Inside Bari Weiss’s Hostile Takeover of CBS News

Trump,⁣ for his part, was effusive in ​his praise of ⁢Weiss. “I think you have a‌ great ⁣new leader, frankly, who’s the young woman that’s leading your whole enterprise,” he said during his sit-down with O’Donnell. “I don’t know her,but I hear she’s a great person.” After the recording concluded, weiss stepped forward to introduce herself to the President. It was the first time that‌ she’d‍ met the man whose presence now loomed over her installation at the network. They greeted each other warmly,exchanging a kiss on the cheek.

Weiss grew up in the Squirrel hill neighborhood ⁢of ‍Pittsburgh, “raised in what can be accurately described as an urban shtetl,” she wrote in her 2019 book, “How to Fight Anti-Semitism.” Her great-grandfather Philip (Chappy) Goldstein was a successful flyweight ⁣boxer who sometimes sported‌ a Star of David on his⁢ boxing silks. Her parents worked in the family’s furniture store, where ‍Weiss’s father, Lou, had‍ a flair for marketing, doling out a ‌line of candies called‌ Weiss Krispie Treats ​to customers. Weiss attended a Jewish day school—which one of her three sisters now heads—and the‍ family‍ spent a couple of summers in Jerusalem, where her ‌parents learned Hebrew. “I grew up in a family‌ where we belonged to three synagogues,” Weiss told an⁢ interviewer in ⁤2019. “It was not‌ unusual for me to read Torah at shul and then go, ‌say, to a Chabad family for lunch before heading ​to​ basketball practice.”

The​ Weisses’ Shabbat ⁢dinners featured a rotating cast of guests and were often contentious. “I remember vividly, like, constant debate,” Weiss’s sister Casey told the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette last year.⁣ “Sometimes it got really heated.” Lou, who grew up in a “McGovern liberal” household, had become a conservative at⁤ Kenyon ⁣College. he kept ⁤copies of ‌ Commentary ⁣magazine and the Financial Times around the house, and frequently contributed op-eds to local Pittsburgh papers. His politics were ‌centered around free markets and support for Israel. “They hate gays, and they subject women to horrible second-class treatment—not every single person, but as a group,” he told the Pittsburgh Jewish Chronicle in 2017, for an article about Syrian ⁢refugees. “If​ you bring‍ them ⁣here, u

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