[00:00] Victor Hale: Our focus today, the end of CBS News Radio. [00:05] Victor Hale: The timeline for a major shift in American broadcasting is now set. [00:11] Victor Hale: From Neural Newscast, I'm Victor Hale. [00:14] Adriana Costa: And I'm Adriana Costa. [00:16] Victor Hale: The timeline for one of the most significant institutions in American media has been set. [00:23] Victor Hale: On May 22nd, CBS News Radio will go silent after nearly a century of continuous operation [00:32] Victor Hale: This isn't just a change in programming. [00:35] Victor Hale: It is the dismantlement of a broadcast infrastructure that has existed since 1927. [00:42] Victor Hale: When William S. Paley founded the network, he was creating the first true national news pipeline that millions of Americans came to trust. [00:53] Adriana Costa: It is difficult to overstate the cultural footprint here, Victor. [00:57] Adriana Costa: For many, CBS news radio was the primary connection to the world before the age of television and the internet. [01:04] Adriana Costa: Paley saw the potential for radio to be a public service, but it was Edward R. Murrow who gave that service its soul. [01:13] Adriana Costa: His broadcasts from London during the Second World War brought the reality of the Blitz into American living rooms. [01:20] Victor Hale: Murrow's work established the ethical precedence for what we now consider objective broadcast journalism. [01:28] Victor Hale: He pioneered the concept of the field report using natural sound and factual narration to convey high-stakes information. [01:38] Victor Hale: That gold standard was maintained for decades. [01:42] Victor Hale: Even as the media landscape shifted toward cable and digital, CBS News Radio remained a constant, [01:51] Victor Hale: providing the top-of-the-hour updates that defined the rhythm of the day for listeners nationwide. [01:57] Adriana Costa: That is why this shutdown feels so abrupt to the industry. We are looking at 99 years of history, [02:05] Adriana Costa: ending just months shy of a centennial celebration. The network survived the rise of the internet [02:12] Adriana Costa: and the decline of terrestrial radio for years. Now, however, the [02:16] Adriana Costa: The corporate landscape has changed in a way that the traditional radio model apparently cannot survive. [02:24] Victor Hale: The catalyst for this closure is the ongoing restructuring at Paramount Global. [02:28] Victor Hale: Since David Ellison took control of the company, there has been an aggressive move to trim legacy assets and consolidate editorial resources. [02:37] Victor Hale: Barry Weiss has been tasked with overseeing the restructuring of the news division. [02:41] Victor Hale: The decision to shudder the radio wing suggests that the new leadership views the traditional [02:47] Victor Hale: affiliate-based radio model as no longer viable within their digital first strategy. [02:52] Adriana Costa: It is a stark departure from the way Paramount has historically protected its news identity. [02:59] Adriana Costa: We're seeing a pivot toward more centralized content delivery, Victor. [03:03] Adriana Costa: Under Weiss, the focus seems to be moving away from the broad, high-volume affiliate service [03:09] Adriana Costa: that radio required and towards something more streamlined. [03:13] Adriana Costa: But in doing so, they're cutting ties with a massive network of local partners. [03:19] Victor Hale: That is the logistical crisis that has not been fully realized yet. [03:23] Victor Hale: There are approximately 700 affiliate stations across the United States that carry CBS News radio content. [03:30] Victor Hale: These local stations rely on those hourly updates to provide national and international context to their audiences. [03:38] Victor Hale: When the feed goes dark on May 22nd, those stations will have to pivot immediately to other providers like ABC or NPR. [03:45] Adriana Costa: For many of those stations, particularly in smaller markets, CBS was the only link they had to a global reporting staff. [03:54] Adriana Costa: The loss of that infrastructure means a significant reduction in the diversity of news voices available on the airwaves. [04:02] Adriana Costa: Local broadcasters are being forced to find new partners in an increasingly consolidated market. [04:10] Victor Hale: There is also the human cost within the network itself. [04:14] Victor Hale: While we have not seen the final tally of job losses, [04:17] Victor Hale: the closure of a 24-hour news operation involves more than just the anchors. [04:22] Victor Hale: It is the writers, the editors, the engineers, [04:26] Victor Hale: and the technicians who have maintained this service for nearly a century. [04:31] Victor Hale: These are professionals who have spent their entire careers [04:34] Victor Hale: upholding the standards set by Paley and Murrow. [04:38] Adriana Costa: It is a sobering moment for everyone in the industry [04:42] Adriana Costa: As we move closer to that May deadline, the focus will likely remain on how Paramount rebrands its remaining news assets. [04:50] Adriana Costa: If this is the end of the radio era for CBS, the question becomes what replaces that gold standard [04:58] Adriana Costa: in a world dominated by algorithmic news? [05:01] Adriana Costa: The loss of a century-old institution leaves a vacuum that is not easily filled by a digital restructuring. [05:09] Victor Hale: The legacy of CBS News Radio will ultimately be defined by its commitment to factual clarity [05:16] Victor Hale: during the world's most difficult moments. [05:19] Victor Hale: From the first reports of the 1920s to the updates of 2026, it served as a steady hand. [05:27] Victor Hale: While the business model may be ending, the journalistic precedents established over the last 99 years [05:33] Victor Hale: will continue to influence how we report the news, even if the medium changes.