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GEMINI Veteran journalists Elaine Quijano, left, and Lisa Ling no longer work at CBS. |
While mainstream media is currently hyper-focused on Scott Pelley’s dramatic, "for cause" termination from 60 Minutes, his exit was quietly preceded by the firings of veteran Latino journalist Cecilia Vega and two prominent Asian American journalists, Elaine Quijano and Lisa Ling.
Last month, as a harbinger of CBS News' future, the network also released Cecilia Vega, the first Latina correspondent in the 55-year history of 60 Minutes was fired. She has publicly spoken out against the network, citing "censorship" and expressing concern about the editorial direction the storied newsmagazine is taking under the new leadership of Editor-in-Chief Bari Weiss.
- Lisa Ling (October 2025): The veteran journalist was swept up in a massive wave of network-wide layoffs. As a contributor who frequently brought deeply human storytelling to CBS News Sunday Morning, Ling noted after her dismissal that contributors are often the "easy to cut" targets when corporate suits look to slash budgets.
- Elaine Quijano (March 2026): Quijano, a trailblazing Filipina American anchor who paved the way on both streaming and traditional broadcasts, was abruptly axed from her roles as a prominent CBS morning show anchor and weekend anchor. Her termination was part of a sweeping 6% workforce reduction that eliminated 60 to 70 newsroom jobs.
These exits were part of a broader culling of journalists and executives across the network, including the cancellation of *CBS Mornings Plus$* and *CBS Evening News Plus.* Many industry insiders and critics have expressed concern over the loss of prominent minority voices and experienced field reporters across the network's rosters.
Mainstream headlines will continue to center on Pelley's dramatic newsroom crashout. However, the reality remains that the erosion of veteran, diverse journalists like Vega, Cooper, Quijano and Ling is what set the stage for the collapse of values at the top of the network.
During a heated editorial meeting, Pelley loudly condemned management, stating that Weiss was brought in specifically to "kill" the program. He also questioned Bilton's fitness to run the show since Bilton is a former tech journalist with no traditional broadcast news background.
Following his dismissal, Pelley released a public statement hitting back at leadership. He claimed that under the new management, "60 Minutes" had lost its DNA and alleged that executives had "instructed me to inject falsehoods and bias into a politically sensitive story."
60 Minutes long served as the undisputed "gold standard" of TV journalism, commanding unmatched viewer trust and dominating the Sunday night ratings for decades.














