Bari Weiss on CBS News Censors a 60 Minutes Report on El Salvador

Published on January 05, 2026 | Translated from Spanish
Screenshot of the censored 60 Minutes report showing chained men in an El Salvador prison, with the CBS News logo visible.

Bari Weiss at CBS News Censors a 60 Minutes Report on El Salvador

The journalist Bari Weiss, in her new role as director of CBS News, makes a controversial editorial decision by canceling the broadcast of a already promoted segment from the program 60 Minutes. The report investigates the transfer of men to a penitentiary center in El Salvador. 🚫

The Leak That Prevented Total Blockage

By withdrawing the content from its schedule at the last minute, the network fails to contain its dissemination. The full report airs on the Canadian broadcaster Global TV. Several users use a VPN to access it, and someone records the material, uploading it later to an iCloud account to share it. The portal The Verge verifies and reviews the video, which lasts almost fourteen minutes.

Key Details of the Dissemination:
  • The CBS network cancels the broadcast after it had already been promoted.
  • The report airs in full on Canada's Global TV.
  • People use a VPN to bypass geographic restrictions and record the content.
By trying to suppress the story, CBS only succeeds in making more people want to see it and talk more about the topic.

Images Revealing a Strict Regime

The leaked images show chained men bent at the waist during their transfer, under a very rigorous security protocol. The segment focuses on analyzing the Salvadoran government's security policy and evaluating what the detention centers in the country are like. This internal censorship leads many to wonder how the network decides under its new leadership.

Visual Aspects of the Report:
  • Men chained in forced postures are seen.
  • The video documents the transfer process under custody.
  • The editorial focus targets the country's security policy.

The Opposite Effect to What Was Sought

The final paradox is clear: the measure to hide the report generates more public interest and online conversation, achieving exactly the opposite of what the CBS News leadership intended. The case highlights the challenges of controlling information in the digital age and tests the newly implemented editorial criteria. 🤔