CBS News
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CBS News is the news part of the American television and radio company CBS, based in New York City. It is one of the three big news networks in the United States, along with ABC News and NBC News.
It started in 1929 as a radio news service. In 1933, Paul W. White became its leader and helped it grow, especially during World War II. The first TV broadcasts began in 1941 from WCBW in New York City. In 1962, Walter Cronkite became the main host of its main TV news show, called the CBS Evening News.
Today, CBS News makes many popular TV shows like CBS Evening News, CBS Mornings, CBS News Sunday Morning, 60 Minutes, and 48 Hours. It also has radio news, podcasts like The Takeout Podcast, and a 24-hour digital news channel called CBS News 24/7.
History
In 1929, the Columbia Broadcasting System started making regular radio news broadcasts. These were short summaries from reports by United Press.
In 1930, CBS hired journalist Paul W. White as its news editor. He helped make CBS News well-known. In 1937, CBS sent Edward R. Murrow to London to run its European radio operation.
During World War II, CBS provided important news to South and Central America through its radio network. After the war, CBS began regular television news broadcasts. In 1948, Douglas Edwards started anchoring the first regularly scheduled network television news program.
In the years that followed, CBS News grew. It created new programs and expanded its news coverage. In 2021, CBS News and its television stations merged into one division. The network has faced many changes in recent years.
Broadcast history
CBS News has many different programs. One of these is called the "CBS Evening News." It was shown on Saturday and Sunday evenings. Another program is the "CBS Sunday Night News." It started in 1963 and aired late at night on Sundays. These shows are on CBS at certain times, usually in the evening.
CBS News television programs
News programs
CBS News has many popular TV shows. Some of these are CBS News Mornings, which started in 1982, and CBS Evening News, which began in 1941 and is still on. Other well-known shows are 48 Hours, which began in 1988, and CBS News Sunday Morning, starting in 1979. There is also Face the Nation, which has been on since 1954, and 60 Minutes, a show that began in 1968 and is still airing.
Early morning news program history
Over the years, CBS News has tried different early morning news shows. Some of these include CBS News Nightwatch, which ran from 1982 to 1992, and CBS Up to the Minute, which was on from 1992 to 2015. More recently, CBS News Roundup started in 2024.
Morning news program history
CBS has had many morning news shows over the years. Some early ones were The Morning Show, which aired from 1954 to 1956, and Good Morning! with Will Rogers, Jr., in 1956. Later, CBS This Morning ran from 1987 to 1999 and then again from 2012 to 2021. Today, CBS Mornings and CBS Saturday Morning are still on the air.
Evening/prime time news program history
In the evening, CBS News has offered several shows. CBS Evening News has been a favorite since 1941. Other shows include West 57th, which was on from 1985 to 1989, and 48 Hours, starting in 1988. Eye to Eye with Connie Chung aired from 1993 to 1995, and Public Eye with Bryant Gumbel was on from 1997 to 1998.
Other programs
Besides news, CBS News has made many other types of shows. Some of these include United Nations in Action from 1949, You Are There from 1953 to 1973, and Adventure from 1953 to 1955. More recent shows include The FBI Declassified, which started in 2020, and Boiling Point, beginning in 2021.
CBS News Radio
CBS News Radio is the oldest part of CBS, starting in 1927. It makes news for radio stations. It created the first daily news show on radio or TV, the CBS World News Roundup. This show began in 1938 and still airs twice every weekday.
In 2026, CBS announced that its radio news service would stop on May 22, 2026, because of changes in how people get their news.
CBS Newspath
CBS Newspath is a service from CBS News that sends news to TV stations across the country. It works like another service called CNN Newsource. Newspath shares important stories, sports news, and special reports for local news stations to use in their broadcasts. It has reporters all over the United States and the world who help create these stories. Local stations can also send in their own videos if they think they are important for everyone to see.
