The Free Press’ Bari Weiss, pictured interviewing Sen. Ted Cruz, R-Texas, at an occasion in January, has been named the brand new editor-in-chief of CBS Information.
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Leigh Vogel/Getty Photos
Paramount introduced Monday that it’s buying The Free Press — a provocative information web site recognized for criticizing mainstream media and left-leaning “woke” tradition — and putting in the publication’s co-founder, Bari Weiss, as the brand new editor-in-chief of CBS Information.
“As of at this time, I’m editor-in-chief of CBS Information, working with new colleagues on the applications which have impacted American tradition for generations — reveals like 60 Minutes and Sunday Morning — and shaping how hundreds of thousands of People learn, pay attention, watch, and, most significantly, perceive the information within the twenty first century,” Weiss wrote in a Monday letter to readers.
It is a important step within the meteoric rise of the 41-year-old journalist and entrepreneur, who spent years as an op-ed editor on the Wall Avenue Journal and New York Instances earlier than her emphatic disavowal of conventional media organizations.

Weiss left the Instances in 2020 after many within the newsroom expressed outrage over its publication of a controversial op-ed by Sen. Tom Cotton, R-Arkansas, during which he referred to as for a army response to protests over George Floyd’s homicide. In a prolonged resignation letter, Weiss accused her colleagues of harassment and argued that the Instances was too influenced by its left-leaning critics on-line.
Weiss, alongside together with her sister Suzy Weiss and her partner Nellie Bowles, began The Free Press as a e-newsletter (initially titled Widespread Sense) the next yr, calling it a “new media firm … constructed on the beliefs that when had been the bedrock of nice American journalism: honesty, doggedness, and fierce independence.”
The Free Press developed right into a full-fledged media firm in 2022, increasing its choices into podcasts and dwell occasions. Its investigations and commentaries largely scrutinize political and cultural points like gender-affirming well being care, COVID-19 lockdowns, DEI applications and J.Okay. Rowling’s anti-trans views.
It is the place then-NPR editor Uri Berliner revealed his essay arguing the general public radio community had misplaced America’s belief (he joined The Free Press as a senior editor mere months later). The publication, like Weiss herself, can also be recognized for its staunchly pro-Israel views, particularly within the wake of the Oct. 7, 2023, Hamas assaults and Israel’s ensuing struggle in Gaza.
The Free Press has constructed a large following. It has grown its subscriber base by 86% over the previous yr to a complete of 1.5 million individuals, in accordance with Paramount, and is backed by a slew of huge names, together with enterprise capitalist Marc Andreessen, hedge fund tycoon Paul Marshall and former Starbucks CEO Howard Schultz.

“As proud as we’re of the 1.5 million subscribers who’ve joined beneath the banner of The Free Press — and we’re astonished at that quantity — it is a nation with 340 million individuals. We wish our work to achieve extra of them, as shortly as potential,” Weiss wrote on Monday. “This once-in-a-lifetime alternative permits us to do this.”
The Free Press says it is going to retain its personal model and operations. And, as NPR has reported, Weiss — who has no broadcasting expertise — seems unlikely to run the information division at CBS Information on a day-to-day foundation.
However she’s going to play a key function in shaping the community’s editorial course, at a time when it’s seeking to increase its attraction amongst right-leaning viewers. When Skydance Media acquired Paramount, CBS’ dad or mum firm, in July — a merger that required Trump administration approval — it promised to embrace a variety of political and ideological viewpoints.
“Bari is a confirmed champion of unbiased, principled journalism, and I’m assured her entrepreneurial drive and editorial imaginative and prescient will invigorate CBS Information,” Skydance Media CEO David Ellison mentioned in an announcement, calling the transfer “a part of Paramount’s larger imaginative and prescient to modernize content material and the way in which it connects … to audiences world wide.”
This is what else to find out about Weiss.
What’s Weiss’ background?
Weiss grew up in a Jewish household in Pittsburgh and had her Bat Mitzvah on the Tree of Life Synagogue — lengthy earlier than the 2018 mass capturing that made it the location of the deadliest antisemitic assault in U.S. historical past.
Weiss attended Columbia College (the place, she says, she dated future Saturday Evening Dwell star Kate McKinnon). As a sophomore, Weiss was a part of a bunch of Jewish college students who challenged the college to answer what they perceived as anti-Israel mental intimidation in its Mideast research division.
Whereas a college panel in the end concluded there was no ongoing drawback within the division, the incident gained nationwide prominence and prompted Columbia to revise its course of for reviewing complaints in opposition to school.

It was additionally a formative expertise for Weiss, who grew to become the founding editor of a campus journal devoted to politics, tradition and Jewish affairs — and went on to jot down a guide referred to as Find out how to Struggle Anti-Semitism, which was revealed in 2019.
After school, Weiss labored as a senior editor on the on-line Jewish life journal Pill earlier than becoming a member of the Wall Avenue Journal in 2013 as an op-ed and guide evaluation editor. She left in 2017, after President Trump took workplace. She later advised Cause that she left the job partially due to her employer’s resistance to political op-eds that had been “too anti-Trump.”

