimmel.

Last week, I noted that Fox’s post-Tucker strategy would, in many ways, be a return to form for the network, with Bret Baier & Co. providing the patina of hard news while these prime-time stars massaged the right-wing erogenous zones without drifting too far into the conspiratorial fever swamps. As The New York Times noted this week in a lengthy profile of Gutfeld, “merry trolling” and “insult conservatism” will now become “an institutional voice for the next generation” of Fox News viewers. (Fittingly, all three men seemed to be smirking in the promotional material.) And indeed, that may be just enough to offset the nascent challengers on the right—Tucker, Newsmax, etcetera—for the remainder of linear television’s claim on American culture and politics.

FOUR STORIES WE’RE TALKING ABOUT
Post-Coup Report
Post-Coup Report
Putin’s end, or a new era?
JULIA IOFFE
Netflix’s New Math
Netflix’s New Math
Breaking down the Top 10 debate.
JULIA ALEXANDER
Christie’s Cornermen
Christie’s Cornermen
Inside dish on the latest dark-money shenanigans.
TEDDY SCHLEIFER
Elon’s Tesla Nightmare
Elon’s Tesla Nightmare
Testing the limits of Musk’s legal exposure.
ERIQ GARDNER
swash divider
Puck
Facebook Twitter Instagram LinkedIn

Need help? Review our FAQs
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 . To stop receiving this newsletter and/or manage all your email preferences, click here.

Puck is published by Heat Media LLC. 227 W 17th St New York, NY 10011.

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

Mark Thompson
Julia Alexander • June 29, 2023
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 • June 29, 2023
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 • June 29, 2023
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 • June 29, 2023
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 • June 29, 2023
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 • June 29, 2023
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?


Elon Musk
Julia Alexander • June 29, 2023
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.


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

Nick Bilton
Dylan Byers • June 29, 2023
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 • June 29, 2023
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 • June 29, 2023
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 • June 29, 2023
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 • June 29, 2023
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 • June 29, 2023
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.


Nicholas Kristof
Dylan Byers • June 29, 2023
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.
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

Byron Allen
Dylan Byers • June 29, 2023
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 • June 29, 2023
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 • June 29, 2023
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 • June 29, 2023
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 • June 29, 2023
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 • June 29, 2023
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.


White House Correspondents Association dinner
Dylan Byers • June 29, 2023
The Weiss House
While fourth-estate purists bemoan the diminishment of press freedoms under Trump, CBS’s Bari Weiss and David Ellison will be breaking bread over White House Correspondents’ Association weekend with two of the administration’s most visible press antagonists. Cue the outrage… but that’s the point.


  • 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