They can now toast Scott Pruitt in coal country, perhaps with plastic flutes of toxic rain. Tuesday brought what New Yorker writer Jane Mayer has called the “triumph of the anti-environmental movement.” It’s a triumph you can watch on Wednesday’s installment of PBS’ Frontline.

Mayer is one of two prominent journalists featured in “War on the EPA,” a depressingly timely investigation that will surely now be edited to insert word of EPA Administrator Scott Pruitt’s Tuesday announcement of his plan to rescind President Barack Obama’s signature move to curb greenhouse emissions from power plants (Obama’s so-called Clean Power Plan).

An early version of the show sent for review purposes was in and of itself convincing about what at least constitutes a giant temporary victory of Donald Trump and all those who see the environmental movement as a contrivance of wealthy and left-wing Americans who actually believe in global warming.

This is essentially a profile of Pruitt, who was elected attorney general of Oklahoma in the 2010 Republican sweep of Congress and made his priority an unceasing battle—coordinated with other Republican attorneys general and the fossil fuels industry—against Obama’s energy agenda.

Its strength is on-the-record interviews with key players on both sides, ranging from bombastic Murray Energy CEO Bob Murray and Southern Company lobbyist Andrew Miller, on one side, to former top Obama aides and officials, as well as reporters Mayer and The New York Times’s Eric Lipton.

Lipton won a Pulitzer Prize for astonishing disclosures about the relationship between attorneys general, led by Pruitt, and the industry that supported them. It’s as vivid a demonstration as one can find about the nexus of money and power. But, lest one get too cheery about the positive impact of great journalism, watch one Republican strategist on Frontline declare that Lipton’s revelations not only didn’t hurt Pruitt in Oklahoma, they may have helped a man whose acts included copying energy company-crafted letters, and putting his letterhead on them, in filing protests with the EPA.

And now, as Lipton says here, Pruitt “is making the regulated the regulator.” Until Tuesday, the most vivid example was a September decision to gut a long-in-the-works regulation to keep toxic coal waste out of the water supply. Pruitt suspended the rule, claiming it threatened harm to the economy. He’s now gone a bridge too far.

Harvey Weinstein

His wife, Georgina Chapman, said she’s leaving him. That now puts her in a select group, certainly along with Huma Abedin, in not standing by her very public man. Op-ed editors, you might crank out some thoughtful speculation as to whether we have a trend.

Meanwhile, both Fox & Friends and CNN’s New Day were on the same page in gabbing about the lengthy initial silence of the Clintons on the Weinstein mess. Yes, he’s been a big supporter of both of them. But this was an easy one and to take five days before Hillary Clinton issued a rebuke (it’s a 6.5 on a 10-point Rebuke Scale) struck CNN co-host Ailsyn Camerota as “puzzling.” No, it wasn’t. It was Clintonian caution and premeditation. She probably focused grouped it on her cell before going public.

Oh, and TMZ, our primary chronicler of Important Cultural Happenings (especially if a source takes a few bucks), claimed that Weinstein was boarding a private plane last night to get to a European clinic that deals with alleged sex addiction. Well, I figured he wasn’t flying United coach to Reykjavik.