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CBS News

CBS News is the news division of the American television and radio service CBS. CBS News television programs include the CBS Evening News, CBS Mornings, news magazine programs CBS News Sunday Morning, 60 Minutes, and 48 Hours, and Sunday morning political affairs program Face the Nation. CBS News Radio produces hourly newscasts for hundreds of radio stations, and also oversees CBS News podcasts like The Takeout Podcast. CBS News also operates a 24-hour digital news network.

CBS News
News division ofCBS
Key people
  • George Cheeks (Chairman and CEO, CBS Entertainment Group)
  • Neeraj Khemlani
    Wendy McMahon (Co-presidents, CBS News and Television Stations)
FoundedSeptember 18, 1927; 95 years ago (1927-09-18)
HeadquartersCBS Broadcast Center
530 West 57th Street
New York City, New York 10019
U.S.
Area servedWorldwide
Broadcast programsCBS Evening News
CBS Mornings
48 Hours
60 Minutes
CBS News Sunday Morning
Face the Nation
CBS News Radio
ParentParamount Global
Websitecbsnews.com
Streaming news networkCBS News Streaming Network

Up until April 2021,[1] the president and senior executive producer of CBS News was Susan Zirinsky, who assumed the role on March 1, 2019.[2] Zirinsky, the first female president of the network's news division,[3][4] was announced as the choice to replace David Rhodes on January 6, 2019.[5][6] The announcement came amid news that Rhodes would step down as president of CBS News "amid falling ratings and the fallout from revelations from an investigation into sexual misconduct allegations" against CBS News figures and Rhodes.[7]

On April 15, 2021, CBS Television Stations and CBS News announced that their respective divisions would merge into one entity,[8] to be named CBS News and Stations.[9] It was also announced that Neeraj Khemlani (former Executive Vice President of Hearst Newspapers) and Wendy McMahon (former President of the ABC Owned Television Stations Group) were named presidents and co-heads. This transition was completed on May 3.

History

In 1929, the Columbia Broadcasting System began making regular radio news broadcasts—five-minute summaries taken from reports from the United Press, one of the three wire services that supplied newspapers with national and international news. In December 1930 CBS chief William S. Paley hired journalist Paul W. White away from United Press as CBS's news editor. Paley put the radio network's news operation at the same level as entertainment, and authorized White to interrupt programming if events warranted. Along with other networks, CBS chafed at the breaking news embargo imposed upon radio by the wire services, which prevented them from using bulletins until they first appeared in print. CBS disregarded an embargo when it broke the story of the Lindbergh kidnapping in 1932, using live on-the-air reporting. Radio networks scooped print outlets with news of the 1932 presidential election.[10]: 485–486 

In March 1933, White was named vice president and general manager in charge of news at CBS.[11] As the first head of CBS News, he began to build an organization that soon established a legendary reputation.[10]: 486 

In 1935, White hired Edward R. Murrow, and sent him to London in 1937 to run CBS Radio's European operation.[10]: 486  White led a staff that would come to include Richard C. Hottelet, Charles Collingwood, William L. Shirer, Eric Sevareid,[12] Bill Downs, John Charles Daly, Joseph C. Harsch[10]: 501  Cecil Brown, Elmer Davis, Quincy Howe, H. V. Kaltenborn, Robert Trout,[13] and Lewis Shollenberger.[14]

"CBS was getting its ducks in a row for the biggest news story in history, World War II", wrote radio historian John Dunning.[10]: 487 

In 1940, William S. Paley recruited Edmund A. Chester from his position as Bureau Chief for Latin America at the Associated Press to coordinate the development of the international shortwave radio Network of the Americas (La Cadena de las Americas) in 1942.[15][16][17] Broadcasting in concert with the assistance of the Department of State, the Office for Inter-American Affairs chaired by Nelson Rockefeller and Voice of America as part of President Roosevelt's support for Pan-Americanism, this CBS radio network provided vital news and cultural programming throughout South America and Central America during the World War II era.[18][19] Through its operations in twenty nations, it fostered benevolent diplomatic relations between the United States and other nations in the region while providing an alternative to Nazi propaganda.[20][21][22]

Television

Upon becoming commercial station WCBW (channel 2, now WCBS-TV) in 1941, the pioneer CBS television station in New York City broadcast two daily news programs, at 2:30 p.m. and 7:30 p.m. weekdays, anchored by Richard Hubbell (journalist). Most of the newscasts featured Hubbell reading a script with only occasional cutaways to a map or still photograph. When Pearl Harbor was bombed on December 7, 1941, WCBW (which was usually off the air on Sunday to give the engineers a day off), took to the air at 8:45 p.m. with an extensive special report. The national emergency even broke down the unspoken wall between CBS radio and television. WCBW executives convinced radio announcers and experts such as George Fielding Elliot and Linton Wells to come down to the Grand Central studios during the evening and give information and commentary on the attack. The WCBW special report that night lasted less than 90 minutes. But that special broadcast pushed the limits of live television in 1941 and opened up new possibilities for future broadcasts. As CBS wrote in a special report to the Federal Communications Commission (FCC), the unscheduled live news broadcast on December 7 "was unquestionably the most stimulating challenge and marked the greatest advance of any single problem faced up to that time."

Additional newscasts were scheduled in the early days of the war. In May 1942, WCBW (like almost all television stations) sharply cut back its live program schedule and the newscasts were canceled, since the station temporarily suspended studio operations, resorting exclusively to the occasional broadcast of films. This was primarily because much of the staff had either joined the service or were redeployed to war related technical research, and to prolong the life of the early, unstable cameras which were now impossible to repair due to the wartime lack of parts.

 
Douglas Edwards on the CBS news set in 1952.

In May 1944, as the war began to turn in favor of the Allies, WCBW reopened the studios and the newscasts returned, briefly anchored by Ned Calmer, and then by Everett Holles.[23] After the war, expanded news programs appeared on the WCBW schedule – whose call letters were changed to WCBS-TV in 1946 – first anchored by Milo Boulton, and later by Douglas Edwards. On May 3, 1948, Edwards began anchoring CBS Television News, a regular 15-minute nightly newscast on the CBS television network, including WCBS-TV. It aired every weeknight at 7:30 p.m., and was the first regularly scheduled, network television news program featuring an anchor (the nightly Lowell Thomas NBC radio network newscast was simulcast on television locally on NBC's WNBT—now WNBC—for a time in the early 1940s and the previously mentioned Richard Hubbell, Ned Calmer, Everett Holles and Milo Boulton on WCBW in the early and mid-1940s, but these were local television broadcasts seen only in New York City). NBC's offering at the time, NBC Television Newsreel (which premiered in February 1948), was simply film footage with voice narration.

In 1948, CBS Radio's seasoned journalist Edmund Chester emerged as the television network's new Director of News Special Events and Sports.[24][25] Soon thereafter in 1949, he collaborated with one of CBS' original Murrow Boys named Larry LeSueur to produce the innovative news series United Nations In Action. Underwritten by the Ford Motor Company as a public service, these broadcasts endeavored to provide live coverage of the proceedings of the United Nations General Assembly from its interim headquarters in Lake Success, New York.[26][27] They proved to be highly successful and were honored with the prestigious George Foster Peabody Award for Television News in 1949.[28]

In 1950, the name of the nightly newscast was changed to Douglas Edwards with the News, and the following year, it became the first news program to be broadcast on both coasts, thanks to a new coaxial cable connection, prompting Edwards to use the greeting "Good evening everyone, coast to coast." The broadcast was renamed the CBS Evening News when Walter Cronkite replaced Edwards in 1962.[29] Edwards remained with CBS News with various daytime television newscasts and radio news broadcasts until his retirement on April 1, 1988.