In 1999, CBS Newspath joined with two other news services, ABC NewsOne and Fox NewsEdge, to share videos and news with each other. This group was called the Network News Service.
CBS News 24/7
CBS News 24/7 is a news channel that is on all day. You can watch it on the internet or on smart devices like Apple TV, Roku, and Amazon Fire. It began on November 4, 2014. It shows live news from 9 a.m. to midnight on weekdays. It was the first U.S. news channel that you could only watch online or on smart devices, not on regular cable TV.
The channel is based in New York City. It has different anchors for morning and afternoon shows. Some of the anchors are Errol Barnett and Vladimir Duthiers in the mornings, and John Dickerson for "The Daily Report" on Mondays through Thursdays.
In March 2026, some writers for the channel stopped working for one day. This happened because their contract had ended and they could not agree on a new one. Later, CBS and Paramount made a new agreement with the writers’ union on April 2. The writers still had to approve this agreement.
News bureaus
CBS News has offices in the United States and around the world. Its main office is in New York City. Other important offices in the U.S. are in Washington, D.C., Los Angeles, and Kennedy Space Center.
The network has offices in many other countries. In Africa, there is an office in Johannesburg. In Asia, offices are in Bangkok, Beijing, and Kabul. In Europe, CBS News has offices in London, Paris, and Rome. The Middle East office is in Tel Aviv.
Personnel
Current television hosts, anchors, correspondents, and reporters
New York (Main Headquarters)
- Sharyn Alfonsi – Correspondent, 60 Minutes (2002–2008, 2011–present)
- Jim Axelrod – National Correspondent (1996–present)
- Errol Barnett – National Correspondent, Anchor, CBS News 24/7 (2016–present)
- James Brown – Special Correspondent (1984–1993, 2006–present)
- Nate Burleson – Co-Anchor, CBS Mornings (2021–present)
- Adriana Diaz – Correspondent (2012–present); Co-Anchor, CBS Saturday Morning (2026–present)
- Tony Dokoupil – Co-Anchor, CBS Evening News (2026–present); Correspondent (2016–present)
- Jericka Duncan – Correspondent, CBS Mornings (2013–present); Anchor, CBS Weekend News (2020–present)
- Vladimir Duthiers – Co-Anchor, CBS Mornings (2022–present); Anchor, CBS News 24/7 (2016–present); Correspondent (2014–present)
- Michael George – Anchor, CBS News Mornings and CBS News 24/7
- Anne-Marie Green – 48 Hours Correspondent (2024–present), Anchor/Correspondent (2004–present)
- Peter Greenberg – Travel Editor
- Shanelle Kaul – Correspondent
- Gayle King – Co-Anchor, CBS Mornings (2012–present)
- Dr. Jonathan LaPook – Chief Medical Correspondent
- Rob Marciano – Senior National Weather Correspondent (2024–present)
- Anthony Mason – Culture and National Correspondent (1986–present)
- Jessi Mitchell – Anchor, CBS News Roundup
- Erin Moriarty – Correspondent, 48 Hours and CBS News Sunday Morning (1986–present)
- Kelly O'Grady – Co-Anchor, CBS Saturday Morning (2026–present)
- Meg Oliver – Correspondent (2006–2009; 2015–present)
- Jane Pauley – Anchor, CBS News Sunday Morning (2016–present), Contributing Correspondent (2014–present)
- Scott Pelley – Correspondent, 60 Minutes (2003–present), Correspondent (1989–present)
