How Bari Weiss could change CBS News

Is the network trying to ‘appease’ the president?

Photo composite illustration of Bari Weiss, television cameras and the CBS News logo
‘You don’t put Weiss in charge of your mainstream media organization if you are seeking only minor changes’
(Image credit: Illustration by Stephen Kelly / Getty Images)

The network of Edward R. Murrow and Walter Cronkite is getting a new look. Paramount announced on Monday that Bari Weiss — founder of The Free Press, an online publication known mostly for anti-woke, pro-Israel opinionating — will be the new editor in chief of CBS News.

The Free Press brand emphasizes a sharply “contrarian point of view on politics and culture,” said The Wall Street Journal. Weiss, who started the publication after leaving The New York Times, saying that progressive staffers had bullied her for her views, will likely bring that same sensibility to CBS. The network is aiming at “that 70% of the audience that would really define themselves at center-left to center-right,” said Paramount CEO David Ellison. For her part, Weiss said she wants to create news that “doesn’t seek to demonize, but seeks to understand.” Network TV is in trouble, with broadcasts attracting “half the audience they commanded a quarter of a century ago,” said the Journal. Which raises the question: “Can Bari Weiss reinvent CBS News?”

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Joel Mathis, The Week US

Joel Mathis is a writer with 30 years of newspaper and online journalism experience. His work also regularly appears in National Geographic and The Kansas City Star. His awards include best online commentary at the Online News Association and (twice) at the City and Regional Magazine Association.