CBS News ran cable channel CBS Eye on People from 1997 to 2000 and Spanish-language channel CBS Telenoticias from 1996 to 1998.

In 2021, CBS News had set up its own production unit See It Now Studios, to be headed up by Susan Zirinsky.[30]

In 2022, CBS News hired former Donald Trump administration official Mick Mulvaney as a paid on-air contributor.[31] Mulvaney's hiring stirred controversy within the company due to his history of promoting Trump's false claims and attacking the press.[31] CBS News co-president Neeraj Khemlani told CBS morning show staff: "If you look at some of the people that we've been hiring on a contributor basis, being able to make sure that we are getting access to both sides of the aisle is a priority because we know the Republicans are going to take over, most likely, in the midterms".[31]

Broadcast history

The information on programs listed in this section came directly from CBS News in interviews with the Vice President of Communications and NewsWatch Dallas.

According to the CBS News Library and source Sandy Genelius (Vice President, CBS News Communications), the "CBS Evening News" was the program title for both Saturday and Sunday evening broadcasts. The program title for the Sunday late night news beginning in 1963 was the "CBS Sunday Night News". These titles were also seen on the intro slide of the program's opening. The program airs on Saturday, and Sunday nights at 7:00 p.m.–7:30 p.m. UTC (Eastern Time) on CBS.

 
CBS News Bulletin covering the assassination of John F. Kennedy.

CBS News television programs

Current news programs

Early morning news program history

Morning news program history

Evening/prime time news program history

Other programs

CBS News Radio

The branch of CBS News that produces newscasts and features to radio stations is CBS News Radio. The radio network is the oldest unit of CBS and traced its roots to the company's founding in 1927, and the news division took shape over the decade that followed. The list of CBS News correspondents (below) includes those reporting on CBS News Radio.

CBS News Radio produces the oldest daily news show on radio or television, the CBS World News Roundup, which first aired in 1938 and celebrated its 80th anniversary in 2018. The World News Roundup airs twice every weekday: a morning edition is anchored by Steve Kathan and produced by Paul Farry, while a "late edition" is anchored by Dave Barrett and produced by James Hutton. The evening Roundup, previously known as The World Tonight, has aired in its current form since 1956 and has been anchored by Blair Clark, Douglas Edwards, Dallas Townsend and Christopher Glenn (Glenn also anchored the morning Roundup before his death in 2006).

The CBS Radio Network provides newscasts at the top of the hour, regular updates at :31 minutes past the hour, the popular Newsfeeds for affiliates (including WCBS and KYW) at :35 minutes past the hour, and breaking news updates when developments warrant, often at :20 and :50 minutes past the hour. Skyview Networks handles the distribution.

CBS Newspath

CBS Newspath is CBS News' satellite news-gathering service (similar to CNN Newsource). Newspath provides national hard news, sports highlights, regional spot news, features and live coverage of major breaking news events for affiliate stations to use in their local news broadcasts. The service has a team of domestic and global correspondents and freelance reporters dedicated to reporting for affiliates, and offers several different national or international stories fronted by reporters on a daily basis. CBS Newspath also relies heavily on local affiliates sharing content. Stations will often contribute locally obtained footage that may be of national interest. It replaced a similar service, CBS News NewsNet.

Network News Service (NNS) is a pioneering news organization formed by ABC NewsOne, CBS Newspath and Fox NewsEdge.

CBS News Streaming Network

CBS News Streaming Network is a 24-hour streaming news channel available from the CBS News website and launched on November 4, 2014 as CBSN.[56] At the time as CBSN, the channel features live news from 9 a.m. to midnight on weekdays. The channel makes all of the resources of CBS News available directly on digital platforms with live, anchored coverage 15 hours each week. It is a first for a U.S. 24-hour news channel to forgo cable and be available exclusively only online and on smart devices such as smart TV's Apple TV, Roku, Amazon Fire and others.[57] The channel is based at CBS's New York City headquarters.[58]

News bureaus

Domestic bureaus

Foreign bureaus

Europe
Africa
Middle East
Asia

Personnel

Current television hosts, anchors, correspondents, and reporters

New York (Main​ Headquarters)
Washington, D.C​ (Evening​ News​ Headquarters/White​ House​ Bureau)
  • Rita Braver – Senior Correspondent, CBS News Sunday Morning (1972–present)
  • Margaret Brennan – State Department Correspondent; Anchor, Face the Nation (2012–present)
  • Nancy Cordes – Chief White House Correspondent (2007–present)
  • Robert Costa – Chief Election and Campaign Correspondent (2022–present)
  • Jan Crawford – Chief Legal Correspondent (2005–2006; 2009–present)
  • Major Garrett – Chief Washington Correspondent (2011–present); Host, The Takeout (CBS News Streaming Network)
  • Catherine Herridge – Senior Investigative Correspondent (2019–present)
  • Weijia Jiang – Senior White House Correspondent
  • Nikole Killion – Congressional Correspondent
  • Scott MacFarlane – Congressional Correspondent
  • David Martin – National Security Correspondent (1983–present)
  • Norah O'Donnell – Anchor, CBS Evening News (2019–present)
  • Ed O'Keefe – Senior White House Correspondent
  • Jeff Pegues – Chief National Affairs and Justice Correspondent (2013–present)
  • Chip Reid – National Correspondent
  • Christina Ruffini – Foreign Affairs/ Washington Correspondent
  • Susan Spencer – Correspondent, 48 Hours and CBS News Sunday Morning (1977–present)
  • Ben Tracy – Senior National and Environmental Correspondent (2019–present)
  • Cecilia​ Vega​ -​ Correspondent, 60 Minute​s​ (2023–present)
Atlanta
  • Mark Strassmann – Correspondent
Chicago
  • Charlie DeMar – Reporter, CBS Chicago/ WBBM-TV
  • Adriana Diaz – Correspondent; Anchor, CBS Weekend News (Saturday)
Dallas
  • Kris VanCleave – Correspondent
  • Omar Villafranca – Correspondent
Houston
Los Angeles​ (West​ Coast​ Bureau)
Miami
  • Manuel Bojorquez – Correspondent
London
Rome
  • Seth Doane – Foreign Correspondent/ Correspondent, ''60 Minutes+''
  • Chris Livesay – Foreign Correspondent
Johannesburg
Istanbul

Current contributors

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
  • Steven Portnoy – CBS News Radio White House Correspondent
  • Bill Rehkopf – CBS News Radio Correspondent

Current Newspath correspondents

  • Debra Alfarone – Correspondent (based in Washington, D.C.)
  • 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)
  • Skyler Henry – Correspondent (based in Washington, D.C.)
  • Nichelle Medina – Correspondent (based in Los Angeles)
  • Laura Podesta – Correspondent (based in New York)
  • Anthony Pura – Correspondent (based in Los Angeles)
  • Elise Preston – Correspondent (based in Los Angeles)
  • Femi Redwood – Correspondent (based in New York)
  • Naomi Ruchim – Correspondent (based in New York)

Past correspondents

+ – deceased

Presidents of CBS News

Reporting partnerships

In 2017, CBS News entered into a content-sharing agreement with BBC News, respectively replacing similar arrangements with the BBC and ABC News, and CBS and Sky News (which was partially controlled by 21st Century Fox until 2018 when ownership was then transferred to Comcast). The partnership includes the ability to share resources, footage, and reports, and conduct "efficient planning of news gathering resources to increase the content of each broadcaster's coverage of world events".[62]

Although they do not have an official partnership, CNN and CBS News share correspondents and contributors such as Anderson Cooper and Dr. Sanjay Gupta.[63]

In 2022, CBS News entered into a content-sharing partnership with The Weather Channel, where The Weather Channel meteorologists will appear on CBS News programs, and CBS News correspondents will appear during live coverage of weather events on The Weather Channel.