- Matt Pieper – Correspondent
- Lindsey Reiser – Anchor and Correspondent, CBS News 24/7
- Mo Rocca – Correspondent, CBS News Sunday Morning (2006–present)
- Tracy Smith – Correspondent, 48 Hours and CBS News Sunday Morning (2000–present)
- Lesley Stahl – Co-editor, 60 Minutes (1991–present), Correspondent (1971–present)
- Martha Teichner – Correspondent, CBS News Sunday Morning (1977–present)
- Peter Van Sant – Correspondent, 48 Hours (1984–present)
- Bill Whitaker – Correspondent, 60 Minutes (2014–present), Correspondent (1984–present)
- Lana Zak – Anchor, CBS News 24/7
Washington, D.C. (White House Bureau)
- Margaret Brennan – Anchor, Face the Nation (2018–present); Chief Foreign Affairs Correspondent (2012–present)
- Nancy Cordes – Chief White House Correspondent (2007–present)
- Robert Costa – National Correspondent, CBS News Sunday Morning; Chief Washington Analyst (2022–present)
- Jan Crawford – Chief Legal Correspondent (2005–2006; 2009–present)
- Major Garrett – Chief Washington Correspondent (2012–present); Anchor, America Decides (2025–present)
- Caitlin Huey-Burns – Congressional Correspondent (2018–present)
- Willie James Inman – White House Reporter
- Jennifer Jacobs – Senior White House Reporter (2024–present)
- Weijia Jiang – Senior White House Correspondent (2012–present)
- Nikole Killion – Congressional Correspondent (2018–present)
- David Martin – National Security Correspondent (1983–present)
- Norah O'Donnell – Senior Correspondent (2011–present)
- Ed O'Keefe – Senior White House Correspondent (2018–present)
- Nicole Sganga – Homeland Security Correspondent (2015–present)
- Taurean Small – Campaign Reporter
- Susan Spencer – Correspondent, 48 Hours and CBS News Sunday Morning (1977–present)
- Cecilia Vega – Correspondent, 60 Minutes (2023–present)
Atlanta
- Mark Strassmann – Correspondent (2001–present)
- Skyler Henry – Reporter
Chicago
- Charlie DeMar – Reporter, CBS Chicago/WBBM-TV (2016–present)
Los Angeles (West Coast Bureau)
- Lee Cowan – Correspondent, CBS News Sunday Morning (1996–2007; 2013–present)
- Carter Evans – Correspondent
- Matt Gutman – Chief Correspondent (2026–present)
- Lilia Luciano – Correspondent
- Natalie Morales – Correspondent and 48 Hours Contributor (2021–present)
- Kris Van Cleave – Transportation Correspondent
- Jonathan Vigliotti – Correspondent (2015–present)
- Jamie Yuccas – Correspondent, KCAL-TV and KCBS-TV (2011–present)
Miami
- Manuel Bojorquez – Correspondent (2012–present)
London
- Charlie D'Agata – Senior Foreign Correspondent (2002–present)
- Ian Lee – Foreign Correspondent
- Elizabeth Palmer – Foreign Correspondent (2000–present)
- Mark Phillips – Senior Foreign Correspondent (1982–present)
- Imtiaz Tyab – Senior Foreign Correspondent (2019–present)
- Holly Williams – Foreign Correspondent (2012–present)
Hong Kong
- Anna Coren – Foreign Correspondent (2025–present)
Rome
- Seth Doane – Foreign Correspondent (2007–present)
- Chris Livesay – Foreign Correspondent (2020–present)
Current contributors
- David Agus – Medical Contributor
- Serena Altschul – Contributing Correspondent, CBS News Sunday Morning (2003–present)
- David Becker – Election Law Contributor
- David Begnaud – Contributor, CBS Mornings (2013–present)
- Luke Burbank – Correspondent, CBS News Sunday Morning (2013–present)
