For nearly a century, CBS News Radio served as the gold standard of broadcast journalism. In many cases, it was the voice America turned to when the world stopped making sense. Now, that voice is preparing to go silent.
On Friday, May 22nd, CBS News Radio will broadcast its final news report. It ends 99 years of broadcast excellence in the process. The network’s shutdown has sent shockwaves through the radio industry, leaving behind a community of journalists, executives, and staffers grappling with grief, frustration, and lingering questions about who — or what — is really to blame.
Many have pointed to new CBS News Editor-in-Chief Bari Weiss as the person responsible for the network’s demise. However, high-level sources shared with Barrett Media that Weiss can be labeled as “a convenient scapegoat” for the move. And that it ultimately was not her idea or her decision to cease operations.
The real culprits, it seems, are far more systemic — a convergence of economic pressure, corporate short-sightedness, and an industry-wide failure of imagination.
Those who built CBS News Radio into what it became aren’t staying quiet. Former executives and newsroom leaders who shaped the network’s editorial identity and business model are speaking out. And what they’re saying paints a portrait of an institution that didn’t have to die.
Their words carry the weight of people who watched something extraordinary get built, sustained it through disasters and pandemics and the relentless churn of a changing media landscape, and now must reckon with its absence.
“Stunned, Disappointed, and Sad”
The emotional weight of the shutdown hit former CBS Audio Network Vice President and General Manager Craig Swagler hard. “Stunned, disappointed,” said Swagler. “And sad for the industry as a whole, and for my former colleagues at CBS News.”
Yet Swagler isn’t willing to let the story end there. He believes two uncomfortable truths exist simultaneously — that audience fragmentation is real, and that leadership failed to meet the moment. “We talk about it all the time about audience attrition, about the digital world taking away from the traditional radio audience,” Swagler said, “and the amount of content that’s out there to consume news and all content as a whole. It’s a lot.”
Still, he pushes back hard on the idea that the numbers didn’t justify the network’s survival. “There were 700 radio stations,” said Swagler. “And there was over 20,000,000 people that were engaging on a weekly basis. That is a huge, unbelievable number.” He argues that reaching 20 million people weekly should be financially viable for any media organization. And that the failure to make it so reflects a deep deficit of entrepreneurial thinking at the highest levels. “One has to ask themselves, well, why can’t that be a financially viable model?” Swagler said. “Why is that not valuable for any media organization simply on the basis of being able to reach that many people? Because a lot of their other platforms don’t do that.”
Swagler also pushes back on the notion that CBS’s stated reasoning — changing listener habits and difficult economic conditions — tells the whole story. He acknowledges those factors are real. He just doesn’t think they’re sufficient justification. Innovation, he argues, was always the answer. And the absence of it at the leadership level is what ultimately sealed the network’s fate. “Understanding the statement that CBS put out that it was changing listener habits and economic conditions, and I’m paraphrasing here,” said Swagler. “Both of those things, I believe, are true. It’s not that those aren’t true things. But you still have to look at there were 700 radio stations.”
The former CBS Radio Vice President of News, Harvey Nagler, shared that same disbelief. “Obviously surprised and disappointed,” said Nagler, “because I didn’t think there was a legitimate reason for doing so.” He points to the network’s massive audience reach as a marketing asset. Paramount Skydance — the company now overseeing CBS — should’ve recognized it as invaluable, in his opinion. Rather than viewing the radio network as a liability, Nagler argues, it should have seen it as a megaphone. “It was a massive marketing opportunity,” Nagler said, “as it has been all through the years, to promote CBS and its programs. Now that Skydance is on the verge of buying other platforms, it would have been a great opportunity to continue to market them, if for no other reason.”
The perspective of former CBS News Radio Executive Editor Jennifer Brown carries the weight of someone who helped build the newsroom from the inside. And then watched it dissolve from the outside. “I have really big feelings about all of this,” said Brown. “I grew up there.” She frames CBS News Radio not just as a news service, but as a cultural institution. One that helped guide the national conversation long before social media claimed that role for itself. “I think CBS News Radio was like the lighthouse,” Brown said. “Everyone knew it was live and would have the latest information.”
Brown recalls interns and even television journalists stopping what they were doing to listen to CBS News Radio’s lineup. That influence extended well beyond the radio audience itself. “I feel like CBS News Radio helped guide a lot of people on the news of the day,” said Brown. “Whether you were in your car or whether you were also a news creator or content creator.” She adds that the network’s reach extended into pop culture in ways that often went unacknowledged. People didn’t just listen. They learned. They developed a shared vocabulary for the events shaping their lives.
A Legacy Built on Unrelenting Excellence
The record CBS News Radio assembled across decades of broadcasting is, by any measure, extraordinary. Nagler points to the network’s consistent recognition from the RTDNA as proof of that excellence. And as a rebuttal to anyone who might dismiss the network’s significance. “We won literally over 50 Radio Television News Directors awards,” said Nagler, “including seven years in a row for overall excellence from 2007 to 2013.” Those wins didn’t come in a vacuum. They came in direct competition with ABC, NPR, and every other major player in the network news space.
Swagler adds texture to just how dominant the network’s award track record truly was. “In the 10 years that I was there, there was a time in 2023 where that newscast award was won 11 times consecutively in a row,” Swagler said. “That’s an unbelievable, unprecedented recognition of just the outstanding work that happens 24/7 every hour, live, nonstop.” Overall excellence recognition came 16 times between 2000 and 2024 — a staggering achievement for any organization, let alone one that Swagler says was consistently operating lean. “They were constantly punching above their weight for the size of the organization,” said Swagler. “It spoke again to the people. The people of that organization were amazing in what they do every day.”
