Dynasty: The Murdochs (2026) s01e03 Episode Script
The Fallout
[distant siren wailing]
[car horns beeping]
[ominous string music playing]
[Jonathan Mahler] Jim Rutenberg and I
started writing about the Murdochs
more than 20 years ago.
And, you know,
I would say, with some humility,
that I think we have, like,
gotten to know the family pretty well.
[Jim Rutenberg] One day, out of the blue,
we get contacted by this mystery person,
saying "You're gonna
find this pretty interesting,
given what you do and who you cover."
So we agreed to meet.
All I can say is the way
that we had to get that first document
was pretty involved.
Nothing was gonna be given
to us electronically
'cause it's all so sensitive.
So that meant meeting
in secret locations, passing envelopes.
[Jonathan] Until finally, we got our hands
on these secret documents.
We couldn't believe it.
It was jaw-dropping.
[dramatic music playing]
This was thousands of pages.
E-mails, text messages.
Every page was unbelievable.
[Jonathan] "You're being lobbied by James,
and you're going to bend to his will."
To this, Liz responds,
"Do you think I'm a fucking moron?"
[Jim] The family was airing decades
of dirty laundry in a Nevada court.
[Jonathan] That's when it dawned on us,
that, oh my God, the Murdoch family is
in a massive lawsuit against each other.
[reporter 1]
According to the New York Times,
93-year-old Rupert Murdoch
allegedly surprised three of his children
by filing to change an irrevocable trust.
- [reporter 2] It reads like Succession.
- [reporter 3] A legal battle.
[reporter 4] At issue, who controls
his right-leaning media empire.
[woman] Joining me,
one of the reporters who broke this story.
All right, Jim, why are the three siblings
going up against Lachlan and Rupert?
I just would say
it's really why is Rupert, uh,
going against the three siblings?
[soft, intriguing music playing]
[Jonathan] After our story ran,
everyone knew
the family was suing each other
over Rupert's desire to lock in
Lachlan's control over the company.
[reporter 5] Morning. Anybody have
any comment this morning?
[Jonathan] But then there was
no more information available.
The case was sealed.
[reporter 5] Any comment?
[Jonathan] No one was really allowed
to talk about it.
And then we learned
that all the Murdoch family members
were going to actually testify
against each other.
[Jim] The Murdochs were going to war
in a pitched court fight
over the future of the entire empire.
[intriguing music continues]
[music ends]
[McKay Coppins] In early 2024,
before the New York Times piece came out,
I approached James really just on a hunch
that he would have
an interesting story to tell.
[intense music playing]
He couldn't quite believe
that his father was willing
to divide the family, maybe permanently.
So when James was deposed
as part of the preparation for the trial,
he was really ready to go to battle.
James had spent 20 years
as a senior executive.
He had been in depositions
where you have to be really aggressive.
And so he decided that he was
going to approach the whole thing
in a spirit of corporate combat.
But the deposition was much more difficult
for James emotionally
than I think he was prepared for.
When he walked into the boardroom,
James saw that it wasn't
just his father's lawyer and his lawyer,
but sitting in this office
was his father himself.
[music intensifies]
James didn't know
that Rupert would be there.
This was the first time he had seen Rupert
in years. They were fully estranged.
His dad just sat down across from him.
They didn't talk to each other.
And for the next several hours,
Rupert's lawyer just grilled James with
incredibly witheringly personal questions.
[music pauses]
Questions like,
"Have you ever accomplished anything
on your own?"
[music resumes]
Or, "Why don't you ever
take responsibility
for the things
that go wrong in your life?"
Or, "Why were you too busy
to call your dad on his 90th birthday?"
James told me that he tried
to concentrate on the lawyer's questions,
but he just kept looking over at his dad,
who was staring inscrutably at his son.
And every once in a while,
Rupert would pick up his phone
and tap something out.
And eventually, James realized
that these super aggressive,
mean-spirited, personal questions
were actually coming from his father.
I remember talking to James weeks later,
and he was still sort of reeling
from the experience.
He couldn't quite believe
what had happened.
He was constantly analyzing it
and trying to make sense
about why his dad did what he did.
The question that kept coming back to him
was, how did we let it come to this?
[curious music playing]
[Paul Barry]
If you look at the succession in 2011,
James is in the box seat.
[commentator] But Binocular's been
the challenger as they turn for home.
Binocular now strikes the…
[Paul] Elisabeth walked away,
and Lachlan's back in Australia.
[commentator] …Binocular, who had this
patchy season, win the Champion Hurdle.
[crowd cheering]
[Paul] James is running News Corp
in Britain,
and their tabloids
were making an absolute fortune.
[David Folkenflik] He sits atop
what's now called News UK,
their publishing empire in Great Britain,
the four newspapers that they own.
Most importantly, the News of the World.
[McKay] They have a villainous reputation
in Britain
for down-market tabloids
and conservative politics.
[Richard Cooke] One of Rupert's editors
once gave a staff talk.
He said, "Imagine the old man
down the end of the bar."
"Doesn't like immigrants.
He doesn't like poofs."
"He thinks that there's
too much smut on TV."
"But he wants to see tits
in the newspaper."
"That's who we're writing for."
[David] You're feasting on the missteps
and embarrassments of celebrities.
That's a News of the World exclusive.
[David] If you were a royal,
if you were a politician,
if you were some fancy actor,
a sports star or a singer,
you were fair game.
[reporter 1] The News of the World
is the jewel of Murdoch's empire.
[reporter 2] Enormously profitable.
[reporter 3] Britain's biggest newspaper
with an unrivaled reputation
for journalistic scoops.
[music ends]
[phone ringing]
I went to work for the News of the World
because I liked its reputation.
It was like the Death Star.
The dark heart of the evil empire.
And that emanated
from the characters who ran it.
[indistinct speech]
[Paul McMullan] Piers Morgan,
who you might've heard of,
was my first boss.
One day, I turned up
with a load of stolen photographs.
[intriguing music playing]
Pictures of Naomi Campbell,
Eva Herzigová,
Carla Bruni,
all of them topless.
I gave them to the picture editor,
and he said,
"You can't use these.
They're stolen pictures."
And Piers went, "Bollocks to it.
Stick it in. Good work."
And on the basis of that,
I got my staff job at the News
for stealing, basically.
[music ends]
One thing which is interesting about
Rupert Murdoch and his corporate culture
is a sense that anything can be achieved
by a force of will.
This is a really important characteristic
of the people who worked for him.
[Paddy Manning] He needed people
that would do whatever it took
to continue his way of doing business.
[intriguing music playing]
And at the News of the World,
that was Rebekah Brooks.
[Paul] Rebekah Brooks
was the features editor.
Used to work as a secretary
in the magazine.
And Murdoch made her editor
of the biggest newspaper in the world.
[Jonathan] Rebekah Brooks was the daughter
that Rupert never had
because she was unfailingly loyal to him.
[Paul] Elisabeth Murdoch hated her,
but Murdoch loved her.
Rebekah Brooks is an excellent example
of a senior Rupert Murdoch executive.
[camera clicking]
Moves at 800 miles an hour.
Knows all about newspapers,
makes quick decisions, is resourceful.
Quite hot. Nice arse.
She'd walk through with bits of paper,
just throwing them behind her,
"This is shit, this is shit."
And her secretary's scurrying behind her,
picking up the bits of paper.
[indistinct speech]
[Graham] There was no moaning or excuses.
It was, "Get the story at any cost."
[Sarah Ellison] Throughout the 2000s,
the News of the World
was going gangbusters.
They were getting great scoops about
celebrities, politicians, football stars.
I mean, every entity in the UK
was trying to get to the bottom of,
how are they doing that?
[pulsing electronic music playing]
[Graham] The Murdoch organization
at the News of the World
was an organized crime group,
by any definition.
Scores of people were involved.
Journalists and private detectives
trading unlawful information.
They were spending
millions of pounds a year on gathering it.
And it went on all over the world.
It was called the Dark Arts.
[man 1] Where have you gone, Kate Hudson?
[Paul] Dark Arts are
hiring private investigators,
sitting in surveillance vans.
[Graham] Getting phone bills,
medical records,
bank records, flight details.
[photographer 1] Paris! Paris!
[Graham] And what that means is
you can get to the story first.
It gave Murdoch the competitive advantage
against other newspapers
on exclusive stories.
[photographer 2] Hello, dear.
[Graham] I had a contact
who'd give me stories on Prince Charles,
who was having an affair
with Camilla Parker Bowles.
She's the queen now.
So I knew her inside movements.
I'll wield my bullwhip at you in a minute.
[Paul] I spent
the last month of Diana's life
just chasing her around the world.
I can see why Harry hates us.
Sorry, Harry.
Wherever you went,
bang, out came a pap, and you thought,
"How do they know where I am?"