- Alina Cho – Contributor, CBS News Sunday Morning
- Lisa Damour – Psychologist Contributor, CBS Mornings
- Jeff Flake – Contributor
- Nancy Giles – Contributor, CBS News Sunday Morning (2003–present)
- Steve Hartman – "On The Road" CBS Evening News, CBS News Sunday Morning (1994–present)
- Alexis Hoag – Legal Contributor
- Hua Hsu – Contributor, CBS News Sunday Morning
- Jo Ling Kent – Senior Business & Technology Correspondent (2022–present)
- Rikki Klieman – Legal Analyst
- Conor Knighton – Correspondent, CBS News Sunday Morning (2016–present)
- Ted Koppel – Contributor, CBS News Sunday Morning (2016–present)
- Ben Mankiewicz – Contributor, CBS News Sunday Morning (2019–present)
- Wynton Marsalis – Cultural Correspondent (1996–present)
- Kelly O'Grady – MoneyWatch Correspondent (2024–present)
- Barry Petersen – Contributing Correspondent (1974–present)
- David Pogue – Correspondent CBS News Sunday Morning (2002–present)
- Lonnie Quinn – CBS Evening News Weather Contributor (1997–present)
- Faith Salie – Contributor, CBS News Sunday Morning
- Kelefa Sanneh – Contributor, CBS News Sunday Morning
- Bob Schieffer – Political Contributor
- Ben Stein – Contributor, [CBS News Sunday Morning]
- Jamie Wax – Contributor
- Jon Wertheim – Correspondent, 60 Minutes (2017–present)
- Mark Whitaker – Correspondent and Contributor, CBS News Sunday Morning
Current radio personalities
- Elaine Cobb – CBS News Radio Correspondent (based in Paris)
- Pam Coulter – CBS News Radio Correspondent
- Lucy Craft – CBS News Radio Correspondent (based in Tokyo)
- Steve Dorsey – CBS News Radio Executive Editor
- Pamela Falk – CBS News Radio Correspondent (based in New York)
- Wendy Gillette – CBS News Radio Correspondent
- Allison Keyes – Host, CBS News Weekend Roundup
- Stacy Lyn – CBS News Radio Anchor/ Reporter
- Cami McCormick – CBS News Radio National Security and Foreign Affairs Correspondent
- Bill Rehkopf – CBS News Radio Correspondent
Newspath correspondents
- Danya Bacchus – Correspondent (based in Los Angeles)
- Cristian Benavides – Correspondent (based in Miami)
- Natalie Brand – Correspondent (based in Washington, D.C.)
- Dina Demetrius – Correspondent (based in Los Angeles)
- Michael George – Correspondent (based in New York)
- Diane King Hall – MoneyWatch Correspondent (based in New York)
- Tom Hanson – Correspondent (based in New York)
- Nichelle Medina – Correspondent (based in Los Angeles)
- Laura Podesta – Correspondent (based in New York)
- Anthony Pura – Correspondent (based in Los Angeles)
- Femi Redwood – Correspondent (based in New York)
- Naomi Ruchim – Correspondent (based in New York)
Past correspondents
- Betsy Aaron
- Enrique Acevedo (2020–2022), later TelevisaUnivision
- Jim Acosta – later at CNN
- Jacqueline Adams
- Martin Agronsky +
- Craig Allen, at WHSQ in New York City and News 12 Networks)
- David Andelman – at CNN
- Wyatt Andrews – (1981–2015) retired from journalism
- Howard Arenstein
- Bob Arnot (later at NBC News and MSNBC)
- Jennifer Ashton – later at ABC News, then editor in chief of Ajenda
- Thalia Assuras (1997–2009)
- Sharyl Attkisson (1993–2014)
- Barry Bagnato
- José Díaz-Balart – at Telemundo and at NBC News
- Dave Barrett +
- Roberta Baskin – (later at WJLA-TV in Washington, D.C.)
