
Photo illustration: The Intercept / Photo: Michael Tessier/CBS News via Getty Images
Itâs the 6:30 p.m. ET broadcasting block on Wednesday, and Tony Dokoupil, the shiny new host of âCBS Evening News,â is explaining away the killing of three journalists in Gaza even as a ceasefire deal apparently remains in place.
That does not seem to matter much to Dokoupil, who before landing this plush gig at Bari Weissâs CBS News was best known for hassling the writer Ta-Nehisi Coates for his âextremistâ belief that apartheid is morally wrong.
Dokoupil opens the news read already at a distance: âTurning to one of the deadliest days in Gaza since Octoberâs ceasefire between Hamas and Israel, an Israeli airstrike today killed three journalists.â
He continues by accepting, without skepticism, Israelâs framing of what should be a clear violation of the terms of the ceasefire: âIsrael said it was targeting a group operating a drone affiliated with Hamas,â Dokoupil says. âOne of those journalists, Abed Shaat, has worked for CBS as a photographer. His colleagues described the 30-year-old as a brave person doing dangerous work. He was married just two weeks ago.â
An Israeli airstrike killed 11 people in Gaza on Wednesday, including three journalists, the territoryâs civil defense agency said. One of those killed, Abed Shaat, had worked for years as a photographer for CBS News and other outlets. https://t.co/8wPvo9RSf7 pic.twitter.com/USxQRscATg
â CBS Evening News with Tony Dokoupil (@CBSEveningNews) January 22, 2026
Itâs a blink-and-you-miss-it sleight of hand that tells you exactly where the priorities of the news regime at CBS lie. First, thereâs the tone, which exudes calmness about the fact that a co-worker has been killed doing his job. Dokoupil states that Shaat died in an Israeli airstrike targeting âa group operating a drone affiliated with Hamas,â the implication being that Shaat was either working with Hamas or was a little too cozy with Hamas, a means of justifying his killing. Finally, Dokoupil uses the distancing language of â[Shaatâs] colleaguesâ â making clear that the host of âCBS Evening Newsâ is certainly not among them.
It was just the latest low for a host who has struggled to find his footing and his audience. Dokoupilâs viewership numbers have been in the tank, with the number of eyeballs down 23 percent in his first five days on air, compared to a year ago with anchor Norah OâDonnell. Viewership was not much improved in Dokoupilâs second week; âCBS Evening Newsâ remained a distant third behind ABC and NBCâs evening news shows. (Perhaps thatâs why Dylan Byers, every media bossâs favorite stenographer, landed the unattributed scoop Thursday night that âEvening Newsâ drew 6.4 million viewers on Monday, said to be its largest audience since 2021.) Dokoupilâs first official broadcast was marred by gaffes, and his January 6 show featured a fawning package on Secretary of State Marco Rubio that featured the utterly surreal lines: âMarco Rubio, we salute you. Youâre the ultimate Florida Man.â (The White House rapid response team approvingly shared the clip.)
WE LOVE @SecRubio! pic.twitter.com/ExpAMd8WaC
â Rapid Response 47 (@RapidResponse47) January 7, 2026
Higher up at the network, there have been multiple rounds of reporting that Weiss, CBSâs new editor-in-chief, isnât so much a manager or a journalist as the person tasked with courting the capricious approval of President Donald Trump. Weiss, who answers directly to David Ellison, infamously caused a Streisand effect by pulling a â60 Minutesâ story about Venezuelan men deported to a notoriously violent prison in El Salvador hours before it was set to air because there was no on-camera comment from the Trump administration. The story finally aired Sunday with no substantive changes â and without the all-important on-air administration voice.
Coming to us from a Ford assembly line in Dearborn, Michigan, on January 13, Dokoupil landed a marquee interview with Trump himself. With the sound of loud machinery in the background, the president didnât bother to conceal his disdain. In response to a question about Iran, Trump seemed to imply that Dokoupil, a convert to Judaism, has dual loyalty to Israel.
âI donât know where you come from and what your thought process is, but youâll perhaps be very happy,â Trump said.
