S
usan Ziri nsky, 67, the new
president of CBS News, was in
her office at the CBS Broadcast
Center recently rummaging through
her illustrious past, which happens to
constitute a ri ch history of broadcast
journalism, and the world itself. There’s
a poster-si ze photo of Tank Man in
Tiananmen Square, where Ziri nsky
oversaw the coverage when CBS had
the only live broadcast of the protests
by a maj or network. On a console,
there was Dan Rather’s typewriter from
the White House. Framed on the
wall, Edward R. Murrow’s coat hanger.
Zirinsky crouched down and pulled
out an ancient manila folder from a
filing drawer. Inside was Walter
Cronkite’s original Evening News scri pt
from the night of Richard Nixon’s
resignation. “He tossed it in the trash,”
she said, “so I just took it out.”
The News Business
By Joe Pompeo
others, Zirinsky’s appointment
can seem like ancestor worship. “One
might argue,” said a veteran of
the network, “that what CBS needs
right now is somebody who really
unders tands the future, as opposed to
someone who’s a throwback to the
past. For a network in third pla ce for
30 years in the evening, and for as
long as the morning show has existed,
is she the best person to take a hard
look and change what is necessary?”
One question is whether there’s
something fundamental about CBS
News that means it’s destined to
remain a third-place proposition, or
whether Zirinsky can move the needle
with her recent talent shake-ups at
CBS This Morning, where Gayle King
is now even more of a centerpiece,
and the CBS Evening News, which moves
to Washington, D.C., this fall with
Norah O’Donnell, following her July 15
debut as anchor. “I wouldn’t put
something on the air that I didn’t think
was going to work,” said Zirinsky.
“As a journalist and a producer, you
don’t put a show on that you don’t
think will work. What’s the measure
of success? To me, it’s producing a
solid program in the tradition of CBS’s
golden legacy. Even though I want
the numbers to increase, as we move
forward, numbers”—meaning
traditional television ratings—“will be
increasingly less important than the
core value of what we are providing the
viewer, or the mobile listener, or
whatever the device. The measure of
success will change along with the
platforms we appear on.” Take King’s
blockbuster R. Kelly interview from
March. “When there’s an R. Kelly, and
we start putting bits out online,” said
Zirinsky, “at the end of the day, there
were 40 million people who saw that.
So do I want the numbers to grow?
You’re damn straight I do, but that’s not
Zirinsky, aka “Z,” who’s been at CBS
since Watergate, ascended to her job
after a peri od of radical discontinuity.
In less than 12 months, a cascade of
#MeToo scandals brought down
CBS titans Les Moonves, Jeff Fager, and
Charlie Rose. Ziri nsky had worked
alo ngside Moonves and Fager for years.
She consi dered them fri ends. “I felt
sad. Those weren’t the people I knew,”
she said, adding that she hasn’t talked
to them since. Can those relationships
be repaired? Zirinsky paused,
carefully considering her response.
“I think it’s difficult.”
Ziri nsky’s appointment is, undeniably,
a restoration. And for many of her
charges, that is exactly what was
required. “Z running the news div isi on
is the best thing that’s happened to
that group of people in a very lo ng time,”
one of my CBS sources said. But to
The Legend of CBS News
Susan Zirinsky lived past glories—
but can she restore them?
Gayle King, Susan Zirinsky, and
Norah O’Donnell.