- Nikki Battiste (2017–2025)
- Nelson Benton +
- Lowell Bergman
- John Blackstone – (1980–2018) retired
- Derrick Blakley (later at WBBM-TV) retired from journalism
- Jerry Bowen (1969–2007) retired from journalism
- Regina Blakely
- Cynthia Bowers (1996–2012)
- Betty Ann Bowser +
- Ed Bradley +
- Ray Brady +
- Rita Braver – (1972–2025) retired from journalism
- Marvin Breckinridge Patterson +
- Heywood Hale Broun +
- Joel Brown
- Karen Brown
- Cecil Brown +
- Terrell Brown – at WLS-TV in Chicago
- Mika Brzezinski – (1997–2001, 2001–2007) at MSNBC
- Winston Burdett +
- Ned Calmer +
- Gretchen Carlson – later at Fox News
- Harley Carnes – (1992–2020) retired
- Julie Chen Moonves (1999–2018)
- Nancy Chen
- Sylvia Chase +
- Connie Chung – (1970s–1982, 1989–1995) retired
- Sam Chu-Lin +
- Lou Cioffi +
- Blair Clark +
- Mandy Clark
- Michele Clark + (died aboard United Air Lines Flight 553, which crashed in Chicago on December 8, 1972)
- Jane Clayson (1999–2008; later at NPR)
- Ron Cochran +
- Charles Collingwood +
- Anderson Cooper – (2006–2026)
- Victoria Corderi – later at NBC News
- Katie Couric (2006–2011)
- Kenneth Craig (2015–2020)
- Walter Cronkite +
- Frank Currier +
- Don Dahler
- John Charles Daly +
- Faith Daniels
- Randy Daniels
- Priya David
- Morton Dean – (1964–1984) later at ABC News; retired
- David Dick +
- John Dickerson
- Nancy Dickerson +
- Linda Douglass
- Harold Dow +
- Bill Downs +
- Kimberly Dozier – at The Daily Beast, then CNN
- Terry Drinkwater +
- Maurice DuBois
- Jed Duvall +
- Douglas Edwards +
- Eric Engberg +
- Pamela Falk
- Tom Fenton +
- Giselle Fernández
- John Ferrugia – at Rocky Mountain PBS
- Murray Fromson +
- Bob Fuss +
- Monica Gayle – later at WJBK; retired
- Bill Geist – (1987–2018) retired
- Phyllis George +
- Kendis Gibson – later at NBC News
- Michelle Gielan
- Christopher Glenn +
- Jeff Glor – (2007–2024)
- Bernard Goldberg (later at Fox News and at HBO Sports)
- Julianna Goldman (2014–2018)
- Bianna Golodryga – at CNN
- Marci Gonzalez (2021–2024)
- Fred Graham +
- Jeff Greenfield – later at PBS
- Bryant Gumbel – later at HBO Sports
- Tony Guida – at CUNY TV
- Bruce Hall +
- Nanette Hansen
- John Hart – (1960–1975) later at NBC News; retired
- Celia Hatton
- David Henderson
- Allison Harmelin
- George Herman +
- Catherine Herridge (2019–2024)
- Erica Hill – at CNN
- Sandy Hill
- Don Hollenbeck +
- Richard C. Hottelet +
- Sandra Hughes
- Dana Jacobson – (2015–2025)
- Allan Jackson +
- Rebecca Jarvis – at ABC News
- Whit Johnson – at ABC News
- Phil Jones +
- Gordon Joseloff +
- Bernard Kalb +
- Marvin Kalb – (1957–1980) retired
- Peter Kalischer +
- H.V. Kaltenborn +
- Hattie Kauffman
- Frank Kearns +
- Alexander Kendrick +
- Armen Keteyian
- Dana King
- Mark Knoller +
- Susan Koeppen
- Jeffrey Kofman (later at ABC News)
- Steve Kroft – (1980–2019) retired from journalism
- Robert Krulwich (later at NPR) retired
- Charles Kuralt +
- Bill Kurtis (later at WBBM-TV in Chicago) retired
- Stephanie Lambidakis (1985–2013) retired
- John Laurence – at ABC News
- Mola Lenghi – at ABC News
- Bill Leonard +
- Larry LeSueur +
- Stan Levey +
- Lisa Ling (2023–2025)
- Lara Logan (2002–2018)
- Bill Lynch +
- Vicki Mabrey
- Scott MacFarlane (2022–2026)
- Sheila MacVicar
- Peter Maer (1975–2015) retired from journalism