I got sent to LA to follow Hugh Grant,
crawling for Black hookers.
So what did Murdoch want us to do?
Find the girl, give her $250,000
to tell us all about what Hugh Grant
asked you to do in his car.
All the dirty details.
[Hugh] I thought,
"This is part of my punishment."
But, uh, life at that time
was extremely difficult,
because their power
grew and grew and grew.
I mean, you know, you could do anything
as long as you didn't get caught.
But it's important
that the wall is maintained,
so the Murdochs can't see
how the sausage is made,
even though they know how it's done.
So there's plausible deniability
at every level.
That's really important
in a Murdoch organization.
[Paul Barry] Technically, James is
in charge of all of Murdoch's papers
in Britain at the time.
But he doesn't really care
about newspapers that much.
He was very much interested in tech.
And he was making investments
all over the place.
I think he was trying to say, you know,
"This is not my daddy's
old media company."
[dynamic music playing]
[reporter 4] BSkyB,
Britain's most lucrative
satellite TV provider.
[reporter 5] News Corp is trying to buy
the 60% of BSkyB it doesn't already own.
[Paul] At that point,
James is right on the cusp
of getting this deal with BSkyB,
which would make
a huge amount of money for them.
[Sarah] BSkyB is an incredibly powerful
satellite television operation.
And it will give the Murdochs a launch pad
to control the media environment
around the world.
[James] We're about to complete the merger
of the three European Sky businesses,
which, uh, you know,
creates something really new.
A real 21st century
digital television company.
[Sarah] James sees that if he's able
to bring BSkyB into the fold.
That will be his crowning achievement.
But in order to be approved, you need
to be, quote unquote, "fit and proper,"
which means your newspapers
are not doing things
that are illegal or untoward.
This requires an enormous amount
of review by the British government.
And it's James's job to get it across.
James has managed to befriend
and ingratiate himself with Jeremy Hunt,
a key Cabinet figure.
And Rebekah Brooks
is a close friend and confidante
of the new prime minister, David Cameron.
So everything seems aligned perfectly
to go James's way
when a headline erupts
in early July of 2011.
[sparse, solemn music playing]
- [reporter 6] Heinous, despicable.
- [reporter 7] Shock and anger.
[reporter 8] Going too far to get a story.
[reporter 9] Allegations against
the News of the World.
[reporter 10] Hacked into…
[reporter 11] …families of murder victims.
[reporter 12] The murdered schoolgirl
Milly Dowler.
[Graham] Milly Dowler was a schoolgirl
who was abducted and murdered.
And before she was…
Before her body was found,
the News of the World
were hacking her phone.
[poignant piano music playing]
The way to hack someone's phone is
to make sure they're asleep or engaged.
You just ring 'em up on one phone,
they answer it,
then dial again on the other one
and get through to their messages.
[voicemail] Enter your security code.
And the private investigator
has given you the code,
so you put the code in
and you listen to their messages.
[reporter 13]
When the voicemail became full,
messages were deleted
so that more could be left.
[woman 1] A private detective
working for the News of the World
deleted some of those messages,
giving her family the false hope
that she might still be alive.
- I rang her phone.
- [man 2] Yes.
And it clicked through onto her voicemail,
so I heard her voice.
- [man 2] Yes.
- And I was… It was just like… I jumped.
"She's picked up her voicemails, Bob!
She's alive."
[Kara] They made the parents
think the girl was alive.
It just was… who… who would do that?
That's when I started
calling him Uncle Satan.
[chanting] Boycott Murdoch!
Boycott Murdoch!
[Sarah] There had been stories
about celebrities getting hacked.
But there's not as much sympathy
for the victims of those stories
because these are wealthy people.
[David] But when it was a schoolgirl,
people realized this stuff could happen
to anybody.
This was fiendishly vile.
[chanting] Money, power, lies by the hour
Rupert Murdoch…
[Paul McMullan] We were reviled by
everybody. My wife
fucking hated me for my job.
"You're a fucking lowlife!"
This is my wife, you know.
[chanting] Boycott Murdoch!
Boycott Murdoch!
[Graham] A cover-up started to take place.
Deletions of emails
and destruction of evidence.
The private eye I used to use,
he burned all his records quickly.
[David] This developed
into a raging, roiling scandal.
It affected
the law enforcement establishment,
top officials at Scotland Yard,
who had essentially
looked the other way for years,
and politicians, who appeared compromised
by their ties to the Murdochs.
What I've read in the papers
is quite, quite shocking.
[reporter 14] Britain's prime minister
vowing no stone will be left unturned.
[reporter 15] James Murdoch
and other News Limited executives
could face charges
over a suspected cover-up
with reports millions of emails
were deleted from an internal archive.
[McKay] According to James,
he immediately ordered the lawyers
to turn over everything they had
to the police,
to start cooperating
with an investigation,
over Rupert's objections.
[reporter 16] Detectives made
their first arrest and seized evidence.
[reporter 17] Thousands of pages
of notes were seized.
[reporter 18] More alleged crimes.
Rampant computer hacking,
stolen bank data, even break-ins.
[McKay] This was not a one-off thing.
Journalists at News of the World had been
working with private investigators
to hack voicemails for years.
They'd hacked the voicemails
of parents of a child
who was murdered by a pedophile,
and troops who were killed in combat
in Afghanistan and Iraq.
[chanting] Rupert Murdoch's got to go to,
say hey!
[protestors chanting]
[Matthew Belloni]
This was emotional stuff,
and Rupert was very much painted
as the villain here.
[people chanting] Boycott Murdoch!
Boycott Murdoch!
[Jim] One thing we understand about Rupert
with his executives is,
if you win, you can do whatever you want.
Just keep winning.
But hacking showed just how far
his executives were willing to take that.
This was a crossed line.
[Matthew] Here was pretty good evidence
that they were leveraging these papers
to push agendas
and to blackmail people
and to invade people's privacy.
All the stuff that you kind of suspected
but didn't know,
it was all out there and laid bare.
I'm not making any comments.
[reporter 19] Stock in parent company
News Corp has dropped nearly 15%.
[reporter 20]
Advertisers leaving in droves.
[reporter 21] The prime minister,
David Cameron,
joined opposition politicians
in parliament to call on Rupert Murdoch…
[reporter 22] The prime minister
has promised a public inquiry.
The people involved,
however high or low they go,
they must not only be brought to justice,
they must also have no future role
in running a media company in our country.
[reporter 23] Three principal executives
are called to testify before parliament.
[man 3] I think they are
in a lot of trouble.
[reporter 24] This could be the moment
his newspaper power crumbles.
The question was,
how high up was this scandal gonna go?
Would there be a Murdoch scalp?
[indistinct chattering]
[James] Mr. Chairman,
thank you very much.
First of all, I would like to say as well
just how sorry I am
and how sorry we are, uh,
to particularly the victims
of illegal voicemail interceptions
and to their families.
Before you get to that,
I would just like to say one sentence.
- This is the most humble day of my life.
- [man 4] Thank you.
So, in order to claw out
from under this Milly Dowler scandal,
he gives an apology.
Rupert clearly knows that
that's the posture that he has to strike.
At what point did you find out criminality
was endemic at News of the World?
"Endemic" is a very hard…
a very wide-ranging word.
I was absolutely shocked,
appalled, and ashamed
when I heard about
the Milly Dowler case only
two weeks ago.
- [Sarah] He mumbled.
- I don't know anything about that.
He seemed like a confused, older man.
I forget the date.
[Sarah] This was not
the fearsome media mogul
that people expected
that they were going to see.
And it was a very effective performance,
whether it was real or not.
I don't remember meeting him.
I might have shaken hands,
but I don't have any memory.
I just don't remember.
I literally turned to someone, I was like,
"He's pretending he's addled?
Are you kidding me? This guy is a viper."
[Sarah] Rupert said he had no idea.
James said he had no idea.
[James hesitates]
There is… I have… I have no knowledge
and there is no, uh, evidence, uh, that…
uh, that I'm… that I'm aware of that…
[Paul McMullan] They all stood back.
Him, James, Rebekah.
All said, "We knew nothing about that.
It's just the journalists did it."
They let me down,
and I think
they behaved, uh, disgracefully
and betrayed the company and me.
Okay. Whilst it has been obvious
to most of us…
You know, Rebekah Brooks, by all accounts,
would have been the natural scapegoat
for all of this, right?
She was running News of the World,
and then the newspaper division.
But Rupert loved Rebekah Brooks
and was more loyal to Rebekah Brooks
than he was to James.
[man 5] Can I ask, in 2008…
In fact, there's this moment
where one of the members of parliament
asks Rupert about a specific incidence
of phone hacking,
and Rupert, rather than answer, says…
I think my son can perhaps answer that
in more detail. He was a lot closer.