“It was heartbreaking for me to see individuals who I assumed that we kind of shared basic values making peace with a candidate who, I imply, simply from essentially the most primary perspective ran a marketing campaign on denigrating and demonizing the weakest individuals in our tradition,” Weiss advised the journal.
The New York Instances employed Weiss as a workers editor and author within the opinion part in 2017, as a part of its said efforts to broaden ideological variety in its op-ed pages, then led by James Bennet.
“I’ve gone within the final yr from being essentially the most progressive individual at The Wall Avenue Journal, to being essentially the most right-winged individual at The New York Instances,” Weiss advised the Pittsburgh Jewish Chronicle later that yr.
Lots of Weiss’ Instances columns garnered controversy — like a 2017 protection of cultural appropriation, a 2018 protection of comic Aziz Ansari after he confronted #MeToo accusations, a chunk questioning whether or not sexual assault allegations in opposition to then-Supreme Courtroom justice nominee Brett Kavanaugh must be disqualifying and a 2018 assault on liberal intolerance titled “We’re All Fascists Now.”
However the largest backlash got here in June 2020, after the Instances ran the op-ed by Cotton — the Republican senator — calling for the army to answer Black Lives Matter protests with an “overwhelming present of pressure.” A whole bunch of Instances staffers signed a letter protesting the piece, which an editor’s observe later mentioned “fell in need of our requirements and mustn’t have been revealed.” Bennet resigned inside days.
Weiss, who defended the op-ed’s publication, tweeted concerning the fallout as a “civil struggle inside The New York Instances between the (largely younger wokes) [and] the (largely 40+) liberals” — a characterization that lots of her colleagues pushed again on. In July 2020, Weiss resigned in a virtually 1,500-word letter to the paper’s writer, citing “bullying by colleagues” and an “intolerant surroundings.”
“The paper of report is, increasingly more, the report of these dwelling in a distant galaxy, one whose issues are profoundly faraway from the lives of most individuals,” she wrote. “These days, standing up for precept on the paper doesn’t win plaudits. It places a goal in your again.”

Bari Weiss walks backstage at a dwell occasion in Los Angeles in September 2023.
Francine Orr/Los Angeles Instances through Getty Photos
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Francine Orr/Los Angeles Instances through Getty Photos
How does Weiss establish politically?
The Free Press frames its protection as anti-woke and has made its title by criticizing mainstream establishments and specialists in industries from media to public well being. However it has been comparatively measured in its view of the Trump administration, often publishing crucial items and most lately objecting to its “coercion” of ABC to droop Jimmy Kimmel’s present.
Whilst Weiss has made a reputation for herself partially by lambasting progressive tradition, her personal political opinions have been considerably exhausting to pin down.
Through the years, she has described herself as a “radical centrist” and a “Jewish, center-left-on-most-things-person.” In a 2024 TED Speak, she mentioned she voted for Republican presidential candidate Mitt Romney in a single election, and Democratic candidates Hillary Clinton and Joe Biden in others.

She went on to characterize her ideological views as pro-choice, pro-Israel and pro-gay marriage, “a lot in order that I am truly in a single myself.” (Weiss married Bowles, a former Instances tech reporter, in 2021 — the identical yr they cofounded The Free Press — they usually have two kids collectively.)
However she additionally acknowledged that she is a frequent goal of criticism from fellow liberals.
“I’m, or no less than … I was, thought of a standard-issue liberal,” Weiss mentioned in the identical speech. “And but one way or the other, in our most mental and prestigious areas, lots of the concepts I simply outlined and others like them, have develop into provocative or controversial, which is known as a well mannered method of claiming unwelcome, past the pale, even bigoted or racist.”
Why is she returning to legacy media?
In Weiss’ announcement letter, she acknowledges that many individuals could also be questioning: “Why flee The New York Instances solely to move again into one other legacy establishment?”
She says that whereas she was “raised to be a believer within the establishments that constructed America and that made sense of it,” she present in 2020 that “an important public conversations had been taking place outdoors of these locations.”

Issues look totally different 5 years later, Weiss writes, “because the gatekeepers of the mainstream have failed one after one other” and new voices — together with podcasters and influencers — have come to dominate the media panorama.
Weiss paints an image of two more and more highly effective extremes — “an America-loathing far left” and a “history-erasing far proper” — and says nearly all of “good, politically blended, pragmatic People” who fall someplace in between aren’t being nicely served. She pitches Paramount’s embrace of The Free Press as a option to change that.
“The values that we have hammered out right here over time — journalism primarily based in curiosity and honesty, a tradition of wholesome disagreement, our shared perception in America’s promise — now have the chance to go very, very huge,” Weiss writes.
In a observe to CBS Information staffers obtained by Axios on Monday, Weiss laid out the ten ideas that she says have and can proceed to information her journalism.
These embrace holding “each American political events to equal scrutiny,” embracing “a large spectrum of views and voices in order that the viewers can take care of the most effective arguments on all sides of a debate” and respecting “our viewers sufficient to inform the reality plainly — wherever it leads.”