- Maureen Maher (1997–2021)
- Dave Malkoff – Correspondent (2023–2026)
- Paul Manning +
- Carol Marin – later at WMAQ-TV; retired from journalism
- Chris Mavridis
- Lark McCarthy
- Melissa McDermott
- Mark McEwen
- Susan McGinnis
- Derek McGinty – later at WUSA
- Jim McKay +
- Bob McKeown (later at CBC News) then retired
- Bill McLaughlin +
- Marya McLaughlin +
- Tara Mergener
- Michelle Miller (2004–2025)
- Russ Mitchell – at WKYC
- DeMarco Morgan – later at ABC News
- Edward P. Morgan +
- Bruce Morton +
- Bill Moyers + – later at PBS
- Roger Mudd +
- Edward R. Murrow +
- Reena Ninan
- Paul K. Niven Jr. +
- Betty Nguyen – (later at NBC News and MSNBC; then at WPIX in New York City)
- Deborah Norville – later weekday anchor, Inside Edition
- Stuart Novins +
- Bill O'Reilly (later at Fox News; then at Newsmax)
- Teri Okita
- Bob Orr – (1993–2015) retired from journalism
- Charles Osgood +
- Ike Pappas +
- Debora Patta (2013–2025)
- Jeff Pegues (2013–2024)
- Terry Phillips
- Robert Pierpoint +
- Randall Pinkston (1980–2013; later at Al Jazeera America)
- Byron Pitts – at ABC News
- Allen Pizzey (1980–2016) retired from journalism
- Bill Plante +
- George Polk +
- Steven Portnoy – at ABC News
- Ned Potter (later at ABC News) retired
- Elise Preston
- Dave Price – at WNBC
- Elaine Quijano – (2010–2026)
- Jane Bryant Quinn
- Sally Quinn
- Bert Quint +
- Ed Rabel
- Art Rascon – (1994–1998; later with KTRK-TV)
- Dan Rather – (1962–2006; then at AXS TV)
- Dan Raviv – (1974–2017; then host of The Mossad Files and The Quest for Significance podcast)
- Harry Reasoner +
- Trish Regan – at Fox Business
- Chip Reid
- Paula Reid – at CNN
- Dean Reynolds – (2007–2020) retired from journalism
- Frank Reynolds +
- Tanya Rivero – (2005–2007, 2017–2024) at WABC-TV
- Jane Robelot – at WYFF-TV
- John Roberts (1992–2006; later at CNN; then Fox News)
- Troy Roberts – (1993–2017; now at NBC News)
- Norman Robinson – retired from journalism
- Maggie Rodriguez (with WFLA-TV in Tampa)
- Andy Rooney +
- Charlie Rose – (1984–1990; 2012–2017)
- Richard Roth (1972–2010) based in Moscow, Rome, Los Angeles, New York and London
- Hughes Rudd +
- Christina Ruffini – at NBC News
- Morley Safer +
- Marlene Sanders +
- Diane Sawyer – (1978–1989) now at ABC News
- Forrest Sawyer – (later at ABC News and then at MSNBC)
- Stephen Schiff
- Richard Schlesinger – (1984–2022) retired
- David Schoenbrun +
- Daniel Schorr +
- David Schoumacher +
- Dr. Emily Senay
- Barry Serafin – (1969–1979) later at ABC News; retired
- Don Hewitt +
- Roxana Saberi (2018–2024)
- Eric Sevareid +
- David Schechter – National Environmental Correspondent (2022–2026)
- Frank Settipani (1981–2017) retired
- Bill Shadel +
- Janet Shamlian (2019–2025)
- Bernard Shaw +
- John Sheahan
- Gary Shepard (1963–1984) later at ABC News; retired from journalism
- William L. Shirer +
- Lewis Shollenberger +
- Maria Shriver – at NBC News
- Daniel Sieberg
- Bob Simon +
- Bob Sirott
- Harry Smith – (1986–2011) later at NBC News; retired
- Howard K. Smith +
- Terence Smith – (1985–1998) later at PBS Newshour; retired
- Joan Snyder +
- Bianca Solorzano
- Hari Sreenivasan – weekend anchor, PBS Newshour
- Andrea Stassou
- John Stehr – lead anchor at WTHR until retirement in 2018/ mayor of Zionsville, Indiana.
