Bari Weiss to CBS News staff: Without a shift in strategy, ‘we are toast’
The editor in chief said the network needs to produce journalism people want as she named a raft of new contributors from her website, the Free Press.
January 27, 2026
CBS News editor in chief Bari Weiss, left, interviews Erika Kirk, widow of slain conservative influencer Charlie Kirk, during a town hall broadcast in New York last month. (Michele Crowe/CBS News/Getty Images)
By Scott Nover and Laura Wagner
Bari Weiss has two jobs. Since October, she has been the editor in chief of CBS News, a high-profile position that has put her under intense scrutiny from network staffers and outside critics.
But she never gave up her old gig running the Free Press, a conservative opinion website that CBS’s parent company bought for $150 million. After a few months of modest overlap, including some Free Press staffers appearing on network streaming shows, Weiss has moved to accelerate the convergence of the two starkly different media brands.
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In a CBS News all-staff meeting Tuesday, Weiss announced a new slate of network contributors, many of whom are on the Free Press’s roster of writers, according to audio of the meeting reviewed by The Washington Post.
Weiss told the CBS News staff that she wanted the network to appeal to political moderates. “We’re for the center. We’re for the center-right, and we’re for the center-left,” she said.
She also outlined a critique of the network’s current standing. “The honest truth is right now we are not producing a product that enough people want,” she said. “I am here to make CBS News fit for purpose in the 21st century.”
Weiss argued that CBS is too focused on maintaining its broadcast audience rather than building for the future. “Our strategy until now has been clinging to the audience that remains on broadcast television, and I’m here to tell you that if we stick to that strategy, we are toast,” she said.
Weiss also took pains to explain her rationale for postponing a “60 Minutes” segment on the treatment of deportees from the United States sent to El Salvador’s CECOT prison, which led to internal criticism over the last-minute change.Ask The Post AIDive deeper
“Am I ever going to hold something again after it has been put out there with promos? I don’t want to make that exact same decision again. No, I do not,” Weiss told staffers. “But asking for more information, trying to go back to a source, making sure that we have as much information in that particular case on the kinds of people that were being sent to that faraway, horrible prison, yeah, I felt that was important and I felt it was important to do our best to try and get a voice from the administration, and I’m always gonna be pushing for that.”
Weiss said she was not pressured to hold the segment or make any editorial decisions by David Ellison, who hired her and runs Paramount Skydance, CBS’s parent company.
The segment wasabruptly shelved when Weiss asked for an on-camera interview with an official from President Donald Trump’s administration, but it eventually aired four weeks later in January without the interview she sought. Instead, the producers added a long coda with extra notes and written comments from government officials.Ask The Post AIDive deeper
Staffers were notified of the all-hands meeting on Monday when Weiss emailed out an infographic that simply read: “Please join Bari Weiss to talk about the future of CBS News.” Staffers were asked to submit questions for Weiss in advance via email, though she took a few questions that were not preapproved.
Since she has taken over CBS News, Weiss has overseen layoffs, introduced Tony Dokoupil as the new host of “CBS Evening News” and intervened to hold the “60 Minutes” segment. Those actions have prompted heated debate from critical onlookers and network insiders trying to understand Weiss’s plans for CBS News.
“It’s her right as EIC to seek changes,” said one CBS News staffer, adding that the last-minute shelving of the “60 Minutes” segment “could have been handled better.” The staffer, who like others interviewed for this report spoke on the condition of anonymity to avoid possible repercussions for discussing internal matters, didn’t think Weiss’s latest personnel moves would have much impact.
“She’ll bring on a few new contributors with perspectives we haven’t had before? Okay,” the staffer said. “Will that move the needle? Probably not.”
“It’s a lot of big talk, and some of the ideas aren’t bad ones,” another staffer said. “We all know ratings are outdated metrics and that information should be more agile across new platforms. What we all diverge from Bari on is how she’s going about it.”
Some were more supportive of Weiss’s presentation. “Her macro diagnosis of changes in industry is absolutely spot-on,” a CBS staffer said. While Weiss offered some platitudes, the staffer said, she was right in underscoring that information is a commodity while contextual enterprise reporting is the future. “Spot on,” the staffer said.
The new contributor list included some Free Press columnists and contributing writers, including Harvard professor and happiness scholar Arthur Brooks, British historian Niall Ferguson, writer and podcast host Coleman Hughes, and technology journalist Patrick McGee. Other newCBS News contributors include the writer and former military and intelligence officer Elliot Ackerman, Iran-focused journalist Masih Alinejad, former Trump national security adviser H.R. McMaster, and Manhattan Institute President Reihan Salam — all of whom have had bylines on the website.
Roger Carstens, a diplomat and former Trump administration hostage envoy, and longevity influencer Peter Attia were also among the new contributors announced.
Also new to CBS News is Andrew Huberman, a neuroscientist turned podcaster who has been criticized for platforming health claims without evidence and leveraging his credentials to give questionable health advice. In September, he posted on X that “I now do pay some attention to how the shapes of peoples heads relates to their intellect and steadiness, or lack thereof.” His “Huberman Lab” podcast has become one of the most-listened-to health podcasts. Suzy Weiss, a Free Press co-founder and reporter who is Bari Weiss’s sister, wrote a defense of Huberman in 2024 after a New York magazine investigation into his professional claims and allegedly adulterous relationships with women.
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