Former CBS Radio President and CEO Dan Mason puts that legacy in its broadest historical context. “The legacy is the brand that they have created over 100 years with all of the great journalists over the years,” said Mason. “It has been said that CBS News Radio actually taught those involved the meaning of journalism, and they sure had the people to prove it.”
Former CBS Radio Chief Operating Officer Scott Herman doesn’t mince words when describing where CBS News Radio stood in the landscape of American media. “CBS Radio News was at the top of the Mount Rushmore of News,” said Herman. “The top of the hour newscast, CBS World News Roundup, that jingle that everyone knew, Charles Osgood, Edward R. Murrow, Dallas Townsend, Dan Rather — the list goes on and on.” Herman adds that the network’s gravitational pull extended well beyond radio’s traditional boundaries. “TV’s best newspeople wanted to contribute and wanted to be on the radio,” said Herman. “There were other very good network news and syndicated products, but only one CBS Radio News.”
Nagler traces that legacy all the way back to its origin — March 13, 1938, when Edward R. Murrow anchored live from Vienna as Adolf Hitler marched into Austria. It was the first time America heard live coverage of a world-altering event as it actually unfolded. “For the first time, America heard live coverage of Adolf Hitler’s march into Austria,” said Nagler. “And then two years later, the London Blitz.” From those wartime dispatches to COVID-19 briefings, the mission never wavered: get it right, get it out, and be the voice people could trust every hour on the hour.
The network’s editorial philosophy matched that ambition at every turn. “The thing I always said in the newsroom was that I don’t want to be first with the story,” said Nagler. “I want to be right with the story.”
He recalls a telling episode. Other networks reported that Bob Hope had died. The report was based on an erroneous announcement from the floor of the House of Representatives. CBS News Radio paused. 20 minutes later, the story collapsed entirely. Hope was still alive. “It was that commitment to detail and objectivity,” Nagler said. That discipline, he argues, was the network’s defining characteristic — and it held across decades of major breaking news coverage.
Brown remembers those same standards holding firm through some of the most difficult stories she’s ever covered. “The journalism standards that we held were very high,” said Brown. “We had uncomfortable discussions every day. We had phones open so our stations could call us and question something we did. Or ask us about a word choice.”
That culture of accountability was structural. It ran through every layer of the organization and produced journalism that people trusted precisely because they could feel the rigor behind it. She points to the network’s COVID coverage as perhaps the defining chapter of its final years. It was a period when CBS News Radio’s live, around-the-clock format proved irreplaceable. “Having that live element, you don’t have that necessarily on YouTube or Instagram the same way that you can count on it at top and bottom,” Brown said.
What the Industry Loses — and What Comes Next
The shutdown isn’t just a business story. The people who lived it understand exactly what’s at stake for the broader media ecosystem. Brown fears the cultural cost most deeply. “Everything is very siloed in bubbles now,” said Brown. “Everybody lives in their own little bubbles. They have their news sources that reinforce their ideas. And we’re getting further and further from the actual truth of it all.”
CBS News Radio, she argues, was one of the last institutions consistently cutting across those bubbles. It reached people in their cars. In their kitchens. In the in-between moments of daily life, when they weren’t actively seeking out news that confirmed what they already believed.
Swagler worries about the knock-on effects for the networks that remain standing. The challenge, he says, isn’t simply filling the void — it’s justifying the investment required to fill it well. “The value proposition that the remaining entities out there are going to have to find a way, if they are going to survive, is an investment in how uniquely they are providing this that others aren’t,” said Swagler. He’s candid about his doubts regarding whether current leadership across the industry has the appetite for that kind of commitment. “I have serious concerns that those other entities that are still standing, in their management and their executives, are really invested in that for the long term,” Swagler said. The question isn’t just who steps into the void — it’s whether anyone stepping into it will bring the resources and the vision the moment demands.
Nagler holds out genuine hope that someone will rise to meet that challenge. “I think there are going to be other companies that step into the void and try to recreate what CBS was,” said Nagler. “I’d be naive to think affiliates are just not going to have a network news service.” He believes the democratic need is too urgent and the market reality too clear for the industry to simply walk away from network radio news altogether. “It’s a very small world that we live in today,” Nagler said, “and things that happen in far-off places matter to the person in the smallest cities in our country.” Objective, reliable journalism — the kind CBS News Radio provided for generations — isn’t a luxury. It’s infrastructure. And when it disappears, the damage spreads far beyond the people who depended on it most directly.
But for those who gave years — in some cases, entire careers — to CBS News Radio, the grief runs deeper than any market analysis can reach. Brown captures it most plainly. “It almost feels like a family member dying,” said Brown, “but this is like a big swath of family, because all these voices are going to go away.” The people who filled those voices, she says, weren’t just employees. They were journalists who cared deeply about getting it right, who showed up through Katrina and 9/11 and COVID and every breaking story in between, who held the standard even when holding it was hard. “That makes me really sad,” Brown said.
Nagler frames the loss in the starkest possible terms. “It’s a very sad day for journalism and for democracy when such an objective, reliable source that is still heard by 22 million listeners is going away,” said Nagler. “It’s not good for democracy when the lights get turned off on journalism, which is really important to our society.”
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Garrett Searight is Barrett Media’s News Editor, which includes writing daily news stories, features, and opinion columns. He joined Barrett Media in 2022 after a decade leading several radio brands in several formats, as well as a 5-year stint working in local television. In addition to his work with Barrett Media, he is a radio and TV play-by-play broadcaster. Reach out to him at Garrett@BarrettMedia.com.