See also

References

  1. ^ Alexandra Steigrad (April 13, 2021). "CBS News president Susan Zirinsky reportedly stepping down". New York Post. Retrieved May 7, 2021.
  2. ^ "CBS News Bios". CBS News. Retrieved May 6, 2019.
  3. ^ Snider, Mike (January 7, 2019). "Susan Zirinsky named first woman to lead CBS News as David Rhodes departs". USA Today. Retrieved January 7, 2019.
  4. ^ Farzan, Antonia Noori (January 7, 2019). "After being rocked by sexual misconduct allegations, CBS News names its first female president". The Washington Post. Retrieved January 7, 2019.
  5. ^ Flint, Joe (January 6, 2019). "CBS News Names Susan Zirinsky as Its First Female President". The Wall Street Journal. Retrieved January 7, 2019.
  6. ^ DeMarche, Edmund (January 7, 2019). "CBS names Susan Zirinsky to lead news division, will replace David Rhodes: reports". Fox News. Retrieved January 7, 2019.
  7. ^ Johnson, Alex (January 6, 2019). "David Rhodes leaving as head of scandal-scarred CBS News". NBC News. Retrieved January 7, 2019.
  8. ^ Johnson, Ted (April 15, 2021). "CBS Combines News And TV Stations, Taps Neeraj Khemlani And Wendy McMahon To Lead New Division". Deadline. Retrieved May 7, 2021.
  9. ^ "Neeraj Khemlani". CBS News. Retrieved May 7, 2021.
  10. ^ a b c d e Dunning, John, On the Air: The Encyclopedia of Old-Time Radio. New York: Oxford University Press, Inc., 1998 ISBN 978-0-19-507678-3 hardcover; revised edition of Tune In Yesterday (1976)
  11. ^ "News on the Air dustjacket". NYPL Digital Gallery. Retrieved May 25, 2014.
  12. ^ . Radio-Television News Directors Association. September 20, 1997. Archived from the original on August 6, 2007. Retrieved August 6, 2007., Radio Television Digital News Association Conference & Exhibition, September 20, 1997. Retrieved 2014-05-25.
  13. ^ "Paul White Dies; Radio Newsman". The New York Times, July 10, 1955.
  14. ^ "Lewis W. Shollenberger Dies". The Washington Post. March 18, 1994. Retrieved April 26, 2017.
  15. ^ The New York Times - "Obituary: "Edmund Chester, 75, Ex-Directorate C.B.S.", October 16, 1973 p. 46 on nytimes.com
  16. ^ In All His Glory: the Life And Times of William S. Paley. Salley Bedell Smith. Random House. New York, 2002 p. 18 ISBN 978-0-307-78671-5 William S. Paley, CBS, Edmund A. Chester on books.google
  17. ^ Beyond the Black and White TV: Asian and Latin American Spectacle in Cold War America. Han, Benjamin M. Rutgers University Press, 2022 La Cadena de las Americas, Edmund Chester, William S. Paley, Cold War diplomacy on Google Books
  18. ^ Roosevelt, Franklin D., "Executive Order 8840 Establishing the Office of Coordinator of Inter-American Affairs", July 30, 1941. Online by Gerhard Peters and John T. Woolley, The American Presidency Project, University of California, Santa Barbara
  19. ^ Time - Radio: La Cadena, June 1, 1942 William S. Paley, La Cadena de las Americas on Content.time.com
  20. ^ Dissonant Divas In Chicana Music: The Limits of La Onda January 9, 2020, at the Wayback Machine Deborah R. Vargas. University of Minnesota Press, Minneapolis, 2012 ISBN 978-0-8166-7316-2 p. 152–153 Edmund Chester and "La Cadena De Las Americas" on google.books.com
  21. ^ Beyond the Black and White TV: Asian and Latin American Spectacle in Cold War America. Han, Benjamin M. Rutgers University Press, 2022 La Cadena de las Americas, Edmund Chester, William S. Paley La cadena de Las Americas on Google Books
  22. ^ Roosevelt, Franklin D., "Executive Order 8840 Establishing the Office of Coordinator of Inter-American Affairs", July 30, 1941. Online by Gerhard Peters and John T. Woolley, The American Presidency Project, University of California, Santa Barbara
  23. ^ . Archived from the original on September 6, 2013. Retrieved January 6, 2018.
  24. ^ The New York Times - "Obituary: "Edmund Chester, 75, Ex-Directorate C.B.S.", October 16, 1973 p. 46 on nytimes.com
  25. ^ As It Happened: A Memoir William S. Paley. Doubleday, New York. 1979 p. 375 Edmund Chester - Director of CBS News on books.google
  26. ^ The New York Times, November 4, 1949, pg. 50
  27. ^ United Nations in Action: Photograph of Edmund Chester, Larry LaSueur, Lyman Bryson at the interim headquarters of the UN General Assembly Lake Success, NY, March 8,1949 ongettyimages.com
  28. ^ "United Nations In Action" Peabody Award (1949) on peabodyawards.com
  29. ^ "The Origins of Television News in America" by Mike Conway. Chapter: "The Birth of CBS-TV News: Columbia's Ambitious Experiment at the Advent of U.S. Commercial Television". (Peter Lang Publishing, New York NY).
  30. ^ Johnson, Ted (September 8, 2021). "CBS News Launches New Production Entity See It Now Studios Headed By Susan Zirinsky". Deadline. Retrieved June 22, 2022.
  31. ^ a b c Barr, Jeremy (March 30, 2022). "Turmoil at CBS News over Trump aide Mick Mulvaney's punditry gig". The Washington Post. ISSN 0190-8286. Retrieved March 31, 2022.
  32. ^ Hill, Michael P. "CBS debuts 'Overnight News' with familiar look". newscaststudio.com. Retrieved March 15, 2020.
  33. ^ Leise, Ernest. "Agony at 'Nightwatch,' CBS's Great Night Hope". The Washington Post. Retrieved March 18, 2020.
  34. ^ Pelley, Scott. ""Evening News" marks golden anniversary of 30-minute broadcast". CBS News. Retrieved March 15, 2020.
  35. ^ "CBS This Morning: Saturday". viacomcbsexpress.com. Retrieved March 15, 2020.
  36. ^ Steinberg, Brian (May 2, 2016). "CBS Will Revamp 'CBS Evening News' on Weekends". Variety. Retrieved March 15, 2020.
  37. ^ . September 19, 2012. Archived from the original on October 8, 2016. Retrieved January 6, 2018.
  38. ^ Malone, Michael (August 10, 2018). "CBS Celebrates 40 Years of 'CBS Sunday Morning' With Prime Special". broadcastingandcable.com. Retrieved March 15, 2020.
  39. ^ ""Face the Nation": By the numbers". CBS News. Retrieved March 15, 2020.
  40. ^ "The Very First "60 Minutes"". CBS News. Retrieved March 15, 2020.
  41. ^ "CBS News Nightwatch (1982–1992)". IMDb. Retrieved March 18, 2020.
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  43. ^ Ariens, Chris. "CBS News 'Up to the Minute' to End". Adweek. Retrieved March 18, 2020.
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  45. ^ "The CBS Morning News (1963–1987)". IMDb. Retrieved March 18, 2020.
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  48. ^ Pelley, Scott. ""Evening News" marks golden anniversary of 30-minute broadcast". CBS News. Retrieved March 22, 2020.
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  52. ^ Rosenberg, Howard. "CBS' 'America Tonight' Feels Like Old News". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved March 22, 2020.
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  56. ^ "CBS LAUNCHES INTERACTIVE STREAMING NEWS NETWORK CBSN, THE FIRST LIVE ANCHORED NEWS NETWORK ACROSS ALL LEADING DIGITAL PLATFORMS – CBS Corporation". Retrieved April 1, 2019.
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  59. ^ Maggie Rodriguez named co-host of Daytime NewsChannel 8 (WFLA-TV). February 16, 2021. Retrieved February 23, 2021.
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External links