Rupert really threw James to the wolves
on that one.
[woman 2] Had you been made aware prior
to the Milly Dowler story breaking
that your reporters hacked into the phones
of any other crime victims?
No, I had not. I had not been…
I had not been made aware of that.
Most of this hacking took place
before James came into the job.
[Sarah] But then it comes out
that James has in fact
been on an email chain
approving a settlement
in order to keep
the phone hacking situation quiet.
[man 5] When you signed off
the Taylor payment,
did you see or were you made aware
of the "For Neville" email?
[hesitates] No. I…
I was not aware of that at the time.
James approved a million-pound settlement
to an official with a football association
that they had hacked into.
James said the fact of the payment
was on an email chain
that he read over the weekend.
He hadn't really realized
what he was signing off on.
Mr. Murdoch, you must be
the first mafia boss in history
who didn't know
he was running a criminal enterprise.
Mr. Watson, please.
I think that's inappropriate.
[Sarah] So at the hearing
with James and Rupert
is Wendi Deng Murdoch,
who is there by his side.
So then there's this crazy moment
where this guy rises to smash a cream pie
into Murdoch's face,
like he's on some sort
of Benny Hill slapstick episode.
[clamoring]
[David] And Wendi
knocks it out of his hand,
which is incredible television.
It's an absurd moment,
but it's also really destabilizing.
[man 6] The sitting suspended
for ten minutes.
[David] It creates sympathy for Murdoch.
The instant Murdoch was hit
with that pie, News Corp's stock spiked.
This is brilliant!
He needs to be hit with more pies.
[Matthew] I think that
the spectacle of the pie
did distract a bit
from the substance of the allegations.
And it turned the whole thing into a farce
when the issues that were being litigated
were very serious.
- Thank you, Mr. Chairman.
- Thank you. Thank you, Mr. Chairman.
[Rupert] Thank you, all members.
[Graham] It didn't bring justice,
and it didn't get to the truth
of this organized crime group.
[Matthew] I must have watched that video
a hundred times.
It's striking because Wendi has
such protectionism instincts for him.
And James does not,
which is the interesting thing.
Your wife has a very good left hook.
I have to say, she was fast.
I wrote her, "Wow, you're fast.
I'm not getting in your way, friend."
I am not a big proponent
of the four-decade marriage age gap.
- But…
- [laughter]
…if ever there was a situation
where it would pay dividends…
[laughter]
- …it would be an ambush like that.
- [applause]
[Sarah] It's very good for Wendi's brand
because she's seen as Rupert's protector.
And a badass.
[interviewer] And who's the jury…
[Jim] Wendi is just a much hipper person
than Murdoch is.
She's young. She's with it.
She would call Rupert an old man.
She would say that he was stupid.
She belittles him in private,
and then, over time,
socially in public as well.
[in Mandarin] Do you understand, "beating
and scolding means you are in love"?
- [in English] Yeah, she's very tough.
- Really?
[laughter]
And she is linked to a number
of other prominent figures,
uh, romantically.
[intriguing music playing]
[Matthew] There were rumors
about a relationship with Tony Blair.
[Sarah] Rupert grilled his staff
to figure out if that was true or not.
The family went crazy. They were like,
"All hands on deck. Get rid of her."
[Sarah] James and Lachlan got together
and created a dossier on Wendi
to present to their father.
And this included a note
that Wendi had written to herself
in her diary and then thrown away.
A housekeeper who was cleaning up
in Rupert and Wendi's triplex
found that piece of paper.
And in that note, she was describing
her feelings for Tony Blair.
There were exchanges
about the curve of his bottom.
[Richard] How hot he looked
when he was on stage.
[David] His piercing blue eyes.
[Sarah] And how attracted to him she was.
And when James and Lachlan presented that
to their father, that was the last straw.
He was convinced to divorce Wendi.
[reporter 25] Media mogul Rupert Murdoch
is heading for divorce court again,
ending a 14-year marriage
to his third wife.
[Richard] A Vanity Fair story
about the alleged relationship
between Wendi Deng and Tony Blair
is published,
and it had access
to the private note written by Wendi Deng.
[David] This was deeply humiliating
for Rupert.
But it was perfect tabloid fodder.
And because Rupert has always
made his money on sex and scandal,
a lot of people felt that he had finally
gotten his just desserts.
[man 7] A complete bombshell.
After 168 years in print,
this Sunday's edition
of the News of the World will be the last.
[reporter 26] Britain's biggest newspaper
was dramatically killed off.
[man 7] Staff gasped in shock.
Others reduced to tears.
[Graham] Closing the News of the World,
to Rupert Murdoch,
is like Paul McCartney
deleting The White Album.
It would have been heartbreaking for him.
It not only made his fortune,
it was also a massive part
of British popular culture.
They were trying to protect their empire,
and then they did what it took to fix it.
They're good at sacrificing things
they need to, to survive.
[man 7] News International chairman
James Murdoch
said the paper's proud history
had been tarnished
by the behavior he called inhuman.
[Paul McMullan] We all got sacked.
200 journalists got laid off.
Then he decided
to turn us over to the cops.
And I just thought, "You fucker."
[James] Actions taken
by certain individuals
in what had been a good newsroom
have breached the trust
that the News of the World
has with its readers.
[Paul] The main private eye,
Glenn Mulcaire, got arrested,
got sent to jail,
as well as a bunch of reporters.
I am baffled by the decision
to charge me today.
[Paul] Rebekah Brooks was arrested.
Rebekah played a blinder.
"I had no idea. I was so far above.
I didn't know what they were doing."
I really, really do want
to understand what happened.
I think all of us do because that's…
[Paul] But she was smart.
Really manipulative.
Thank you, Chairman.
[Paul] She walked free.
We've finished our meal,
and we're going home.
[Matthew] James really took a hit
from the hacking scandal.
That UK parliamentary committee
did issue a very searing opinion.
The younger Murdoch deemed, quote,
"Not fit to run a major company."
[Sarah] This is a moment when,
if he was able to finally purchase
the entirety of BSkyB,
the company as a whole
was there for James's taking.
And the phone-hacking crisis
just puts an absolute end to all of that.
[man 8] Shame on you!
[reporter 27]
Rupert Murdoch is backing down.
[reporter 28] Murdoch to withdraw
News Corporation's takeover bid
for broadcaster BSkyB.
[reporter 29] The hacking scandal
forced him to pull the plug on that deal.
[reporter 30]
Media tycoon Rupert Murdoch in retreat.
[David] The Murdochs have had to pay
vast sums of money
as a result of this hacking scandal.
It's well over £1.5 billion.
[Jonathan] That scandal did so much damage
to the Murdoch name.
Rupert is chased out of London
and shouted down anywhere he goes.
He's public enemy number one.
I was appalled
to find out what had happened.
And I apologized.
And I have nothing further to say.
[man 9] Elisabeth!
[man 10] Good morning, Elisabeth.
This way, please.
Every time Liz left her house,
she'd be swarmed.
People would be yelling things at her.
So Elisabeth urges her father
to fire James.
[tense string music playing]
[McKay] I talked to James
and Liz about this.
James is hunkered down in his office,
working on a response,
and Liz comes into his office
and tells James,
"Dad and I were talking,
and we really think
that you need to resign
and take the fall for this."
"Because people are so upset,
and it's not going to do
to simply fire lower-level executives."
"It has to be a Murdoch,
and we think you should be it."
As you can imagine, James was furious.
Not just with the idea
that he would be the one to take the fall
but with the idea that his father
wasn't willing to come and tell him.
And what James said in that moment was,
"If Dad wants to fire me,
he can do it himself."
And then he threw Liz out of his office.
[music ends]
That ended up being a defining moment
in his relationship with Liz.
And he and Liz barely spoke to each other
for years afterward.
[Jonathan] One thing that's fascinating
about this family
is that there's so much maneuvering
and there are
billions of dollars at stake,
but at the end of the day,
they are family.
They do love each other on some level.
[McKay] When James was
at his breaking point,
Lachlan ended up flying to London
in the midst of this whole scandal
to calm his dad down
and convince him not to fire James.
So, instead, James was given an exit ramp.
He had a job set up in New York
that was presented as a promotion,
but everybody knew it wasn't.
But it was one of the last moments
of brotherly solidarity
where Lachlan really ended up
supporting James.
[man 11] You are a Murdoch.
It's a blessing or a curse,
but it's there, like it or not.
It's obviously been a very big year.
It's obviously been a very nightmare year
for the family.
[Paul Barry] Elisabeth thinks
the hacking scandal's a disaster
and it would never have happened
if the company had been run properly.
[Jim] Liz is outside of News Corp,
building her own company, Shine.
[woman 3] You are the biggest loser!
