Bari Weiss’s CBS News Gambit: Ditch TV or Die Trying

CBS News chief Bari Weiss warns staff the network faces oblivion without ditching broadcast TV for digital-first journalism, amid ratings plunges, staff cuts, new hires, and Paramount's Warner Bros. bid.
Bari Weiss’s CBS News Gambit: Ditch TV or Die Trying
Written by Tim Toole

In a stark all-hands meeting on January 27, 2026, CBS News Editor-in-Chief Bari Weiss delivered a blunt diagnosis to her staff: the network’s fixation on broadcast television spells doom. “Our strategy until now has been cling to the audience that remains on broadcast television. I’m here to tell you that if we stick to that strategy, we’re toast,” she declared, according to a recording viewed by The Wall Street Journal.

Weiss, who joined in October 2025 after Paramount acquired her Free Press for $150 million, framed the overhaul as essential for survival amid eroding trust in mainstream media and shifting viewer habits. She vowed to earn staff trust through results, not rhetoric, while announcing 19 new contributors spanning health experts like Andrew Huberman and podcaster Peter Attia, conservative historian Niall Ferguson, and Free Press columnists, as detailed by CBS News itself.

The address came amid plummeting ratings, with CBS Evening News—relaunched under new anchor Tony Dokoupil—losing over a million viewers year-over-year, trailing ABC and NBC badly, per Nielsen data cited in Reuters. Weiss urged a “streaming mentality,” prioritizing digital platforms like YouTube and the CBS website for breaking stories before TV airings.

Weiss’s Fiery Diagnosis

“The honest truth is, right now, we are not producing a product that enough people want,” Weiss stated plainly, echoing leaked audio reported by Business Insider. She blamed neither demographics nor technology but internal failures: insufficient trust-building, lack of exclusives, and platform myopia. Her slide deck highlighted Gallup polls showing media trust at historic lows and rising independent voters, per The Hollywood Reporter.

To counter fragmentation, Weiss pushed for a “singular editorial vision” appealing to center, center-right, and center-left audiences. She envisioned stories launching digitally—say, on Thursday via website and YouTube—then flowing to Evening News and 60 Minutes, fostering nimble, multi-format delivery as described in The New York Times.

This startup-like pivot demands workforce transformation: hires for digital savvy alongside potential cuts for non-alignment, sources told NPR. Weiss dared dissenters to depart, saying it’s a “free country,” while reassuring on beloved figures like Gayle King, whose contract nears renewal.

Internal Firestorms and Leaks

Gayle King vented frustration over gossip and leaks during the Q&A, lamenting staff walking “with gasoline on our pants” and pleading for candid internal talks, as recounted in The Guardian. She praised Weiss’s vision despite external backlash, calling leakers a scourge. Media reporters live-tweeted remarks anyway, via Mediaite.

Weiss addressed her rocky start, including the December 2025 delay of a 60 Minutes segment on El Salvador’s CECOT prison housing Trump-deported Venezuelan migrants. Correspondent Sharyn Alfonsi decried it as political, not editorial, in an email reviewed by Fox News. The piece aired in January with added Trump admin context attempts, which declined on-camera.

“I was not pressured by David Ellison or anyone else,” Weiss insisted Tuesday, admitting mishandling timing but defending rigor, per attendees cited in TheWrap. Critics like Scott Pelley urged her to treat the role full-time, fueling exit rumors and buyout offers.

Paramount’s High-Stakes Backdrop

Weiss reports to Paramount CEO David Ellison, whose Skydance merger reshaped the company amid Trump administration scrutiny, including a $16 million CBS settlement over a Kamala Harris 60 Minutes edit. Now, Paramount pursues a hostile $108 billion bid for Warner Bros. Discovery, backed by Larry Ellison’s $40.4 billion guarantee, as reported by The New York Times.

The WBD push—rivaling Netflix’s studio/streamer deal—hinges on regulatory nods, where Trump ties loom large. Ellison’s CBS moves, like Weiss’s hire, drew Trump praise, but recent 60 Minutes treatment irked him, per Truth Social posts noted in NBC News. A successful merger could fuse CBS News with CNN, amplifying stakes.

Ratings woes persist: Dokoupil’s Evening News debut drew 23% fewer viewers than prior year, per Al Jazeera, with a Kirk widow town hall down 11%. Weiss’s “MAGA-curious” shifts alienate liberals while failing to lure conservatives from Fox, per The Daily Beast.

Revamp’s Real Test

New contributors like tech commentator Patrick McGee and chef Clare de Boer aim to “widen the aperture” on stories and voices, blending exclusives with conversation, as Weiss outlined to The Hollywood Reporter. Digital-first pushes counter linear TV’s bleed, but skeptics question if veterans will adapt or if cuts spark exodus.

External reactions split: WSJ commenters derided CBS’s legacy bias, wishing Weiss luck amid “slow death,” while others saw her as perfect to torch it. Supporters like Daniel Manske urged patience, per WSJ thread. On X, chatter amplified divides, with semantic searches yielding staff-side frustrations and defender posts.

Weiss’s bet: trust via transparency, speed, and breadth will reverse declines. As Paramount eyes empires, her success—or failure—could redefine broadcast news in a digital era, with Ellison’s backing and Trump’s shadow ever-present.

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