CBS Evening News anchor Tony Dokoupil has spoken out about his relationship with Editor-in-Chief Bari Weiss and Paramount CEO David Ellison as the network’s rebranding continues to face scrutiny. He maintained that he can exercise independence, while drawing a comparison between eroding media trust and the “yogurt industry.”
Dokoupil, 45, took over the flagship evening broadcast in December, just weeks after Weiss assumed CBS News’ top editorial role. The leadership shakeup followed Ellison’s acquisition of Paramount, CBS’s parent company.
Since then, Weiss has vowed to transform the storied network, promising “comprehensive and fair” coverage and a turnaround in sagging ratings driven by “viral” moments. Critics, however, argue the shift has tilted coverage in favor of the Trump administration — an allegation she has denied, even as Ellison’s ties to the president draw attention.
Dokoupil, a former morning show host and the poster child of Weiss’ overhaul, has found himself at the center of the controversy. In a new interview with The Wall Street Journal, he offered his side of the story.
The anchor said he has broad latitude to challenge his boss, who has described herself as a “radical centrist” and embraced the moniker “Zionist fanatic.”
“When it comes to Bari Weiss, she’s the editor in chief, she runs a 9 a.m. meeting and has lots of ideas,” he said. “When we like the idea, we use it. If we don’t and if it doesn’t work for our show, we don’t.”
He also maintained that Ellison — who recently hosted President Trump for a private dinner as Paramount sought federal approval to acquire Warner Bros. Discovery — has never interfered in his editorial decisions.
“I’ve never met David Ellison,” Dokoupil said. “He’s never had a comment about my show. He’s never called me to complain about coverage. If he tried to, it wouldn’t have an impact.”
One person who does influence him, Dokoupil said, is his wife, MS NOW correspondent Katy Tur.
“If there’s any whiff of fakery or performance or inauthenticity, my lovely wife will let me know about it,” he said. “And I’ll get back to reality.”
His remarks come as critics have accused him of uncritically carrying out Weiss’s directives and showing on-air bias, particularly in coverage of the Trump administration and Israel.
According to The New York Times, in January, Weiss personally rewrote his first-ever on-air script at the last minute. The segment then unraveled due to a teleprompter malfunction. “First day, big problems here,” he told viewers.
In February, after the U.S. launched its war against Iran, Dokoupil interviewed Douglas Murray, a prominent conservative commentator and outspoken supporter of Israel — a booking that reportedly raised concerns about blurring the line between opinion and straight news.
In another broadcast, he aired a lighthearted segment on Secretary of State Marco Rubio and a wave of memes about him. At the close, he said: “Marco Rubio, we salute you. You’re the ultimate Florida Man.”
He later told the Journal the remark was intended as a joke — but said he would not repeat it.
Those incidents, along with others, have sparked pushback among some in the newsroom. Earlier this year, multiple current and former CBS News staffers torched Dokoupil in a Vanity Fair article, calling him a “useful idiot” who is “deeply lacking in self-awareness.”
A network spokesperson defended him, describing Dokoupil as “an exceptional talent and experienced journalist,” while dismissing the report as based on “old and false rumors.”
Despite the criticism, Dokoupil said he remains focused on reshaping the broadcast, telling the Journal: “The mission is to try to change the course of history at this particular broadcast.”
He pointed to declining public trust in mainstream media, a concern Weiss has also raised.
“I think all journalism has a trust problem,” he said. “If we’re the yogurt industry, and 70% of people didn’t trust yogurt, it would be a crisis. I think it’s a crisis for journalism.”
CBS Evening News continues to trail its competitors, though ratings rose 3 percent year over year in May, according to the Journal, citing Nielsen data.