  • Official website

news, this, article, about, news, organization, within, online, network, with, same, name, streaming, service, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, mat. This article is about the news organization within CBS For the online network with the same name see CBS News streaming service This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources CBS News news newspapers books scholar JSTOR July 2018 Learn how and when to remove this template message CBS News is the news division of the American television and radio service CBS CBS News television programs include the CBS Evening News CBS Mornings news magazine programs CBS News Sunday Morning 60 Minutes and 48 Hours and Sunday morning political affairs program Face the Nation CBS News Radio produces hourly newscasts for hundreds of radio stations and also oversees CBS News podcasts like The Takeout Podcast CBS News also operates a 24 hour digital news network CBS NewsNews division ofCBSKey peopleGeorge Cheeks Chairman and CEO CBS Entertainment Group Neeraj KhemlaniWendy McMahon Co presidents CBS News and Television Stations FoundedSeptember 18 1927 95 years ago 1927 09 18 HeadquartersCBS Broadcast Center530 West 57th StreetNew York City New York 10019U S Area servedWorldwideBroadcast programsCBS Evening NewsCBS Mornings48 Hours60 MinutesCBS News Sunday MorningFace the Nation CBS News RadioParentParamount GlobalWebsitecbsnews wbr comStreaming news networkCBS News Streaming NetworkvteUp until April 2021 1 the president and senior executive producer of CBS News was Susan Zirinsky who assumed the role on March 1 2019 2 Zirinsky the first female president of the network s news division 3 4 was announced as the choice to replace David Rhodes on January 6 2019 5 6 The announcement came amid news that Rhodes would step down as president of CBS News amid falling ratings and the fallout from revelations from an investigation into sexual misconduct allegations against CBS News figures and Rhodes 7 On April 15 2021 CBS Television Stations and CBS News announced that their respective divisions would merge into one entity 8 to be named CBS News and Stations 9 It was also announced that Neeraj Khemlani former Executive Vice President of Hearst Newspapers and Wendy McMahon former President of the ABC Owned Television Stations Group were named presidents and co heads This transition was completed on May 3 Contents 1 History 1 1 Television 2 Broadcast history 3 CBS News television programs 3 1 Current news programs 3 2 Early morning news program history 3 3 Morning news program history 3 4 Evening prime time news program history 3 5 Other programs 4 CBS News Radio 5 CBS Newspath 6 CBS News Streaming Network 7 News bureaus 7 1 Domestic bureaus 7 2 Foreign bureaus 8 Personnel 8 1 Current television hosts anchors correspondents and reporters 8 2 Current contributors 8 3 Current radio personalities 8 4 Current Newspath correspondents 8 5 Past correspondents 9 Presidents of CBS News 10 Reporting partnerships 11 See also 12 References 13 External linksHistory EditIn 1929 the Columbia Broadcasting System began making regular radio news broadcasts five minute summaries taken from reports from the United Press one of the three wire services that supplied newspapers with national and international news In December 1930 CBS chief William S Paley hired journalist Paul W White away from United Press as CBS s news editor Paley put the radio network s news operation at the same level as entertainment and authorized White to interrupt programming if events warranted Along with other networks CBS chafed at the breaking news embargo imposed upon radio by the wire services which prevented them from using bulletins until they first appeared in print CBS disregarded an embargo when it broke the story of the Lindbergh kidnapping in 1932 using live on the air reporting Radio networks scooped print outlets with news of the 1932 presidential election 10 485 486 In March 1933 White was named vice president and general manager in charge of news at CBS 11 As the first head of CBS News he began to build an organization that soon established a legendary reputation 10 486 In 1935 White hired Edward R Murrow and sent him to London in 1937 to run CBS Radio s European operation 10 486 White led a staff that would come to include Richard C Hottelet Charles Collingwood William L Shirer Eric Sevareid 12 Bill Downs John Charles Daly Joseph C Harsch 10 501 Cecil Brown Elmer Davis Quincy Howe H V Kaltenborn Robert Trout 13 and Lewis Shollenberger 14 CBS was getting its ducks in a row for the biggest news story in history World War II wrote radio historian John Dunning 10 487 In 1940 William S Paley recruited Edmund A Chester from his position as Bureau Chief for Latin America at the Associated Press to coordinate the development of the international shortwave radio Network of the Americas La Cadena de las Americas in 1942 15 16 17 Broadcasting in concert with the assistance of the Department of State the Office for Inter American Affairs chaired by Nelson Rockefeller and Voice of America as part of President Roosevelt s support for Pan Americanism this CBS radio network provided vital news and cultural programming throughout South America and Central America during the World War II era 18 19 Through its operations in twenty nations it fostered benevolent diplomatic relations between the United States and other nations in the region while providing an alternative to Nazi propaganda 20 21 22 Television Edit Upon becoming commercial station WCBW channel 2 now WCBS TV in 1941 the pioneer CBS television station in New York City broadcast two daily news programs at 2 30 p m and 7 30 p m weekdays anchored by Richard Hubbell journalist Most of the newscasts featured Hubbell reading a script with only occasional cutaways to a map or still photograph When Pearl Harbor was bombed on December 7 1941 WCBW which was usually off the air on Sunday to give the engineers a day off took to the air at 8 45 p m with an extensive special report The national emergency even broke down the unspoken wall between CBS radio and television WCBW executives convinced radio announcers and experts such as George Fielding Elliot and Linton Wells to come down to the Grand Central studios during the evening and give information and commentary on the attack The WCBW special report that night lasted less than 90 minutes But that special broadcast pushed the limits of live television in 1941 and opened up new possibilities for future broadcasts As CBS wrote in a special report to the Federal Communications Commission FCC the unscheduled live news broadcast on December 7 was unquestionably the most stimulating challenge and marked the greatest advance of any single problem faced up to that time Additional newscasts were scheduled in the early days of the war In May 1942 WCBW like almost all television stations sharply cut back its live program schedule and the newscasts were canceled since the station temporarily suspended studio operations resorting exclusively to the occasional broadcast of films This was primarily because much of the staff had either joined the service or were redeployed to war related technical research and to prolong the life of the early unstable cameras which were now impossible to repair due to the wartime lack of parts Douglas Edwards on the CBS news set in 1952 In May 1944 as the