The host of the Golden Globes 2026, Nikki Glaser, during her opening monologue at the award ceremony, took a jab at CBS News. Nikki Glaser started by saying the Golden Globes were the most important thing taking place in the world at that moment. Nikki Glaser went on to mock the Warner Bros. Discovery sale drama and said,"We'll start the bidding for Warner Brothers at $5."Later in the monologue, Glaser leaned in to a political side, talking about the Epstein files and a dig at CBS, which comes after CBS News editor-in-chief Bari Weiss spiked a 60 Minutes segment. Nikki Glaser stated,"So many A-listers, and by A-listers I do mean people who were on a list that was heavily redacted. And the award for the most editing goes to CBS News. America's new place to see BS news."Following this, Nikki Glaser returned to her roasts about the entertainment industry, including a jab at the Wicked franchise, criticizing that the film was too long. She also joked about Leonardo DiCaprio's dating life, stating,"The most impressive thing (about your career) is that you were able to accomplish all of that before your girlfriend turned 30. I mean, it's just insane."What is the CBS News editing controversy that Nikki Glaser is against?In October, Bari Weiss was named editor-in-chief of CBS News. Upon becoming the editor-in-chief, Weiss reportedly applied an "intense level of editorial scrutiny" to another "60 Minutes" report, involving Anderson Cooper.Anderson Cooper's report involves an investigative segment examining the Trump administration's decision to accept refugees from South Africa. Michael Gavshon, another "60 Minutes" producer, was also affected after Weiss provided extensive editorial feedback.Bari Weiss has directly inserted herself into the "60 Minutes" screenings, which, as per news magazines such as Status, is highly unusual for the news segment.Weiss and CBS News President Tom Cibrowski have been sitting in on screenings. The new editorial process has received backlash since the CBS "60 Minutes" segment historically operated with broad editorial autonomy.Recently CBS also pulled a "60 Minutes" segment about the El Salvador prison CECOT at the last minute. CBS reasoned that it pulled the segment because "we determined it needed additional reporting" and that it "will air in a future broadcast." However, the segment has not aired yet.As per The New York Times, the reporter of the El Salvador "60 Minutes" piece, correspondent Sharyn Alfonsi, in an email to her colleagues, revealed that the decision to pull the segment "is not an editorial decision, it is a political one."