logo
CBS Studios' EVP Casting Deborah Aquila Departs Amid Paramount Layoffs; CBS' SVP Late Night Nick Bernstein Exits As ‘After Midnight' Ends

CBS Studios' EVP Casting Deborah Aquila Departs Amid Paramount Layoffs; CBS' SVP Late Night Nick Bernstein Exits As ‘After Midnight' Ends

Yahoo11-06-2025
EXCLUSIVE: Veteran casting director and executive Deborah Aquila, most recently EVP and head of casting for streaming series at CBS Studios, is leaving as part of the companywide layoffs at parent Paramount Global. According to sources, Aquila and four other members of the studio's casting team, ranging from coordinator to VP, were impacted by the Tuesday cuts that are reducing the overall Paramount workforce by 3.5%.
Also leaving this week is Nick Bernstein, CBS' SVP of late night programming, West Coast. His departure is tied to the wrap of the network's After Midnight whose last show is airing on June 12. It is not directly related to the layoffs though any eliminated positions help divisions meet headcount targets.
More from Deadline
'Boston Blue': Gloria Reuben Joins 'Blue Bloods' Offshoot For CBS
Paramount Cutting Another 3.5% Of Its Domestic Workforce, Citing Linear TV Declines And Broader Economy
2025 Premiere Dates For New & Returning Series On Broadcast, Cable & Streaming
Aquila joined Paramount TV Studios as EVP and head of casting in 2020. In early 2023, she took oversight of casting for both CBS Studios and Paramount TV Studios, the latter of which shut down last August.
In a restructuring well over a year ago, Aquila focused on casting for streaming series, including the Star Trek franchise, Happy Face and most recently, the Little House On the Prairie reboot for Netflix, while CBS head of Casting, EVP Claudia Lyon, took over casting for broadcast. That is a setup that mirrors CBS and CBS Studios' integration of current programming under Eric Kim, while CBS Studios' Stephanie Groves oversees current for streaming.
In another move toward streamlining and centralizing shared functions, Lyon will add casting for streaming series to her purview to oversee all casting for CBS Studios and CBS. She will continue to report to CBS Studios President David Stapf and CBS Entertainment President Amy Reisenbach.
CBS Studios casting is among many areas across Paramount impacted by today's layoffs. They are believed to also include Comedy Central, MTV, kids and adult animation, business development operations, franchises and consumer products. Among those exiting is Lauren Ruggiero, SVP Scripted Series at MTV Entertainment Studios.
'As we navigate the continued industry-wide linear declines and dynamic macro-economic environment, while prioritizing investments in our growing streaming business, we are taking the hard, but necessary steps to further streamline our organization starting this week,' Paramount co-CEOs George Cheeks, Chris McCarthy and Brian Robbins wrote in a staff memo this morning about the latest staff cuts.
Aquila's career, which spans more than four decades, includes stints as a casting director, by herself and in partnership with Tricia Wood, as well as a run as SVP Casting for Paramount Pictures. She won Artios awards for her work on CODA and La La Land.Bernstein joined CBS at the end of 2014 as VP Late Night Programming, West Coast, to shepherd the final stages of development and subsequently oversee The Late Late Show with James Corden. Promoted to SVP, Bernstein became a fixture on the show and frequent target of Corden's, appearing in various gags.
After the 2023 end of The Late Late Show, Bernstein took oversight of After Midnight, hosted by Taylor Tomlinson, which, like its predecessor, also is based in Los Angeles. Following that show's end this week, CBS will no longer air originals in the post-Late Show slot, instead running Comics Unleashed with Byron Allen.
During his 11-year tenure at CBS, Bernstein also oversaw the Los Angeles-based daytime talk show The Talk, which ended its run in December.
Prior to joining CBS, Bernstein spent more than a decade as late-night executive at NBC, working with Saturday Night Live and with hosts Conan O'Brien, Jimmy Fallon, Jay Leno and Carson Daly.
Best of Deadline
List Of Hollywood & Media Layoffs From Paramount To Warner Bros Discovery To CNN & More
Sean 'Diddy' Combs Sex-Trafficking Trial Updates: Cassie Ventura's Testimony, $10M Hotel Settlement, Drugs, Violence, & The Feds
A Full Timeline Of Blake Lively & Justin Baldoni's 'It Ends With Us' Feud In Court, Online & In The Media
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Exclusive: Sylvester Stallone Starts a War in the 'Tulsa King' Season 3 Trailer
Exclusive: Sylvester Stallone Starts a War in the 'Tulsa King' Season 3 Trailer