war began to turn in favor of the Allies WCBW reopened the studios and the newscasts returned briefly anchored by Ned Calmer and then by Everett Holles 23 After the war expanded news programs appeared on the WCBW schedule whose call letters were changed to WCBS TV in 1946 first anchored by Milo Boulton and later by Douglas Edwards On May 3 1948 Edwards began anchoring CBS Television News a regular 15 minute nightly newscast on the CBS television network including WCBS TV It aired every weeknight at 7 30 p m and was the first regularly scheduled network television news program featuring an anchor the nightly Lowell Thomas NBC radio network newscast was simulcast on television locally on NBC s WNBT now WNBC for a time in the early 1940s and the previously mentioned Richard Hubbell Ned Calmer Everett Holles and Milo Boulton on WCBW in the early and mid 1940s but these were local television broadcasts seen only in New York City NBC s offering at the time NBC Television Newsreel which premiered in February 1948 was simply film footage with voice narration In 1948 CBS Radio s seasoned journalist Edmund Chester emerged as the television network s new Director of News Special Events and Sports 24 25 Soon thereafter in 1949 he collaborated with one of CBS original Murrow Boys named Larry LeSueur to produce the innovative news series United Nations In Action Underwritten by the Ford Motor Company as a public service these broadcasts endeavored to provide live coverage of the proceedings of the United Nations General Assembly from its interim headquarters in Lake Success New York 26 27 They proved to be highly successful and were honored with the prestigious George Foster Peabody Award for Television News in 1949 28 In 1950 the name of the nightly newscast was changed to Douglas Edwards with the News and the following year it became the first news program to be broadcast on both coasts thanks to a new coaxial cable connection prompting Edwards to use the greeting Good evening everyone coast to coast The broadcast was renamed the CBS Evening News when Walter Cronkite replaced Edwards in 1962 29 Edwards remained with CBS News with various daytime television newscasts and radio news broadcasts until his retirement on April 1 1988 CBS News ran cable channel CBS Eye on People from 1997 to 2000 and Spanish language channel CBS Telenoticias from 1996 to 1998 In 2021 CBS News had set up its own production unit See It Now Studios to be headed up by Susan Zirinsky 30 In 2022 CBS News hired former Donald Trump administration official Mick Mulvaney as a paid on air contributor 31 Mulvaney s hiring stirred controversy within the company due to his history of promoting Trump s false claims and attacking the press 31 CBS News co president Neeraj Khemlani told CBS morning show staff If you look at some of the people that we ve been hiring on a contributor basis being able to make sure that we are getting access to both sides of the aisle is a priority because we know the Republicans are going to take over most likely in the midterms 31 Broadcast history EditThe information on programs listed in this section came directly from CBS News in interviews with the Vice President of Communications and NewsWatch Dallas According to the CBS News Library and source Sandy Genelius Vice President CBS News Communications the CBS Evening News was the program title for both Saturday and Sunday evening broadcasts The program title for the Sunday late night news beginning in 1963 was the CBS Sunday Night News These titles were also seen on the intro slide of the program s opening The program airs on Saturday and Sunday nights at 7 00 p m 7 30 p m UTC Eastern Time on CBS CBS News Bulletin covering the assassination of John F Kennedy CBS News television programs EditCurrent news programs Edit CBS Overnight News September 21 2015 present 32 CBS Morning News October 4 1982 present 33 CBS Evening News July 1 1941 present 34 CBS Mornings September 7 2021 present CBS Saturday Morning September 18 2021 present 35 CBS Weekend News May 7 2016 present 36 48 Hours January 19 1988 present 37 CBS News Sunday Morning January 28 1979 present 38 Face the Nation November 7 1954 present 39 60 Minutes September 24 1968 present 40 CBS News Flash August 2021 present Early morning news program history Edit CBS News Nightwatch 1982 1992 41 CBS Morning News 1982 present 42 CBS Up to the Minute 1992 2015 43 CBS Overnight News 2015 present 44 Morning news program history Edit Calendar 1961 1963 CBS Morning News 1963 1987 45 In the News 1971 1986 1997 1998 30 Minutes 1978 1982 The Morning Program 1987 46 CBS This Morning 1987 1999 2012 2021 The Early Show 1999 2012 CBS News Saturday Morning 1997 1999 47 The Saturday Early Show 1999 2012 CBS This Morning Saturday 2012 2021 CBS Mornings 2021 present CBS Saturday Morning 2021 present CBS News Sunday Morning 1979 present Evening prime time news program history Edit CBS Evening News July 1 1941 present 48 West 57th Meredith Vieira John Ferrugia August 13 1985 September 9 1989 49 48 Hours January 19 1988 present 50 60 Minutes II January 13 1999 September 2 2005 51 America Tonight Dan Rather Charles Kuralt Lesley Stahl Robert Krulwich Edie Magnus October 1 1990 1991 52 Street Stories Ed Bradley January 9 1992 June 10 1993 53 Eye to Eye with Connie Chung June 17 1993 May 25 1995 54 Public Eye with Bryant Gumbel October 1 1997 1998 55 CBS Newsbreak 1976 2009 Who s Who 1977 Person to Person 1953 1961 2012 2022 present Other programs Edit You Are There 1953 1973 Adventure 1953 1955 Youth Takes a Stand 1953 1954 Air Power 1956 1957 The Twentieth Century 1957 1970 CBS Reports 1959 2010 Of Black America 1968 In The News 1971 1986 1997 1998 Razzmatazz 1977 1982 co production with Scholastic Magazines Inc West 57th 1985 1989 America Tonight 1990 1991 20th Century with Mike Wallace 1993 2001 Biography 1996 2005 Off Tenth 1997 Fast Forward 1997 1999 Scandal 1998 2007 BET Nightly News 2001 2005 co production with BET Studios TV Land Legends The 60 Minutes Interviews 2002 2004 co production with TV Land TV Land Moguls 2004 2009 co production with TV Land What s Hot What s Cool 2004 365gay News 2005 2009 co production with Logo TV Secret Lives of Women 2005 2009 co production with CBS Eye Productions and Kaos Entertainment Commander Castle 2006 FutureCar 2007 Eco Tech 2007 co production with Beanfield Productions and Silent Crow Arts Brink 2008 2009 co production with CBS Eye Productions 48 Hours on ID 2010 present Juicy and Jaded 2012 co production with Euphoric Entertainment 60 Minutes Sports 2013 2017 co production with Showtime Networks Brooklyn DA 2013 Whistleblower 2018 2019 co production with CBS Studios The FBI Declassified 2020 present Boiling Point 2021 present co production with BET Studios Indivisible Healing Hate 2022 co production with XG Productions Gilshaine Partner in Crime 2022 co production with Fremantle 60 Minutes More 1996 1997 60 Minutes 2021 2022 11 Minutes 2022 CBS News Radio EditMain article CBS News Radio The branch of CBS News that produces newscasts and features to radio stations is CBS News Radio The radio network is the oldest unit of CBS and traced its roots to the company s founding in 1927 and the news division took shape over the decade that followed The list of CBS News correspondents below includes those reporting on CBS News Radio CBS News Radio produces the oldest daily news show on radio or television