[Sarah] She helps make a huge success
of The Biggest Loser,
a perfect Murdochian type of show.
Shut up and focus.
[Paul] She has shown that she's got talent
for the sorts of things that you need
in running a media company.
[man 12] Elisabeth, do you mind, please?
[reporter 31] Elisabeth has
her own production company
that was recently bought by News Corp.
An indication, some say,
that she may be directly next in line.
[Sarah] Rupert buys Shine,
and she makes a lot of money.
And so she was brought
back inside his orbit.
[McKay] Whenever he wanted one of his kids
to work for him and they were resisting,
Rupert would just throw enough money
at the problem
that he could buy them off
and force them back into his employ.
Do you feel that in succession terms,
or in sort of family terms,
that you've been overlooked
for the top job?
[Elisabeth] No,
but I don't think that way.
I always think about what can be done,
so I never feel completely satisfied.
You always think of what more you can do.
[Sarah] Elisabeth is probably
the media executive
who has had the greatest success outside
the Murdoch company of any of the kids.
But Rupert is of a certain generation,
and so he always saw either James
or Lachlan as the most likely successor.
[McKay] James, for what it's worth,
told me that Rupert is a misogynist
and never considered Liz
a viable successor.
[David] So she is dispirited.
She clearly does
really admire and respect him,
but she cannot deny
the damage done by the family empire.
Please welcome
the one and only Elisabeth Murdoch.
[cheering and applause]
[Paul] Elisabeth goes
to Edinburgh Television Festival
to give a very prestigious lecture.
Being asked to give
the James MacTaggart Memorial Lecture
has been quite a welcome distraction
from some of the other nightmares
much closer to home.
Yes, you have met
some of my family before.
[Paul] Elisabeth makes
this absolutely scorching speech.
She says all the sort of stuff
that you don't want to see in public.
Speaking of independence,
my brother James spoke about it
in his MacTaggart three years ago.
James ended his lecture
with a line in which he claimed…
[both] The only reliable
and perpetual guarantor of independence
is profit.
The reason his statement
sat so uncomfortably
is that profit without purpose
is a recipe for disaster.
[tense music playing]
[Paddy] News Corp has been accused
of putting profits first and nothing else.
[Paul] Elisabeth's saying the same thing
everyone's said about Murdoch
to this point.
Profit must be our servant,
not our master.
And so she's aligning herself
with the enemies of James
and the enemies of her father.
[Sarah] We see all of this
play out in public.
The deep, deep fissures
in the Murdoch family.
Not surprisingly, her father
doesn't speak to her for nine weeks.
[McKay] Liz ended up
leaving the company altogether,
setting out on her own.
She wants to get away from
all of the toxicity of the family empire.
And the phone-hacking scandal
was her opportunity to do that.
[man 13] Yup, thanks. Bye.
[music ends]
[man 14] Good morning, Mr. Murdoch.
You're gonna retire soon, finally, huh,
and have a good life?
- [Rupert] No way.
- [man 14] Oh!
[Sarah] The time
after the phone-hacking scandal
was a real ebb in Murdoch's
professional and personal life.
BSkyB has been denied to him.
[reporter 32] The stalled deal
and the scandal that caused it
has thrown open the question of succession
in the Murdoch empire.
He thought he was rolling
to world domination,
and now things are starting to fall apart.
[tense string music playing]
[music ends abruptly]
[Jim] Earlier in his life,
Rupert reveled in the idea
of a battle royal between his children
to succeed him.
[enigmatic music playing]
[McKay]
Rupert pitted them against each other,
played them off each other,
like they were cogs
in this dynastic power game
he was playing.
But he allowed his quest
for some kind of immortality
to destroy his actual relationship
with his actual kids.
[David] This is about control
and about the lack of respect
that Rupert Murdoch is showing
in his very last chapter in life.
Basically saying to three of his children,
"I don't think you have it."
And this litigation
brought all of it to the surface.
[tense music playing]
[reporter 33] This morning, the family
believed to be the inspiration
behind the HBO hit show Succession
is locked in a similar battle
playing out in real life.
[reporter 34] This is a dispute
about the Murdoch Family Trust,
and this is very much shrouded in mystery,
and we aren't sure
exactly what's going on inside.
[Jim] In September, we found out
that the trial is about to start.
The setting is Reno, Nevada,
the birthplace of divorce in this country.
Of all places for the Murdoch family
to end up in court, in Reno, Nevada.
No offense to Reno.
[Jim] I personally went
to that courthouse every day.
The first day was just a bizarre scene.
SUV, SUV, SUV.
Press everywhere.
Lawyers are swooping
up the courthouse steps,
and then the children come.
[McKay] You know,
so much of the Murdoch story
has been narrated by anonymous sources
and self-interested parties
speculating about what was going on
behind the scenes.
But for the first time with this trial,
we were getting the actual story.
The real human drama of this family
was being laid bare.
- [photographers 1, 2] Rupert!
- [photographer 1] Big smile!
[reporter 35]
Are you confident of victory?
[Jim] Every major member of the family
is testifying
and in front of each other in court.
Rupert went first.
[Jonathan] And here is Rupert Murdoch
taking the witness stand
in defense of his effort
to unilaterally change
this inviolable family trust,
even though, by definition,
an inviolable trust cannot be changed.
But on some level, you can understand
why he would feel entitled to do it.
He built this empire.
He made everyone in this room
a multibillionaire.
And it's his money.
The judge said
that he was open to their argument
if he can prove
that he's doing it in good faith
and for the sole benefit
of his beneficiaries.
But Rupert is a man who speaks his mind.
He's a master of the universe.
And so how disciplined
is he gonna be on the witness stand,
I think, is a question
from the very beginning.
What will become a problem is that
when Rupert's cross-examined about this,
he's incredibly honest.
[McKay] He was very upfront about the fact
that this was about his legacy
and he didn't trust James
or Liz or Prudence
to retain the conservative political slant
of his media outlets.
That's why he wanted
Lachlan to take control.
I'm not a legal expert,
but a legal expert would say
that was not in his best interest
to make that argument.
[Jim] But Rupert's legal team
appeared to think
they had an ace in the hole.
And that was an exchange
between Rupert and Anna, his second wife.
[soft, suspenseful music playing]
One day, several months prior,
she had reached out to Rupert,
which was a bit strange.
She doesn't ordinarily just call Rupert.
It rarely happens.
As Rupert says, it's out of the blue.
They're talking, catching up,
and Rupert shares with her
some of his angst
about James doing something
with the sisters to shove Lachlan aside.
And after they get off the phone,
Anna writes Rupert by email.
"I think it's imperative
that you get this sorted out soon."
"Some toes will be trod on and egos hurt,
but it would be worse
to leave things as they are."
Then she tells Rupert,
"You are the kingpin."
"You still hold the power."
And Rupert tells Anna he'd love
nothing more than peace all around,
but it's not looking that way.
And then Anna and Rupert
start talking about the kids.
And intriguingly, Rupert
is sort of complimentary of James.
"He's bright, he's articulate,
but time and time again,
showed bad judgment."
Rupert tells Anna,
this isn't just about the children.
He says, "Fox and our empire
is the only thing
standing in the way of this woke mob,"
that, "We are the true defenders
of the free world."
And James and his wife, Kathryn,
want to change it.
And Anna does something
kind of surprising.
She talks about her resentment
of James and Kathryn as well.
That they
and their like-minded woke friends
are gonna be the ruination of the country.
America will be doomed
if these cultural elites take over.
She's in perfect agreement.
Rupert's lawyers try to use this
to say, "Look,
if all of this mess we're in
is because Rupert was trying
to accommodate Anna in their divorce,
Anna, who set these parameters,
Anna, who never wanted
to see one child succeed above the others,
she is now saying
that doesn't matter to her."
"She is endorsing Lachlan's leadership."
"She's endorsing Rupert
backing up Lachlan's leadership."
"Why are we even here?"
is basically the implicit argument.
[music ends]
This, of course, has no legal weight.
This is just an exchange of emails.
There's binding language around the trust,
and Anna has no control.
And she wasn't telling him
he should change the trust.
She doesn't have the authority
to tell him to change the trust.
Still, as a matter of atmospherics,
it was important.
And it shows what's at stake
in this trial.
[tense music playing]
[McKay] Once the litigation began,
years of internal Murdoch
family communications, texts and e-mails,
started to surface
that were really painful
for, I think, everyone involved,
but especially James.
He started telling friends,
"My advice is to never get involved
in litigation with your family
where there's discovery
and the discovery is all about you."
I mean, just imagine what that's like
if you were suddenly able to read
everything that your family says about you
behind your back for two decades.
It was brutal.
And I think there is a tragedy in that
that transcends whatever you think
about the Murdochs or Fox News.
This is the story of a family unraveling.
