Updated
Updated · The New York Times · Jun 23
CBS Watchdog Kenneth Weinstein Draws Fire After 9 Months of Silence
Updated
Updated · The New York Times · Jun 23

CBS Watchdog Kenneth Weinstein Draws Fire After 9 Months of Silence

1 articles · Updated · The New York Times · Jun 23

Summary

  • Nine months after CBS News hired Kenneth R. Weinstein as an independent watchdog, he has made no public statements on the network’s coverage or internal controversies, drawing criticism from media experts.
  • The role was created under an FCC-related agreement, but CBS structured it as a private channel to executives rather than a public-facing ombudsman post.
  • Three employees said Weinstein has sent no staffwide guidance or feedback, and two people said he told some staff he was scheduled to work only 1 day a month.
  • Critics say that setup undercuts the stated goal of protecting journalistic integrity and transparency, especially as CBS News faces infighting between management and prominent correspondents.
  • Former NPR ombudsman Jeffrey Dvorkin said ombudsmen typically report regularly to the public, arguing that public accountability is central to rebuilding trust.

Insights

Is CBS News's silent watchdog a new model for media accountability or simply a tool for corporate compliance?
When a media watchdog doesn't bark, who is being protected: the public trust or the network's new owners?