the CBS World News Roundup which first aired in 1938 and celebrated its 80th anniversary in 2018 The World News Roundup airs twice every weekday a morning edition is anchored by Steve Kathan and produced by Paul Farry while a late edition is anchored by Dave Barrett and produced by James Hutton The evening Roundup previously known as The World Tonight has aired in its current form since 1956 and has been anchored by Blair Clark Douglas Edwards Dallas Townsend and Christopher Glenn Glenn also anchored the morning Roundup before his death in 2006 The CBS Radio Network provides newscasts at the top of the hour regular updates at 31 minutes past the hour the popular Newsfeeds for affiliates including WCBS and KYW at 35 minutes past the hour and breaking news updates when developments warrant often at 20 and 50 minutes past the hour Skyview Networks handles the distribution CBS Newspath EditCBS Newspath is CBS News satellite news gathering service similar to CNN Newsource Newspath provides national hard news sports highlights regional spot news features and live coverage of major breaking news events for affiliate stations to use in their local news broadcasts The service has a team of domestic and global correspondents and freelance reporters dedicated to reporting for affiliates and offers several different national or international stories fronted by reporters on a daily basis CBS Newspath also relies heavily on local affiliates sharing content Stations will often contribute locally obtained footage that may be of national interest It replaced a similar service CBS News NewsNet Network News Service NNS is a pioneering news organization formed by ABC NewsOne CBS Newspath and Fox NewsEdge CBS News Streaming Network EditMain article CBS News streaming service CBS News Streaming Network is a 24 hour streaming news channel available from the CBS News website and launched on November 4 2014 as CBSN 56 At the time as CBSN the channel features live news from 9 a m to midnight on weekdays The channel makes all of the resources of CBS News available directly on digital platforms with live anchored coverage 15 hours each week It is a first for a U S 24 hour news channel to forgo cable and be available exclusively only online and on smart devices such as smart TV s Apple TV Roku Amazon Fire and others 57 The channel is based at CBS s New York City headquarters 58 News bureaus EditDomestic bureaus Edit New York City Main Headquarters Washington D C Evening News Headquarters White House Bureau Atlanta Chicago Dallas Denver Los Angeles West Coast Bureau Miami San Francisco Kennedy Space CenterForeign bureaus Edit EuropeLondon Rome ParisAfricaJohannesburgMiddle EastIstanbulAsiaKabul Beijing Tokyo BangkokPersonnel EditCurrent television hosts anchors correspondents and reporters Edit New York Main Headquarters Enrique Acevedo Correspondent 60 Minutes Sharyn Alfonsi Correspondent 60 Minutes Jim Axelrod National Correspondent Errol Barnett Transportation Correspondent Nikki Battiste National Correspondent David Begnaud Correspondent CBS This Morning James Brown Special Correspondent Nancy Chen Correspondent John Dickerson Correspondent 60 Minutes Tony Dokoupil Co Anchor CBS Mornings Jericka Duncan Correspondent CBS Mornings 2013 present Anchor CBS Weekend News Sunday Vladimir Duthiers Correspondent Anchor CBS News Streaming Network Jeff Glor Co Anchor CBS Saturday Mornings Anne Marie Green Anchor CBS Morning News 2013 present Anchor CBS News Streaming Network Peter Greenberg Travel Editor Dana Jacobson Co Anchor CBS Saturday Morning Gayle King Co Anchor CBS Mornings 2012 present Dr Jonathan LaPook Chief Medical Correspondent Anthony Mason Culture Correspondent Michelle Miller Co Anchor CBS Saturday Morning Erin Moriarty Correspondent 48 Hours and CBS News Sunday Morning Meg Oliver Correspondent 2006 2009 2015 present Jane Pauley Anchor CBS News Sunday Morning 2016 present Scott Pelley Correspondent 60 Minutes 1989 present Elaine Quijano Anchor CBS News Streaming Network Tanya Rivero Anchor CBS News Streaming Network Mo Rocca Correspondent CBS Sunday Morning Richard Schlesinger Correspondent 48 Hours 1984 present Tracy Smith Correspondent 48 Hours and CBS News Sunday Morning 2000 present Lesley Stahl Co editor 60 Minutes 1972 present Martha Teichner Correspondent CBS News Sunday Morning 1977 present Peter Van Sant Correspondent 48 Hours Anna Werner Consumer and Investigative Correspondent CBS This Morning Bill Whitaker Correspondent 60 Minutes 1984 present Lana Zak Anchor CBS News Streaming Network Washington D C Evening News Headquarters White House Bureau Rita Braver Senior Correspondent CBS News Sunday Morning 1972 present Margaret Brennan State Department Correspondent Anchor Face the Nation 2012 present Nancy Cordes Chief White House Correspondent 2007 present Robert Costa Chief Election and Campaign Correspondent 2022 present Jan Crawford Chief Legal Correspondent 2005 2006 2009 present Major Garrett Chief Washington Correspondent 2011 present Host The Takeout CBS News Streaming Network Catherine Herridge Senior Investigative Correspondent 2019 present Weijia Jiang Senior White House Correspondent Nikole Killion Congressional Correspondent Scott MacFarlane Congressional Correspondent David Martin National Security Correspondent 1983 present Norah O Donnell Anchor CBS Evening News 2019 present Ed O Keefe Senior White House Correspondent Jeff Pegues Chief National Affairs and Justice Correspondent 2013 present Chip Reid National Correspondent Christina Ruffini Foreign Affairs Washington Correspondent Susan Spencer Correspondent 48 Hours and CBS News Sunday Morning 1977 present Ben Tracy Senior National and Environmental Correspondent 2019 present Cecilia Vega Correspondent 60 Minute s 2023 present AtlantaMark Strassmann CorrespondentChicagoCharlie DeMar Reporter CBS Chicago WBBM TV Adriana Diaz Correspondent Anchor CBS Weekend News Saturday DallasKris VanCleave Correspondent Omar Villafranca CorrespondentHoustonJanet Shamlian CorrespondentLos Angeles West Coast Bureau Lee Cowan Correspondent CBS News Sunday Morning 1996 2007 2013 present Carter Evans Correspondent Lilia Luciano Correspondent Jonathan Vigliotti Correspondent Jamie Yuccas Correspondent KCAL TV and KCBS TVMiamiManuel Bojorquez CorrespondentLondonCharlie D Agata Senior Foreign Correspondent 2011 present Ian Lee Foreign Correspondent Elizabeth Palmer Foreign Correspondent 2000 present Mark Phillips Senior Foreign Correspondent 1982 present Roxana Saberi Foreign Correspondent Imtiaz Tyab Foreign CorrespondentRomeSeth Doane Foreign Correspondent Correspondent 60 Minutes Chris Livesay Foreign CorrespondentJohannesburgDebora Patta Foreign CorrespondentIstanbulHolly Williams Foreign Correspondent Current contributors Edit Dr David Agus Medical Contributor Serena Altschul Contributing Correspondent 60 Minutes David Becker Election Law Contributor Luke Burbank Correspondent CBS News Sunday Morning Alina Cho Contributor CBS News Sunday Morning Anderson Cooper Correspondent 60 Minutes Jeff Flake Contributor Nancy Giles Contributor CBS News Sunday Morning Steve Hartman On The Road Correspondent CBS Evening News Alexis Hoag Legal Contributor Hua Hsu Contributor CBS News Sunday Morning Rikki Klieman Legal Analyst Conor Knighton Correspondent CBS News Sunday Morning Ted Koppel Contributor CBS News Sunday Morning Ben Mankiewicz Contributor CBS News Sunday Morning