And it was just the beginning.
[music ends]
[ominous music playing]
[car horns beeping]
[ominous string music playing]
[Jonathan Mahler] Jim Rutenberg and I
started writing about the Murdochs
more than 20 years ago.
And, you know,
I would say, with some humility,
that I think we have, like,
gotten to know the family pretty well.
[Jim Rutenberg] One day, out of the blue,
we get contacted by this mystery person,
saying "You're gonna
find this pretty interesting,
given what you do and who you cover."
So we agreed to meet.
All I can say is the way
that we had to get that first document
was pretty involved.
Nothing was gonna be given
to us electronically
'cause it's all so sensitive.
So that meant meeting
in secret locations, passing envelopes.
[Jonathan] Until finally, we got our hands
on these secret documents.
We couldn't believe it.
It was jaw-dropping.
[dramatic music playing]
This was thousands of pages.
E-mails, text messages.
Every page was unbelievable.
[Jonathan] "You're being lobbied by James,
and you're going to bend to his will."
To this, Liz responds,
"Do you think I'm a fucking moron?"
[Jim] The family was airing decades
of dirty laundry in a Nevada court.
[Jonathan] That's when it dawned on us,
that, oh my God, the Murdoch family is
in a massive lawsuit against each other.
[reporter 1]
According to the New York Times,
93-year-old Rupert Murdoch
allegedly surprised three of his children
by filing to change an irrevocable trust.
- [reporter 2] It reads like Succession.
- [reporter 3] A legal battle.
[reporter 4] At issue, who controls
his right-leaning media empire.
[woman] Joining me,
one of the reporters who broke this story.
All right, Jim, why are the three siblings
going up against Lachlan and Rupert?
I just would say
it's really why is Rupert, uh,
going against the three siblings?
[soft, intriguing music playing]
[Jonathan] After our story ran,
everyone knew
the family was suing each other
over Rupert's desire to lock in
Lachlan's control over the company.
[reporter 5] Morning. Anybody have
any comment this morning?
[Jonathan] But then there was
no more information available.
The case was sealed.
[reporter 5] Any comment?
[Jonathan] No one was really allowed
to talk about it.
And then we learned
that all the Murdoch family members
were going to actually testify
against each other.
[Jim] The Murdochs were going to war
in a pitched court fight
over the future of the entire empire.
[intriguing music continues]
[music ends]
[McKay Coppins] In early 2024,
before the New York Times piece came out,
I approached James really just on a hunch
that he would have
an interesting story to tell.
[intense music playing]
He couldn't quite believe
that his father was willing
to divide the family, maybe permanently.
So when James was deposed
as part of the preparation for the trial,
he was really ready to go to battle.
James had spent 20 years
as a senior executive.
He had been in depositions
where you have to be really aggressive.
And so he decided that he was
going to approach the whole thing
in a spirit of corporate combat.
But the deposition was much more difficult
for James emotionally
than I think he was prepared for.
When he walked into the boardroom,
James saw that it wasn't
just his father's lawyer and his lawyer,
but sitting in this office
was his father himself.
[music intensifies]
James didn't know
that Rupert would be there.
This was the first time he had seen Rupert
in years. They were fully estranged.
His dad just sat down across from him.
They didn't talk to each other.
And for the next several hours,
Rupert's lawyer just grilled James with
incredibly witheringly personal questions.
[music pauses]
Questions like,
"Have you ever accomplished anything
on your own?"
[music resumes]
Or, "Why don't you ever
take responsibility
for the things
that go wrong in your life?"
Or, "Why were you too busy
to call your dad on his 90th birthday?"
James told me that he tried
to concentrate on the lawyer's questions,
but he just kept looking over at his dad,
who was staring inscrutably at his son.
And every once in a while,
Rupert would pick up his phone
and tap something out.
And eventually, James realized
that these super aggressive,
mean-spirited, personal questions
were actually coming from his father.
I remember talking to James weeks later,
and he was still sort of reeling
from the experience.
He couldn't quite believe
what had happened.
He was constantly analyzing it
and trying to make sense
about why his dad did what he did.
The question that kept coming back to him
was, how did we let it come to this?
[curious music playing]
[Paul Barry]
If you look at the succession in 2011,
James is in the box seat.
[commentator] But Binocular's been
the challenger as they turn for home.
Binocular now strikes the…
[Paul] Elisabeth walked away,
and Lachlan's back in Australia.
[commentator] …Binocular, who had this
patchy season, win the Champion Hurdle.
[crowd cheering]
[Paul] James is running News Corp
in Britain,
and their tabloids
were making an absolute fortune.
[David Folkenflik] He sits atop
what's now called News UK,
their publishing empire in Great Britain,
the four newspapers that they own.
Most importantly, the News of the World.
[McKay] They have a villainous reputation
in Britain
for down-market tabloids
and conservative politics.
[Richard Cooke] One of Rupert's editors
once gave a staff talk.
He said, "Imagine the old man
down the end of the bar."
"Doesn't like immigrants.
He doesn't like poofs."
"He thinks that there's
too much smut on TV."
"But he wants to see tits
in the newspaper."
"That's who we're writing for."
[David] You're feasting on the missteps
and embarrassments of celebrities.
That's a News of the World exclusive.
[David] If you were a royal,
if you were a politician,
if you were some fancy actor,
a sports star or a singer,
you were fair game.
[reporter 1] The News of the World
is the jewel of Murdoch's empire.
[reporter 2] Enormously profitable.
[reporter 3] Britain's biggest newspaper
with an unrivaled reputation
for journalistic scoops.
[music ends]
[phone ringing]
I went to work for the News of the World
because I liked its reputation.
It was like the Death Star.
The dark heart of the evil empire.
And that emanated
from the characters who ran it.
[indistinct speech]
[Paul McMullan] Piers Morgan,
who you might've heard of,
was my first boss.
One day, I turned up
with a load of stolen photographs.
[intriguing music playing]
Pictures of Naomi Campbell,
Eva Herzigová,
Carla Bruni,
all of them topless.
I gave them to the picture editor,
and he said,
"You can't use these.
They're stolen pictures."
And Piers went, "Bollocks to it.
Stick it in. Good work."
And on the basis of that,
I got my staff job at the News
for stealing, basically.
[music ends]
One thing which is interesting about
Rupert Murdoch and his corporate culture
is a sense that anything can be achieved
by a force of will.
This is a really important characteristic
of the people who worked for him.
[Paddy Manning] He needed people
that would do whatever it took
to continue his way of doing business.
[intriguing music playing]
And at the News of the World,
that was Rebekah Brooks.
[Paul] Rebekah Brooks
was the features editor.
Used to work as a secretary
in the magazine.
And Murdoch made her editor
of the biggest newspaper in the world.
[Jonathan] Rebekah Brooks was the daughter
that Rupert never had
because she was unfailingly loyal to him.
[Paul] Elisabeth Murdoch hated her,
but Murdoch loved her.
Rebekah Brooks is an excellent example
of a senior Rupert Murdoch executive.
[camera clicking]
Moves at 800 miles an hour.
Knows all about newspapers,
makes quick decisions, is resourceful.
Quite hot. Nice arse.
She'd walk through with bits of paper,
just throwing them behind her,
"This is shit, this is shit."
And her secretary's scurrying behind her,
picking up the bits of paper.
[indistinct speech]
[Graham] There was no moaning or excuses.
It was, "Get the story at any cost."
[Sarah Ellison] Throughout the 2000s,
the News of the World
was going gangbusters.
They were getting great scoops about
celebrities, politicians, football stars.
I mean, every entity in the UK
was trying to get to the bottom of,
how are they doing that?
[pulsing electronic music playing]
[Graham] The Murdoch organization
at the News of the World
was an organized crime group,
by any definition.
Scores of people were involved.
Journalists and private detectives
trading unlawful information.
They were spending
millions of pounds a year on gathering it.
And it went on all over the world.
It was called the Dark Arts.
[man 1] Where have you gone, Kate Hudson?
[Paul] Dark Arts are
hiring private investigators,
sitting in surveillance vans.
[Graham] Getting phone bills,
medical records,
bank records, flight details.
[photographer 1] Paris! Paris!
[Graham] And what that means is
you can get to the story first.
It gave Murdoch the competitive advantage
against other newspapers
on exclusive stories.
[photographer 2] Hello, dear.
[Graham] I had a contact
who'd give me stories on Prince Charles,
who was having an affair
with Camilla Parker Bowles.
She's the queen now.
So I knew her inside movements.
I'll wield my bullwhip at you in a minute.
[Paul] I spent
the last month of Diana's life
just chasing her around the world.
I can see why Harry hates us.
Sorry, Harry.
Wherever you went,
bang, out came a pap, and you thought,
"How do they know where I am?"