Yahoo

time2 hours ago

  • Yahoo

Exclusive: Sylvester Stallone Starts a War in the 'Tulsa King' Season 3 Trailer

Tulsans, rejoice: Sylvester Stallone is back. It's been a little over half a year since his Tulsa King character, Dwight 'the General' Manfredi, was kidnapped from his bed at the end of the Paramount+ drama's season 2 finale. His mysterious captors told the former Mafia capo that 'you work for us now' before the credits kept audiences guessing. Though the first teaser trailer for season 3 (below), debuting exclusively in Esquire, doesn't reveal their identities just yet—it seems Manfredi safely leaves the situation with a clear goal in mind. This season, he's got his eye on adding the Montague Distillery to his roster of legitimate (and not-so-legitimate) businesses. 'The distillery is an interesting business,' Manfredi says in the trailer, 'and we got to know to the enemy.' According to Paramount, the new villain is Jeremiah Dunmire (Robert Patrick). The former 1923 actor joins the series as the patriarch of a 'powerful old-money family that doesn't play by old-world rules, forcing Dwight to fight for everything he's built.' In the trailer, Manfredi also pulls a pistol on Bill Bevilaqua (Frank Grillo)—the Kansas City mob boss and the main antagonist of season 2. It seems that the General will need to fight off enemies from multiple fronts when Tulsa King returns to Paramount+ on 21 September. 'They're threatening everybody in my life," Manfredi warns. 'If you think you're going to take me out, it's going to be really difficult." Season 3 will also introduce Samuel L. Jackson as Russell Lee Washington Jr., a former inmate who did serious prison time with Manfredi before the series began. Washington Jr. is sent by New York's Renzetti crime family to kill Manfredi, but that's a tall order. Maybe it's just that classic Stallone charm. As previously reported, Jackson will co-star in a couple of episodes of season 3 before his character is inspired to start his own operation back home in New Orleans, Louisiana. His adventures will continue in a future spin-off series titled NOLA King. Until then, it's a busy second half of the year for Taylor Sheridan's Paramount+ empire. The Yellowstone creator will also release Mayor of Kingstown season 4, Landman season 2, and eventually a trio of Yellowstone sequel spin-offs: Dutton Ranch, Y: Marshalls, and The Madison. For now, just enjoy a bit of Dwight Manfredi foreshadowing his next war in season 3. Plus, you can check out an exclusive photo for Tulsa King season 3 below. You Might Also Like The Best Men's Sunglasses For Summer '19 There's A Smartwatch For Every Sort Of Guy What You Should Buy For Your Groomsmen (And What They Really Want)

Watch: Sylvester Stallone fights for home in 'Tulsa King' Season 3
Watch: Sylvester Stallone fights for home in 'Tulsa King' Season 3

Yahoo

time2 hours ago

  • Yahoo

Watch: Sylvester Stallone fights for home in 'Tulsa King' Season 3

Aug. 6 (UPI) -- Paramount+ released a teaser for Tulsa King Season 3 on Wednesday. The show returns Sept. 21. The 30-second spot shows crime boss Dwight Manfredi (Sylvester Stallone) opening a distillery. Old villains Cal Thresher (Neal McDonough) and Bill Bevilaqua (Frank Grillo) return to threaten Dwight. "Tulsa is my home now," Dwight announces. "If you think you're going to take me out, it's going to be really difficult." Tulsa King launched in 2022. It is Stallone's first lead role in a television series. Created by Taylor Sheridan and written by Sheridan and Terrence Winter, Tulsa King chronicles former New York mafioso Dwight setting up his new family in Tulsa, Okla. Dwight's love interest Margaret (Dana Delany) and allies Bodhi (Martin Starr) and Tyson (Jay Will) are also shown. Season 3 will introduce a new character played by Samuel L. Jackson. That character will launch his own series, NOLA King, with Stallone, Jackson and Sheridan among executive producers. Solve the daily Crossword

Casting News: Logan Marshall-Green Joins Yellowstone Spinoff, The Boys Prequel Cast Expands and More
Casting News: Logan Marshall-Green Joins Yellowstone Spinoff, The Boys Prequel Cast Expands and More

Yahoo

time3 hours ago

  • Yahoo

Casting News: Logan Marshall-Green Joins Yellowstone Spinoff, The Boys Prequel Cast Expands and More

And just like that, Logan Marshall-Green has joined the cast of CBS' upcoming Yellowstone spinoff Y: Marshals. The spinoff follows Kayce Dutton (Luke Grimes), who leaves ranching life behind to join an elite unit of U.S. Marshals, 'combining his skills as a cowboy and Navy SEAL to bring range justice to Montana, where he and his teammates must balance family, duty and the high psychological cost that comes with serving as the last line of defense in the region's war on violence,' reads the show's official logline. More from TVLine Casting News: Colbert on Elsbeth, Justina Machado Joins Matlock and More Casting News: 3 Body Problem Adds Game of Thrones Vet, Ariel Winter Joins Thundermans Movie and More The Terminal List: Dark Wolf Trailer: Taylor Kitsch Leads Amazon Prequel Series Marshall-Green, whose previous TV credits include memorable roles on Fox's The O.C., ABC's Big Sky and HBO Max's And Just Like That…, will portray Pete Calvin, one of Kayce's friends from his days in the military, Variety reports. Though an exact date has yet to be announced, the 13-episode first season of Y: Marshals will premiere midseason on CBS. In other casting news… * Prime Video's Vought Rising, a prequel to The Boys, has added four more series regulars to its cast: Jorden Myrie (Bridgerton), Nicolò Pasetti (Industry), Ricky Staffieri (The Bear) and Brian J. Smith (Sense8) will join previously announced cast members Jensen Ackles and Aya Cash, reprising their roles as Soldier Boy and Stormfront. Specific details about the new characters remain under wraps for now. * Tobias Menzies (Outlander, The Crown) has joined the cast of Apple TV+'s upcoming romantic comedy series Prodigies. Other additions include Andrene Ward-Hammond (61st Street), Yumi Asō, Sophia Di Martino (Loki), Reece Shearsmith (Good Omens), Nabhaan Rizwan (Station Eleven), Meera Syal (The Wheel of Time) and Lolly Adefope (The UK's Ghosts). They join previously announced cast members Will Sharpe, Ayo Edebiri and Rina Sawayama. * Starz's Sweetpea has added Tamsin Grieg (The Completely Made-Up Adventures of Dick Turpin) and Rish Shah (Ms. Marvel) to the Season 2 cast. Filming is underway in London. Best of TVLine Stars Who Almost Played Other TV Roles — on Grey's Anatomy, NCIS, Lost, Gilmore Girls, Friends and Other Shows TV Stars Almost Cast in Other Roles Fall TV Preview: Who's In? Who's Out? Your Guide to Every Casting Move!

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store