Wynton Marsalis Cultural Correspondent David Pogue Correspondent CBS News Sunday Morning Lonnie Quinn CBS Evening News Weather Contributor Mo Rocca Correspondent CBS News Sunday Morning 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 Mark Whitaker Contributor CBS News Sunday Morning Current radio personalities Edit 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 Steven Portnoy CBS News Radio White House Correspondent Bill Rehkopf CBS News Radio Correspondent Current Newspath correspondents Edit Debra Alfarone Correspondent based in Washington D C 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 Skyler Henry Correspondent based in Washington D C Nichelle Medina Correspondent based in Los Angeles Laura Podesta Correspondent based in New York Anthony Pura Correspondent based in Los Angeles Elise Preston Correspondent based in Los Angeles Femi Redwood Correspondent based in New York Naomi Ruchim Correspondent based in New York Past correspondents Edit Betsy Aaron Jim Acosta now at CNN Jacqueline Adams Martin Agronsky Craig Allen now at WCBS AM in New York City and News 12 Networks Bob Allison David Andelman now at CNN Bob Arnot later at NBC News and MSNBC Dr Jennifer Ashton now at ABC News Thalia Assuras Sharyl Attkisson Jose Diaz Balart now at Telemundo and at NBC News Roberta Baskin later at WJLA TV in Washington D C Nelson Benton Lowell Bergman now retired Derrick Blakley later at WBBM TV Regina Blakely Cynthia Bowers Betty Ann Bowser Ed Bradley 1971 2006 Ray Brady Marvin Breckinridge Patterson Heywood Hale Broun Cecil Brown Terrell Brown now at WLS TV in Chicago Mika Brzezinski now at MSNBC Winston Burdett Ned Calmer Gretchen Carlson later at Fox News Julie Chen host of Big Brother Sylvia Chase Connie Chung retired Lou Cioffi Blair Clark Mandy Clark Michele Clark Jane Clayson 1999 2008 now at NPR Ron Cochran Charles Collingwood Victoria Corderi now at NBC News Katie Couric 2006 2011 later at ABC News now at Yahoo News Walter Cronkite 1950 1980s Frank Currier Don Dahler John Charles Daly Faith Daniels Randy Daniels Priya David Morton Dean retired David Dick Nancy Dickerson Linda Douglass Harold Dow 1972 2010 Bill Downs Kimberly Dozier now at The Daily Beast and CNN Terry Drinkwater Jed Duvall Douglas Edwards Eric Engberg Tom Fenton now retired Giselle Fernandez John Ferrugia now at Rocky Mountain PBS Murray Fromson Monica Gayle now at WJBK now retired Phyllis George Kendis Gibson now at NBC News Michelle Gielan Christopher Glenn Bernard Goldberg now at Fox News and at HBO Sports Julianna Goldman Bianna Golodryga now at CNN Fred Graham Jeff Greenfield now at PBS Bryant Gumbel now at HBO Sports Tony Guida now at CUNY TV Bruce Hall Nanette Hansen John Hart retired Celia Hatton David Henderson George Herman Erica Hill now at HLN Sandy Hill Don Hollenbeck Richard C Hottelet Allan Jackson Rebecca Jarvis now at ABC News Whit Johnson now at ABC News Phil Jones Gordon Joseloff Bernard Kalb retired Marvin Kalb later at NBC News now retired Peter Kalischer H V Kaltenborn Hattie Kauffman Frank Kearns Alexander Kendrick Dana King later at KPIX TV in San Francisco now retired Jeffrey Kofman later at ABC News now retired Steve Kroft now retired Robert Krulwich now at NPR Charles Kuralt Bill Kurtis later at WBBM TV in Chicago now retired John Laurence later at ABC News Mola Lenghi now at ABC News Bill Leonard Larry LeSueur Stan Levey Lara Logan Bill Lynch Vicki Mabrey Sheila MacVicar Maureen Maher Paul Manning Carol Marin now at WMAQ TV Chris Mavridis Lark McCarthy Melissa McDermott Mark McEwen Susan McGinnis Derek McGinty later at WUSA Jim McKay later at CBS Sports and at ABC Sports Bob McKeown now at CBC News Bill McLaughlin Marya McLaughlin Russ Mitchell now at WKYC Edward P Morgan Bruce Morton Bill Moyers now at PBS Roger Mudd Edward R Murrow Reena Ninan Paul K Niven Jr Betty Nguyen later at NBC News and MSNBC now at WPIX in New York City Deborah Norville now weekday anchor Inside Edition Stuart Novins Bill O Reilly later at Fox News now at Newsmax Charles Osgood now retired Ike Pappas Terry Phillips Robert Pierpoint Randall Pinkston 1990 2013 later at Al Jazeera America Byron Pitts now at ABC News Bill Plante 1964 2016 George Polk Ned Potter later at ABC News Dave Price now at WNBC Jane Bryant Quinn Sally Quinn Bert Quint Ed Rabel Dan Rather 1962 2006 now at AXS TV Harry Reasoner 1956 1970 1978 1991 Trish Regan most recently with Fox Business Paula Reid now at CNN Dean Reynolds Frank Reynolds 1953 1965 later at ABC News Jane Robelot now at WYFF TV John Roberts later at CNN now at Fox News Troy Roberts 1993 2017 now at NBC News Norman Robinson now retired Maggie Rodriguez now with WFLA TV in Tampa 59 Andy Rooney 1949 1970 1973 2011 Charlie Rose co anchor CBS News Nightwatch CBS This Morning and Person to Person 1984 1990 2012 2017 Richard Roth 1972 2010 based in Moscow Rome Los Angeles New York and London 60 61 Hughes Rudd Morley Safer co editor 60 Minutes 1964 2016 Marlene Sanders Diane Sawyer now at ABC News Forrest Sawyer later at ABC News and then at MSNBC Stephen Schiff David Schoenbrun Daniel Schorr David Schoumacher later at ABC News then at WJLA TV in Washington D C now retired Barry Serafin later at ABC News now retired Don Hewitt Eric Sevareid Bill Shadel Bernard Shaw later at ABC News then at CNN now retired John Sheahan Gary Shepard William L Shirer Lewis Shollenberger Maria Shriver now at NBC News Daniel Sieberg Bob Simon Bob Sirott Harry Smith now at NBC News Howard K Smith Terence Smith now retired Joan Snyder Bianca Solorzano Hari Sreenivasan now weekend anchor PBS Newshour John Stehr now main anchor at WTHR Alison Stewart now at PBS Hannah Storm now at ESPN and ESPN on ABC Bill Stout Kathleen Sullivan later at E News Rene Syler now at Aspire Lowell Thomas Richard Threlkeld Dallas Townsend Liz Trotta Robert Trout Lem Tucker Meredith Vieira later at NBC News Mireya Villarreal now at ABC News Alex Wagner Richard Wagner Jane Wallace Kelly Wallace Mike Wallace Clarissa Ward now at CNN Chris Wragge now at WCBS TV Nick Young now retired Steve Young Paula Zahn later at CNN now at Investigation Discovery deceasedPresidents of CBS News EditRichard 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 present Co Head Reporting partnerships EditIn 2017 CBS News entered into a content sharing agreement with BBC News respectively replacing similar arrangements with the BBC and ABC News and CBS and Sky News which was partially controlled by 21st Century Fox until 2018 when ownership was then transferred to Comcast The partnership includes the ability to share resources footage and reports and conduct efficient planning of news gathering resources to increase the content of each broadcaster s coverage of world events 62 Although they do not have an official partnership CNN and CBS News share correspondents and contributors such as Anderson Cooper and Dr Sanjay Gupta 63 In 2022 CBS News entered into a content sharing partnership with The Weather Channel where The Weather Channel meteorologists will appear on CBS News programs and CBS News correspondents will appear during live coverage of weather events on The Weather Channel See also EditABC News NBC News CNN Fox News Noticias Univision Independent News Network Bloomberg News CBS News controversies and criticismReferences Edit Alexandra Steigrad April 13 2021 CBS News president Susan Zirinsky reportedly stepping down New York Post Retrieved