I got sent to LA to follow Hugh Grant,
crawling for Black hookers.
So what did Murdoch want us to do?
Find the girl, give her $250,000
to tell us all about what Hugh Grant
asked you to do in his car.
All the dirty details.
[Hugh] I thought,
"This is part of my punishment."
But, uh, life at that time
was extremely difficult,
because their power
grew and grew and grew.
I mean, you know, you could do anything
as long as you didn't get caught.
But it's important
that the wall is maintained,
so the Murdochs can't see
how the sausage is made,
even though they know how it's done.
So there's plausible deniability
at every level.
That's really important
in a Murdoch organization.
[Paul Barry] Technically, James is
in charge of all of Murdoch's papers
in Britain at the time.
But he doesn't really care
about newspapers that much.
He was very much interested in tech.
And he was making investments
all over the place.
I think he was trying to say, you know,
"This is not my daddy's
old media company."
[dynamic music playing]
[reporter 4] BSkyB,
Britain's most lucrative
satellite TV provider.
[reporter 5] News Corp is trying to buy
the 60% of BSkyB it doesn't already own.
[Paul] At that point,
James is right on the cusp
of getting this deal with BSkyB,
which would make
a huge amount of money for them.
[Sarah] BSkyB is an incredibly powerful
satellite television operation.
And it will give the Murdochs a launch pad
to control the media environment
around the world.
[James] We're about to complete the merger
of the three European Sky businesses,
which, uh, you know,
creates something really new.
A real 21st century
digital television company.
[Sarah] James sees that if he's able
to bring BSkyB into the fold.
That will be his crowning achievement.
But in order to be approved, you need
to be, quote unquote, "fit and proper,"
which means your newspapers
are not doing things
that are illegal or untoward.
This requires an enormous amount
of review by the British government.
And it's James's job to get it across.
James has managed to befriend
and ingratiate himself with Jeremy Hunt,
a key Cabinet figure.
And Rebekah Brooks
is a close friend and confidante
of the new prime minister, David Cameron.
So everything seems aligned perfectly
to go James's way
when a headline erupts
in early July of 2011.
[sparse, solemn music playing]
- [reporter 6] Heinous, despicable.
- [reporter 7] Shock and anger.
[reporter 8] Going too far to get a story.
[reporter 9] Allegations against
the News of the World.
[reporter 10] Hacked into…
[reporter 11] …families of murder victims.
[reporter 12] The murdered schoolgirl
Milly Dowler.
[Graham] Milly Dowler was a schoolgirl
who was abducted and murdered.
And before she was…
Before her body was found,
the News of the World
were hacking her phone.
[poignant piano music playing]
The way to hack someone's phone is
to make sure they're asleep or engaged.
You just ring 'em up on one phone,
they answer it,
then dial again on the other one
and get through to their messages.
[voicemail] Enter your security code.
And the private investigator
has given you the code,
so you put the code in
and you listen to their messages.
[reporter 13]
When the voicemail became full,
messages were deleted
so that more could be left.
[woman 1] A private detective
working for the News of the World
deleted some of those messages,
giving her family the false hope
that she might still be alive.
- I rang her phone.
- [man 2] Yes.
And it clicked through onto her voicemail,
so I heard her voice.
- [man 2] Yes.
- And I was… It was just like… I jumped.
"She's picked up her voicemails, Bob!
She's alive."
[Kara] They made the parents
think the girl was alive.
It just was… who… who would do that?
That's when I started
calling him Uncle Satan.
[chanting] Boycott Murdoch!
Boycott Murdoch!
[Sarah] There had been stories
about celebrities getting hacked.
But there's not as much sympathy
for the victims of those stories
because these are wealthy people.
[David] But when it was a schoolgirl,
people realized this stuff could happen
to anybody.
This was fiendishly vile.
[chanting] Money, power, lies by the hour
Rupert Murdoch…
[Paul McMullan] We were reviled by
everybody. My wife
fucking hated me for my job.
"You're a fucking lowlife!"
This is my wife, you know.
[chanting] Boycott Murdoch!
Boycott Murdoch!
[Graham] A cover-up started to take place.
Deletions of emails
and destruction of evidence.
The private eye I used to use,
he burned all his records quickly.
[David] This developed
into a raging, roiling scandal.
It affected
the law enforcement establishment,
top officials at Scotland Yard,
who had essentially
looked the other way for years,
and politicians, who appeared compromised
by their ties to the Murdochs.
What I've read in the papers
is quite, quite shocking.
[reporter 14] Britain's prime minister
vowing no stone will be left unturned.
[reporter 15] James Murdoch
and other News Limited executives
could face charges
over a suspected cover-up
with reports millions of emails
were deleted from an internal archive.
[McKay] According to James,
he immediately ordered the lawyers
to turn over everything they had
to the police,
to start cooperating
with an investigation,
over Rupert's objections.
[reporter 16] Detectives made
their first arrest and seized evidence.
[reporter 17] Thousands of pages
of notes were seized.
[reporter 18] More alleged crimes.
Rampant computer hacking,
stolen bank data, even break-ins.
[McKay] This was not a one-off thing.
Journalists at News of the World had been
working with private investigators
to hack voicemails for years.
They'd hacked the voicemails
of parents of a child
who was murdered by a pedophile,
and troops who were killed in combat
in Afghanistan and Iraq.
[chanting] Rupert Murdoch's got to go to,
say hey!
[protestors chanting]
[Matthew Belloni]
This was emotional stuff,
and Rupert was very much painted
as the villain here.
[people chanting] Boycott Murdoch!
Boycott Murdoch!
[Jim] One thing we understand about Rupert
with his executives is,
if you win, you can do whatever you want.
Just keep winning.
But hacking showed just how far
his executives were willing to take that.
This was a crossed line.
[Matthew] Here was pretty good evidence
that they were leveraging these papers
to push agendas
and to blackmail people
and to invade people's privacy.
All the stuff that you kind of suspected
but didn't know,
it was all out there and laid bare.
I'm not making any comments.
[reporter 19] Stock in parent company
News Corp has dropped nearly 15%.
[reporter 20]
Advertisers leaving in droves.
[reporter 21] The prime minister,
David Cameron,
joined opposition politicians
in parliament to call on Rupert Murdoch…
[reporter 22] The prime minister
has promised a public inquiry.
The people involved,
however high or low they go,
they must not only be brought to justice,
they must also have no future role
in running a media company in our country.
[reporter 23] Three principal executives
are called to testify before parliament.
[man 3] I think they are
in a lot of trouble.
[reporter 24] This could be the moment
his newspaper power crumbles.
The question was,
how high up was this scandal gonna go?
Would there be a Murdoch scalp?
[indistinct chattering]
[James] Mr. Chairman,
thank you very much.
First of all, I would like to say as well
just how sorry I am
and how sorry we are, uh,
to particularly the victims
of illegal voicemail interceptions
and to their families.
Before you get to that,
I would just like to say one sentence.
- This is the most humble day of my life.
- [man 4] Thank you.
So, in order to claw out
from under this Milly Dowler scandal,
he gives an apology.
Rupert clearly knows that
that's the posture that he has to strike.
At what point did you find out criminality
was endemic at News of the World?
"Endemic" is a very hard…
a very wide-ranging word.
I was absolutely shocked,
appalled, and ashamed
when I heard about
the Milly Dowler case only
two weeks ago.
- [Sarah] He mumbled.
- I don't know anything about that.
He seemed like a confused, older man.
I forget the date.
[Sarah] This was not
the fearsome media mogul
that people expected
that they were going to see.
And it was a very effective performance,
whether it was real or not.
I don't remember meeting him.
I might have shaken hands,
but I don't have any memory.
I just don't remember.
I literally turned to someone, I was like,
"He's pretending he's addled?
Are you kidding me? This guy is a viper."
[Sarah] Rupert said he had no idea.
James said he had no idea.
[James hesitates]
There is… I have… I have no knowledge
and there is no, uh, evidence, uh, that…
uh, that I'm… that I'm aware of that…
[Paul McMullan] They all stood back.
Him, James, Rebekah.
All said, "We knew nothing about that.
It's just the journalists did it."
They let me down,
and I think
they behaved, uh, disgracefully
and betrayed the company and me.
Okay. Whilst it has been obvious
to most of us…
You know, Rebekah Brooks, by all accounts,
would have been the natural scapegoat
for all of this, right?
She was running News of the World,
and then the newspaper division.
But Rupert loved Rebekah Brooks
and was more loyal to Rebekah Brooks
than he was to James.
[man 5] Can I ask, in 2008…
In fact, there's this moment
where one of the members of parliament
asks Rupert about a specific incidence
of phone hacking,
and Rupert, rather than answer, says…
I think my son can perhaps answer that
in more detail. He was a lot closer.
