Surviving Trump. Saving America
Navigating the chaos of today’s politics can be overwhelming —this show helps make sense of it all. In about 30 minutes each week, host Bella Goode breaks down the players, policies, and threats facing democracy — in plain language and straight talk. Your crash course in today’s politics
Surviving Trump. Saving America
Controlling the Press: Attacks on Media and How Project 2025 Is Dismantling America’s Communications
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Mary Walsh spent decades at CBS News. She started her career under Walter Cronkite. She survived ownership changes, ratings wars, the collapse of the network news business model, the rise of cable, the rise of streaming.
Then in early 2025, she wrote a memo and walked out.
Her reason: she had been told to aim CBS News’s reporting at “a particular part of the political spectrum.” She wrote: “Honestly, I don’t know how to do that.”
That’s what the end of a free press looks like. Not a bonfire. Not a midnight raid. A memo. A buyout. A resignation.
What’s in This Episode
• The blueprint: Project 2025’s Chapter 8 laid out the plan before Trump took office — defund public media, dismantle international broadcasting, reshape the White House press relationship. Brendan Carr wrote the Federal Communications Commission chapter himself
• Defunding public media: Congress cut $1.1 billion in Corporation for Public Broadcasting funding in August 2025. The backbone of PBS, NPR, and more than 1,500 local stations since 1967 voted to dissolve itself rather than be used as a political weapon
• Silencing Voice of America: on March 15, 2025, more than 1,000 journalists were locked out and placed on administrative leave. For the first time in eighty years, Voice of America went silent — taking with it the legal backing for nine journalists imprisoned abroad
• Suing the press into silence: ABC settled for $16 million. CBS settled for $16 million. The New York Times faces $15 billion. The weapon isn’t the verdict — it’s the process. Make the legal costs high enough and newsrooms start making editorial decisions based on what their lawyers will defend
• Controlling the press pool: on February 25, 2025, the White House announced it would decide which journalists get access to the president. The Associated Press was banned for refusing to call the Gulf of Mexico the Gulf of America. Reporters from Gateway Pundit took their place
• Why this connects to the season’s central argument: a free press is not equally valuable to all political projects. It is specifically valuable to the communities whose stories would otherwise go untold. Controlling it is how you keep people from knowing what is being done in their name
Why It Matters
The First Amendment still exists. The press is still nominally free. What has changed is the cost of exercising that freedom — measured in pulled segments, settled lawsuits, padlocked newsrooms, and career journalists writing memos that say: I don’t know how to do this anymore.
Episodes 23 through 27 documented how this administration captured the courts, replaced career experts with loyalists, and gutted independent oversight. Episode 28 documents the final piece of Series 3: controlling what Americans are allowed to read about.
Bella Goode is a pseudonym — but the voice, research, and mission are all real. A Republican turned Democrat advocate in 2016, I was raised by middle class parents in Pennsylvania. I’m a former marketing executive, entrepreneur, and lifelong learner with an MBA from Wharton and a Master’s in Psychology from Penn. I spent decades telling stories in the business world; now I use those skills to connect the dots in American politics.
I’m here because the truth matters — and because the stakes have never been higher. Surviving Trump isn’t lighthearted. It’s clarity, evidence, and a fight for the future of our democracy.
Follow my blog on Substack https://survivingtrumppodcast.substack.com