His subtext doesnât appear lost on the host, who responded, âWhat do you mean by that?â
Later on, Trump disciplined Dokoupil again, this time in reference to his decision to greenlight David Ellisonâs acquisition of CBS-owner Paramount Global. âYou wouldnât have a job right now,â Trump tells the anchor. âIf she [Kamala Harris] got in, you probably wouldnât have a job right now. Your boss, whoâs an amazing guy, might be bust, OK? ⊠You wouldnât have this job, certainly whatever the hell theyâre paying you.â At the interviewâs close, Dokoupil attempted to save face, saying, âFor the record, I do think Iâd have this job even if the other guys won.â Without missing a beat, Trump responded, âBut at a lesser salary.â
For all this taking it on the chin, Dokoupil and Weissâs righteous reward was the White House threatening to sue over the interview.
âCBS Evening Newsâ with Tony Dokoupil demonstrated its obsequiousness by publishing âfive simple principlesâ ahead of the new hostâs debut. The âprinciplesâ are condescension for the Americans they claim to love all the way down. âWe love America. And make no apologies for saying so,â reads one. Another proclaims: âWe work for you.â (You quite literally do not.)
Principle number three is âWe respect you.â Its description reads in part: âWe believe that our fellow Americans are smart and discerning. ⊠We trust you to make up your own minds, and to make the decisions that are best for you, your families and your communities.â
â CBS Evening News with Tony Dokoupil (@CBSEveningNews) January 2, 2026
This babytalk for idiots is a common thread running through the new era of âEvening News.â Dokoupil comes to us live from Real America â a stunt dubbed the âLive From Americaâ tour â including the American Sign Museum in Cincinnati and a diner in the West Loop of Chicago. In Chicago, the broadcast includes a segment where the host takes the L train from the Loop to West Garfield Park to bring attention to the âdeath gap,â or life expectancy disparities, between neighborhoods.
As the train rumbles along, Tony looks out the window, affecting introspection, while his voiceover rolls: âEven on a snowy day, we could see a change from the train window,â he says, like a space alien seeing a city for the first time. At the end of the January 16 half-hour at a steel plant in Pittsburgh, which featured a âLESSON IN BIPARTISANSHIPâ (in other words, a segment with Democratic Sen. John Fetterman and Republican Sen. Dave McCormick, both of Pennsylvania), Dokoupil all but waves a Made in USA American flag to show his love for the common man.
In concluding his second week on January 16, Dokoupil signs off by giving himself credit for a job well done. âWhat a privilege itâs been to hear from so many of you, to hear what matters in your lives. ⊠We put some of your big questions in front of this countryâs biggest leaders.â To underline the point that he really is one of us, he then appears to go perhaps a bit off-script. âIâm gonna talk to these steel workers,â he says. âYou wanna trade jobs? This oneâs not as easy as it looks! Iâve been learning that.â In an unintentionally comedic moment, multiple steelworkers respond âYes.â
Three weeks into his new job, itâs unclear who this incarnation of âCBS Evening Newsâ is even for. Despite Weissâs best efforts, the answer is not the White House, as Dokoupil canât even succeed in flattering Trump. One possible answer is the old and the infirm: During every single commercial break I watched, multiple pharmaceutical ads ran, sometimes back to back, saying more about the state of America than Dokoupil ever could.
All this capping about love of country, and the hostâs own posturing, speaks to an ambition of reconnecting with Americans who have lost faith in the media. Considering what we know about the Ellisons and their support for Trump, itâs not hard to imagine that the showâs new spin is an effort to reach MAGA America. But thatâs a miscalculation at best and a dangerous slide to the right at worst, one that risks alienating the liberal viewership that still believes in institutions like CBS.
MAGA adherents already have Fox News serving as de facto state TV news, and the disenfranchised among them have drifted so far outside any kind of consensus reality that they have embraced more fringe, far-right-wing outlets like One America News Network or the MyPillow guy. They are no longer âgettableâ as an audience.
Weiss and Dokoupil would be much better served if they tried seriously to retain the viewers they had, rather than chase imagined, untold millions of disillusioned Trump voters looking to come in from the cold. It speaks to a real confusion about who âCBS Evening Newsâ is really for, if the true goal, as stated, is to grow its audience. But if the actual goal is to remake an authority in news into a platform for nakedly broadcasting Weiss and Ellisonâs political views, itâs already a roaring success.
The post âCBS Evening Newsâ With Tony Dokoupil Is a Right-Wing Show for Absolutely No One appeared first on The Intercept.
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