Rupert really threw James to the wolves
on that one.
[woman 2] Had you been made aware prior
to the Milly Dowler story breaking
that your reporters hacked into the phones
of any other crime victims?
No, I had not. I had not been…
I had not been made aware of that.
Most of this hacking took place
before James came into the job.
[Sarah] But then it comes out
that James has in fact
been on an email chain
approving a settlement
in order to keep
the phone hacking situation quiet.
[man 5] When you signed off
the Taylor payment,
did you see or were you made aware
of the "For Neville" email?
[hesitates] No. I…
I was not aware of that at the time.
James approved a million-pound settlement
to an official with a football association
that they had hacked into.
James said the fact of the payment
was on an email chain
that he read over the weekend.
He hadn't really realized
what he was signing off on.
Mr. Murdoch, you must be
the first mafia boss in history
who didn't know
he was running a criminal enterprise.
Mr. Watson, please.
I think that's inappropriate.
[Sarah] So at the hearing
with James and Rupert
is Wendi Deng Murdoch,
who is there by his side.
So then there's this crazy moment
where this guy rises to smash a cream pie
into Murdoch's face,
like he's on some sort
of Benny Hill slapstick episode.
[clamoring]
[David] And Wendi
knocks it out of his hand,
which is incredible television.
It's an absurd moment,
but it's also really destabilizing.
[man 6] The sitting suspended
for ten minutes.
[David] It creates sympathy for Murdoch.
The instant Murdoch was hit
with that pie, News Corp's stock spiked.
This is brilliant!
He needs to be hit with more pies.
[Matthew] I think that
the spectacle of the pie
did distract a bit
from the substance of the allegations.
And it turned the whole thing into a farce
when the issues that were being litigated
were very serious.
- Thank you, Mr. Chairman.
- Thank you. Thank you, Mr. Chairman.
[Rupert] Thank you, all members.
[Graham] It didn't bring justice,
and it didn't get to the truth
of this organized crime group.
[Matthew] I must have watched that video
a hundred times.
It's striking because Wendi has
such protectionism instincts for him.
And James does not,
which is the interesting thing.
Your wife has a very good left hook.
I have to say, she was fast.
I wrote her, "Wow, you're fast.
I'm not getting in your way, friend."
I am not a big proponent
of the four-decade marriage age gap.
- But…
- [laughter]
…if ever there was a situation
where it would pay dividends…
[laughter]
- …it would be an ambush like that.
- [applause]
[Sarah] It's very good for Wendi's brand
because she's seen as Rupert's protector.
And a badass.
[interviewer] And who's the jury…
[Jim] Wendi is just a much hipper person
than Murdoch is.
She's young. She's with it.
She would call Rupert an old man.
She would say that he was stupid.
She belittles him in private,
and then, over time,
socially in public as well.
[in Mandarin] Do you understand, "beating
and scolding means you are in love"?
- [in English] Yeah, she's very tough.
- Really?
[laughter]
And she is linked to a number
of other prominent figures,
uh, romantically.
[intriguing music playing]
[Matthew] There were rumors
about a relationship with Tony Blair.
[Sarah] Rupert grilled his staff
to figure out if that was true or not.
The family went crazy. They were like,
"All hands on deck. Get rid of her."
[Sarah] James and Lachlan got together
and created a dossier on Wendi
to present to their father.
And this included a note
that Wendi had written to herself
in her diary and then thrown away.
A housekeeper who was cleaning up
in Rupert and Wendi's triplex
found that piece of paper.
And in that note, she was describing
her feelings for Tony Blair.
There were exchanges
about the curve of his bottom.
[Richard] How hot he looked
when he was on stage.
[David] His piercing blue eyes.
[Sarah] And how attracted to him she was.
And when James and Lachlan presented that
to their father, that was the last straw.
He was convinced to divorce Wendi.
[reporter 25] Media mogul Rupert Murdoch
is heading for divorce court again,
ending a 14-year marriage
to his third wife.
[Richard] A Vanity Fair story
about the alleged relationship
between Wendi Deng and Tony Blair
is published,
and it had access
to the private note written by Wendi Deng.
[David] This was deeply humiliating
for Rupert.
But it was perfect tabloid fodder.
And because Rupert has always
made his money on sex and scandal,
a lot of people felt that he had finally
gotten his just desserts.
[man 7] A complete bombshell.
After 168 years in print,
this Sunday's edition
of the News of the World will be the last.
[reporter 26] Britain's biggest newspaper
was dramatically killed off.
[man 7] Staff gasped in shock.
Others reduced to tears.
[Graham] Closing the News of the World,
to Rupert Murdoch,
is like Paul McCartney
deleting The White Album.
It would have been heartbreaking for him.
It not only made his fortune,
it was also a massive part
of British popular culture.
They were trying to protect their empire,
and then they did what it took to fix it.
They're good at sacrificing things
they need to, to survive.
[man 7] News International chairman
James Murdoch
said the paper's proud history
had been tarnished
by the behavior he called inhuman.
[Paul McMullan] We all got sacked.
200 journalists got laid off.
Then he decided
to turn us over to the cops.
And I just thought, "You fucker."
[James] Actions taken
by certain individuals
in what had been a good newsroom
have breached the trust
that the News of the World
has with its readers.
[Paul] The main private eye,
Glenn Mulcaire, got arrested,
got sent to jail,
as well as a bunch of reporters.
I am baffled by the decision
to charge me today.
[Paul] Rebekah Brooks was arrested.
Rebekah played a blinder.
"I had no idea. I was so far above.
I didn't know what they were doing."
I really, really do want
to understand what happened.
I think all of us do because that's…
[Paul] But she was smart.
Really manipulative.
Thank you, Chairman.
[Paul] She walked free.
We've finished our meal,
and we're going home.
[Matthew] James really took a hit
from the hacking scandal.
That UK parliamentary committee
did issue a very searing opinion.
The younger Murdoch deemed, quote,
"Not fit to run a major company."
[Sarah] This is a moment when,
if he was able to finally purchase
the entirety of BSkyB,
the company as a whole
was there for James's taking.
And the phone-hacking crisis
just puts an absolute end to all of that.
[man 8] Shame on you!
[reporter 27]
Rupert Murdoch is backing down.
[reporter 28] Murdoch to withdraw
News Corporation's takeover bid
for broadcaster BSkyB.
[reporter 29] The hacking scandal
forced him to pull the plug on that deal.
[reporter 30]
Media tycoon Rupert Murdoch in retreat.
[David] The Murdochs have had to pay
vast sums of money
as a result of this hacking scandal.
It's well over £1.5 billion.
[Jonathan] That scandal did so much damage
to the Murdoch name.
Rupert is chased out of London
and shouted down anywhere he goes.
He's public enemy number one.
I was appalled
to find out what had happened.
And I apologized.
And I have nothing further to say.
[man 9] Elisabeth!
[man 10] Good morning, Elisabeth.
This way, please.
Every time Liz left her house,
she'd be swarmed.
People would be yelling things at her.
So Elisabeth urges her father
to fire James.
[tense string music playing]
[McKay] I talked to James
and Liz about this.
James is hunkered down in his office,
working on a response,
and Liz comes into his office
and tells James,
"Dad and I were talking,
and we really think
that you need to resign
and take the fall for this."
"Because people are so upset,
and it's not going to do
to simply fire lower-level executives."
"It has to be a Murdoch,
and we think you should be it."
As you can imagine, James was furious.
Not just with the idea
that he would be the one to take the fall
but with the idea that his father
wasn't willing to come and tell him.
And what James said in that moment was,
"If Dad wants to fire me,
he can do it himself."
And then he threw Liz out of his office.
[music ends]
That ended up being a defining moment
in his relationship with Liz.
And he and Liz barely spoke to each other
for years afterward.
[Jonathan] One thing that's fascinating
about this family
is that there's so much maneuvering
and there are
billions of dollars at stake,
but at the end of the day,
they are family.
They do love each other on some level.
[McKay] When James was
at his breaking point,
Lachlan ended up flying to London
in the midst of this whole scandal
to calm his dad down
and convince him not to fire James.
So, instead, James was given an exit ramp.
He had a job set up in New York
that was presented as a promotion,
but everybody knew it wasn't.
But it was one of the last moments
of brotherly solidarity
where Lachlan really ended up
supporting James.
[man 11] You are a Murdoch.
It's a blessing or a curse,
but it's there, like it or not.
It's obviously been a very big year.
It's obviously been a very nightmare year
for the family.
[Paul Barry] Elisabeth thinks
the hacking scandal's a disaster
and it would never have happened
if the company had been run properly.
[Jim] Liz is outside of News Corp,
building her own company, Shine.
[woman 3] You are the biggest loser!
[Sarah] She helps make a huge success
of The Biggest Loser,
a perfect Murdochian type of show.