- Jim Stewart – (1990–2006) retired from journalism
- Alison Stewart – at PBS
- Hannah Storm – at ESPN and ESPN on ABC
- Bill Stout +
- Kathleen Sullivan (later at E! News)
- Rene Syler – at Aspire
- Lowell Thomas +
- Richard Threlkeld +
- Dallas Townsend +
- Ben Tracy – (2008–2024)
- Liz Trotta
- Robert Trout +
- Gaby Tabunar +
- Lem Tucker +
- Debbye Turner
- Meredith Vieira – at NBC News
- Omar Villafranca
- Mireya Villarreal – at ABC News
- Alex Wagner – at NBC News and MSNBC
- Richard Wagner +
- Jane Wallace
- Kelly Wallace
- Mike Wallace +
- Clarissa Ward – at CNN
- Anna Werner – (2011–2024)
- Bill Whitney (1979–2016) retired
- Charles Wolfson (1970–2010) retired
- Chris Wragge – at WCBS-TV
- Nick Young – (1990–2020) retired
- Steve Young +
- Paula Zahn – at CNN; later at Investigation Discovery
+ : deceased
Presidents of CBS News
Here are the people who have been in charge of CBS News over the years:
- Richard S. Salant (1961–1964)
- Fred W. Friendly (1964–1966)
- Richard S. Salant (1966–1979)
- Bill Leonard (1979–1982)
- Van Gordon Sauter (1982–1983)
- Ed Joyce (1983–1986)
- Van Gordon Sauter (1986)
- Howard Stringer (1986–1988)
- David W. Burke (1988–1990)
- Eric Ober (1990–1996)
- Andrew Heyward (1996–2005)
- Sean McManus (2005–2011)
- David Rhodes (2011–2019)
- Susan Zirinsky (2019–2021)
- Neeraj Khemlani (2021–2023)
- Ingrid Ciprian-Matthews (2023–2024)
- Wendy McMahon (2021–2025)
- Tom Cibrowski (2025–present)
Tom Cibrowski is the current president of CBS News. He reports to the head of Paramount TV, George Cheeks. The editor-in-chief, Bari Weiss, works with Cibrowski but reports directly to the CEO of Paramount, David Ellison. She also oversees The Free Press, a part of CBS News.
Reporting partnerships
In 2017, CBS News began sharing news with BBC News. Before that, BBC News shared with ABC News, and CBS News shared with Sky News. Sky News was owned by 21st Century Fox until Comcast took over in 2018. This partnership lets them share videos and reports to better cover world events.
CBS News sometimes works with CNN and uses some of their reporters like Anderson Cooper and Sanjay Gupta. In 2022, CBS News started sharing weather news with The Weather Channel. Beginning in 2025, stories from The Free Press will be shown online at CBS News.
Controversies
CBS News has had some important disagreements over the years. In 1966, a top leader left because they disagreed with how the Vietnam War was being covered. In 2004, a well-known reporter shared documents that were not fully checked first.
There have also been claims about unfair treatment of different political views and taking credit for work that was not their own.
In 2025 and 2026, more changes happened. Some leaders left because they felt they could not keep their news independent. There were worries that the news was favoring certain political ideas. Some people were concerned about new ideas and health advice shared by the network, feeling that not all information was based on good science.
Some events and parties with important government leaders made some reporters worry about how it might look to the public. A former anchor said it was important to focus on the truth rather than trying to please everyone.
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