Bari Weiss, flanked by six bodyguards who looked more like Marvel superheroes than security detail, strolled into a New York media event Tuesday like someone expecting trouble — or sending a message. And depending on where you sit in today’s media landscape, maybe she is.
At just 41, Weiss is now the editor in chief of CBS News. Let that sink in. A woman with no traditional TV background now holds one of the most powerful positions in mainstream journalism. And she’s not exactly playing it safe.
Now, take that image again — a woman in a blazer, six muscular men forming a protective ring around her, walking through the Upper West Side into a high-stakes media mixer at the New-York Historical Society. The kind of gathering that doesn’t just talk about the future of media — it decides it.
The photo wasn’t subtle. And neither is the message it seems to send: the old guard should probably brace itself.
CBS News boss Bari Weiss has 6 ‘beefy, chiseled’ bodyguards in protection detail: report https://t.co/wApnXF84NI pic.twitter.com/OTlXA3EqVo
— NY Post Business (@nypostbiz) October 22, 2025
Weiss, co-founder of The Free Press, just sold her newsletter brand for a reported $150 million to Paramount Skydance — the same newly merged company that now owns CBS News. With RedBird Capital pouring billions into this deal and David Ellison (yes, that Ellison — son of Oracle founder Larry Ellison) now holding the reins, a shake-up was inevitable. But not many expected it to look like this.
A media outsider. No TV résumé. And a blunt style that already has “60 Minutes” staff whispering in panic.
She walked into her first week with sharp questions: “Why do Americans think CBS is biased?”
Not “do they think?” but “why?”
That alone says a lot.
CBS has long been seen as part of the legacy press. Safe, liberal-leaning, predictable. Weiss has been anything but predictable. She’s pushed for hard-hitting political interviews — yes, including Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and even Jared Kushner — and has made it clear she’s not here to make friends.
In fact, the staff isn’t just rattled — they’re leaving. CBS’s longtime standards chief, Claudia Milne, is already out. And sources say layoffs are around the corner.
Now, let’s be honest here — this doesn’t happen in a vacuum.
“It is hard for me to believe that one person can completely change what is a huge culture problem in these spaces.”@MeghanMcCain and @BenFergusonShow discuss the hurdles Bari Weiss will face in reforming CBS and the Dominant Media—and why changing culture takes more than one… pic.twitter.com/Q1xTgPiadT
— Next Up with Mark Halperin (@NextUpHalperin) October 22, 2025
The political winds have shifted. Trump is back in the White House. J.D. Vance, now Vice President, is helping lead a national conversation that’s pushing back hard on what they see as coastal elitism and media groupthink. And into that environment walks Bari Weiss — a woman who left The New York Times over its ideological rigidity and built an independent brand that champions open dialogue, tough questions, and yes, views outside the Left’s bubble.
This isn’t just about a CBS job. This is about the shape of American media in 2025.
And if you think the bodyguards were just for show, maybe think again.
We’re living in a time where having a controversial opinion or just asking uncomfortable questions can make you a target. Physically, politically, socially. In Weiss’ case, probably all three. So when she walks into an event surrounded by a six-man security team, what’s she really saying?
That she’s not backing down, that she knows exactly what kind of firestorm she’s walking into — and she’s ready for it.
But here’s the real question: Is CBS ready for her?
Because when you pull in someone like Bari Weiss, you’re not getting business as usual. You’re inviting the storm.
And for better or worse, the old rules of legacy media might not survive it.