Shut up and focus.
[Paul] She has shown that she's got talent
for the sorts of things that you need
in running a media company.
[man 12] Elisabeth, do you mind, please?
[reporter 31] Elisabeth has
her own production company
that was recently bought by News Corp.
An indication, some say,
that she may be directly next in line.
[Sarah] Rupert buys Shine,
and she makes a lot of money.
And so she was brought
back inside his orbit.
[McKay] Whenever he wanted one of his kids
to work for him and they were resisting,
Rupert would just throw enough money
at the problem
that he could buy them off
and force them back into his employ.
Do you feel that in succession terms,
or in sort of family terms,
that you've been overlooked
for the top job?
[Elisabeth] No,
but I don't think that way.
I always think about what can be done,
so I never feel completely satisfied.
You always think of what more you can do.
[Sarah] Elisabeth is probably
the media executive
who has had the greatest success outside
the Murdoch company of any of the kids.
But Rupert is of a certain generation,
and so he always saw either James
or Lachlan as the most likely successor.
[McKay] James, for what it's worth,
told me that Rupert is a misogynist
and never considered Liz
a viable successor.
[David] So she is dispirited.
She clearly does
really admire and respect him,
but she cannot deny
the damage done by the family empire.
Please welcome
the one and only Elisabeth Murdoch.
[cheering and applause]
[Paul] Elisabeth goes
to Edinburgh Television Festival
to give a very prestigious lecture.
Being asked to give
the James MacTaggart Memorial Lecture
has been quite a welcome distraction
from some of the other nightmares
much closer to home.
Yes, you have met
some of my family before.
[Paul] Elisabeth makes
this absolutely scorching speech.
She says all the sort of stuff
that you don't want to see in public.
Speaking of independence,
my brother James spoke about it
in his MacTaggart three years ago.
James ended his lecture
with a line in which he claimed…
[both] The only reliable
and perpetual guarantor of independence
is profit.
The reason his statement
sat so uncomfortably
is that profit without purpose
is a recipe for disaster.
[tense music playing]
[Paddy] News Corp has been accused
of putting profits first and nothing else.
[Paul] Elisabeth's saying the same thing
everyone's said about Murdoch
to this point.
Profit must be our servant,
not our master.
And so she's aligning herself
with the enemies of James
and the enemies of her father.
[Sarah] We see all of this
play out in public.
The deep, deep fissures
in the Murdoch family.
Not surprisingly, her father
doesn't speak to her for nine weeks.
[McKay] Liz ended up
leaving the company altogether,
setting out on her own.
She wants to get away from
all of the toxicity of the family empire.
And the phone-hacking scandal
was her opportunity to do that.
[man 13] Yup, thanks. Bye.
[music ends]
[man 14] Good morning, Mr. Murdoch.
You're gonna retire soon, finally, huh,
and have a good life?
- [Rupert] No way.
- [man 14] Oh!
[Sarah] The time
after the phone-hacking scandal
was a real ebb in Murdoch's
professional and personal life.
BSkyB has been denied to him.
[reporter 32] The stalled deal
and the scandal that caused it
has thrown open the question of succession
in the Murdoch empire.
He thought he was rolling
to world domination,
and now things are starting to fall apart.
[tense string music playing]
[music ends abruptly]
[Jim] Earlier in his life,
Rupert reveled in the idea
of a battle royal between his children
to succeed him.
[enigmatic music playing]
[McKay]
Rupert pitted them against each other,
played them off each other,
like they were cogs
in this dynastic power game
he was playing.
But he allowed his quest
for some kind of immortality
to destroy his actual relationship
with his actual kids.
[David] This is about control
and about the lack of respect
that Rupert Murdoch is showing
in his very last chapter in life.
Basically saying to three of his children,
"I don't think you have it."
And this litigation
brought all of it to the surface.
[tense music playing]
[reporter 33] This morning, the family
believed to be the inspiration
behind the HBO hit show Succession
is locked in a similar battle
playing out in real life.
[reporter 34] This is a dispute
about the Murdoch Family Trust,
and this is very much shrouded in mystery,
and we aren't sure
exactly what's going on inside.
[Jim] In September, we found out
that the trial is about to start.
The setting is Reno, Nevada,
the birthplace of divorce in this country.
Of all places for the Murdoch family
to end up in court, in Reno, Nevada.
No offense to Reno.
[Jim] I personally went
to that courthouse every day.
The first day was just a bizarre scene.
SUV, SUV, SUV.
Press everywhere.
Lawyers are swooping
up the courthouse steps,
and then the children come.
[McKay] You know,
so much of the Murdoch story
has been narrated by anonymous sources
and self-interested parties
speculating about what was going on
behind the scenes.
But for the first time with this trial,
we were getting the actual story.
The real human drama of this family
was being laid bare.
- [photographers 1, 2] Rupert!
- [photographer 1] Big smile!
[reporter 35]
Are you confident of victory?
[Jim] Every major member of the family
is testifying
and in front of each other in court.
Rupert went first.
[Jonathan] And here is Rupert Murdoch
taking the witness stand
in defense of his effort
to unilaterally change
this inviolable family trust,
even though, by definition,
an inviolable trust cannot be changed.
But on some level, you can understand
why he would feel entitled to do it.
He built this empire.
He made everyone in this room
a multibillionaire.
And it's his money.
The judge said
that he was open to their argument
if he can prove
that he's doing it in good faith
and for the sole benefit
of his beneficiaries.
But Rupert is a man who speaks his mind.
He's a master of the universe.
And so how disciplined
is he gonna be on the witness stand,
I think, is a question
from the very beginning.
What will become a problem is that
when Rupert's cross-examined about this,
he's incredibly honest.
[McKay] He was very upfront about the fact
that this was about his legacy
and he didn't trust James
or Liz or Prudence
to retain the conservative political slant
of his media outlets.
That's why he wanted
Lachlan to take control.
I'm not a legal expert,
but a legal expert would say
that was not in his best interest
to make that argument.
[Jim] But Rupert's legal team
appeared to think
they had an ace in the hole.
And that was an exchange
between Rupert and Anna, his second wife.
[soft, suspenseful music playing]
One day, several months prior,
she had reached out to Rupert,
which was a bit strange.
She doesn't ordinarily just call Rupert.
It rarely happens.
As Rupert says, it's out of the blue.
They're talking, catching up,
and Rupert shares with her
some of his angst
about James doing something
with the sisters to shove Lachlan aside.
And after they get off the phone,
Anna writes Rupert by email.
"I think it's imperative
that you get this sorted out soon."
"Some toes will be trod on and egos hurt,
but it would be worse
to leave things as they are."
Then she tells Rupert,
"You are the kingpin."
"You still hold the power."
And Rupert tells Anna he'd love
nothing more than peace all around,
but it's not looking that way.
And then Anna and Rupert
start talking about the kids.
And intriguingly, Rupert
is sort of complimentary of James.
"He's bright, he's articulate,
but time and time again,
showed bad judgment."
Rupert tells Anna,
this isn't just about the children.
He says, "Fox and our empire
is the only thing
standing in the way of this woke mob,"
that, "We are the true defenders
of the free world."
And James and his wife, Kathryn,
want to change it.
And Anna does something
kind of surprising.
She talks about her resentment
of James and Kathryn as well.
That they
and their like-minded woke friends
are gonna be the ruination of the country.
America will be doomed
if these cultural elites take over.
She's in perfect agreement.
Rupert's lawyers try to use this
to say, "Look,
if all of this mess we're in
is because Rupert was trying
to accommodate Anna in their divorce,
Anna, who set these parameters,
Anna, who never wanted
to see one child succeed above the others,
she is now saying
that doesn't matter to her."
"She is endorsing Lachlan's leadership."
"She's endorsing Rupert
backing up Lachlan's leadership."
"Why are we even here?"
is basically the implicit argument.
[music ends]
This, of course, has no legal weight.
This is just an exchange of emails.
There's binding language around the trust,
and Anna has no control.
And she wasn't telling him
he should change the trust.
She doesn't have the authority
to tell him to change the trust.
Still, as a matter of atmospherics,
it was important.
And it shows what's at stake
in this trial.
[tense music playing]
[McKay] Once the litigation began,
years of internal Murdoch
family communications, texts and e-mails,
started to surface
that were really painful
for, I think, everyone involved,
but especially James.
He started telling friends,
"My advice is to never get involved
in litigation with your family
where there's discovery
and the discovery is all about you."
I mean, just imagine what that's like
if you were suddenly able to read
everything that your family says about you
behind your back for two decades.
It was brutal.
And I think there is a tragedy in that
that transcends whatever you think
about the Murdochs or Fox News.
This is the story of a family unraveling.
And it was just the beginning.
[music ends]
[ominous music playing]