May 7 2021 CBS News Bios CBS News Retrieved May 6 2019 Snider Mike January 7 2019 Susan Zirinsky named first woman to lead CBS News as David Rhodes departs USA Today Retrieved January 7 2019 Farzan Antonia Noori January 7 2019 After being rocked by sexual misconduct allegations CBS News names its first female president The Washington Post Retrieved January 7 2019 Flint Joe January 6 2019 CBS News Names Susan Zirinsky as Its First Female President The Wall Street Journal Retrieved January 7 2019 DeMarche Edmund January 7 2019 CBS names Susan Zirinsky to lead news division will replace David Rhodes reports Fox News Retrieved January 7 2019 Johnson Alex January 6 2019 David Rhodes leaving as head of scandal scarred CBS News NBC News Retrieved January 7 2019 Johnson Ted April 15 2021 CBS Combines News And TV Stations Taps Neeraj Khemlani And Wendy McMahon To Lead New Division Deadline Retrieved May 7 2021 Neeraj Khemlani CBS News Retrieved May 7 2021 a b c d e Dunning John On the Air The Encyclopedia of Old Time Radio New York Oxford University Press Inc 1998 ISBN 978 0 19 507678 3 hardcover revised edition of Tune In Yesterday 1976 News on the Air dustjacket NYPL Digital Gallery Retrieved May 25 2014 Dan Rather Accepting the Paul White Award Radio Television News Directors Association September 20 1997 Archived from the original on August 6 2007 Retrieved August 6 2007 Radio Television Digital News Association Conference amp Exhibition September 20 1997 Retrieved 2014 05 25 Paul White Dies Radio Newsman The New York Times July 10 1955 Lewis W Shollenberger Dies The Washington Post March 18 1994 Retrieved April 26 2017 The New York Times Obituary Edmund Chester 75 Ex Directorate C B S October 16 1973 p 46 on nytimes com In All His Glory the Life And Times of William S Paley Salley Bedell Smith Random House New York 2002 p 18 ISBN 978 0 307 78671 5 William S Paley CBS Edmund A Chester on books google Beyond the Black and White TV Asian and Latin American Spectacle in Cold War America Han Benjamin M Rutgers University Press 2022 La Cadena de las Americas Edmund Chester William S Paley Cold War diplomacy on Google Books Roosevelt Franklin D Executive Order 8840 Establishing the Office of Coordinator of Inter American Affairs July 30 1941 Online by Gerhard Peters and John T Woolley The American Presidency Project University of California Santa Barbara Time Radio La Cadena June 1 1942 William S Paley La Cadena de las Americas on Content time com Dissonant Divas In Chicana Music The Limits of La Onda Archived January 9 2020 at the Wayback Machine Deborah R Vargas University of Minnesota Press Minneapolis 2012 ISBN 978 0 8166 7316 2 p 152 153 Edmund Chester and La Cadena De Las Americas on google books com Beyond the Black and White TV Asian and Latin American Spectacle in Cold War America Han Benjamin M Rutgers University Press 2022 La Cadena de las Americas Edmund Chester William S Paley La cadena de Las Americas on Google Books Roosevelt Franklin D Executive Order 8840 Establishing the Office of Coordinator of Inter American Affairs July 30 1941 Online by Gerhard Peters and John T Woolley The American Presidency Project University of California Santa Barbara Everett Holles 1944 WCBW Newscast Archived from the original on September 6 2013 Retrieved January 6 2018 The New York Times Obituary Edmund Chester 75 Ex Directorate C B S October 16 1973 p 46 on nytimes com As It Happened A Memoir William S Paley Doubleday New York 1979 p 375 Edmund Chester Director of CBS News on books google The New York Times November 4 1949 pg 50 United Nations in Action Photograph of Edmund Chester Larry LaSueur Lyman Bryson at the interim headquarters of the UN General Assembly Lake Success NY March 8 1949 ongettyimages com United Nations In Action Peabody Award 1949 on peabodyawards com The Origins of Television News in America by Mike Conway Chapter The Birth of CBS TV News Columbia s Ambitious Experiment at the Advent of U S Commercial Television Peter Lang Publishing New York NY Johnson Ted September 8 2021 CBS News Launches New Production Entity See It Now Studios Headed By Susan Zirinsky Deadline Retrieved June 22 2022 a b c Barr Jeremy March 30 2022 Turmoil at CBS News over Trump aide Mick Mulvaney s punditry gig The Washington Post ISSN 0190 8286 Retrieved March 31 2022 Hill Michael P CBS debuts Overnight News with familiar look newscaststudio com Retrieved March 15 2020 Leise Ernest Agony at Nightwatch CBS s Great Night Hope The Washington Post Retrieved March 18 2020 Pelley Scott Evening News marks golden anniversary of 30 minute broadcast CBS News Retrieved March 15 2020 CBS This Morning Saturday viacomcbsexpress com Retrieved March 15 2020 Steinberg Brian May 2 2016 CBS Will Revamp CBS Evening News on Weekends Variety Retrieved March 15 2020 48 Hours Kicks Off Its 25th Full Season With a Fresh New Line Up of Crime and Justice Stories that Make a Difference September 19 2012 Archived from the original on October 8 2016 Retrieved January 6 2018 Malone Michael August 10 2018 CBS Celebrates 40 Years of CBS Sunday Morning With Prime Special broadcastingandcable com Retrieved March 15 2020 Face the Nation By the numbers CBS News Retrieved March 15 2020 The Very First 60 Minutes CBS News Retrieved March 15 2020 CBS News Nightwatch 1982 1992 IMDb Retrieved March 18 2020 Schneider Michael Retro CBS morning shows through the years Variety Retrieved March 18 2020 Ariens Chris CBS News Up to the Minute to End Adweek Retrieved March 18 2020 Hill Michael P CBS debuts Overnight News with familiar look newscaststudio com Retrieved March 18 2020 The CBS Morning News 1963 1987 IMDb Retrieved March 18 2020 Boyer Peter J September 29 1987 CBS Morning Program Canceled After 9 Months The New York Times Retrieved March 18 2020 CBS Drops Saturday Cartoons for News Chicago Tribune Retrieved March 18 2020 Pelley Scott Evening News marks golden anniversary of 30 minute broadcast CBS News Retrieved March 22 2020 West 57th TV Series 1985 1989 IMDb Retrieved March 22 2020 48 Hours 1988 present IMDb Retrieved March 22 2020 60 Minutes II danratherjournalist org Retrieved March 22 2020 Rosenberg Howard CBS America Tonight Feels Like Old News Los Angeles Times Retrieved March 22 2020 Street Stories on CBS South Florida Sun Sentinel Retrieved March 22 2020 Eye to Eye with Connie Chung IMDb Retrieved March 22 2020 Public Eye with Bryant Gumbel 1997 IMDb Retrieved March 22 2020 CBS LAUNCHES INTERACTIVE STREAMING NEWS NETWORK CBSN THE FIRST LIVE ANCHORED NEWS NETWORK ACROSS ALL LEADING DIGITAL PLATFORMS CBS Corporation Retrieved April 1 2019 CBSN About the streaming network CBS News Retrieved January 6 2018 About CBS Corporation CBS Corporation Retrieved April 1 2019 Maggie Rodriguez named co host of Daytime NewsChannel 8 WFLA TV February 16 2021 Retrieved February 23 2021 Richard Roth CBS News Retrieved October 18 2019 Ariens Chris September 30 2010 CBS News London Bureau Cuts Staff TV Newser Retrieved October 18 2019 CBS News BBC Strike Content Sharing Partnership The Hollywood Reporter Retrieved July 13 2017 Gough Paul J December 15 2006 Gupta makes office visits to CBS News The Hollywood Reporter Retrieved November 3 2021 External links EditOfficial website Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title CBS News amp oldid 1141195339, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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