CBS News Radio Signs Off Friday Night After Nearly 100 Years of Broadcasting: "An American Institution"
Audacy moved 17 stations to ABC News a day early as CBS News Radio prepared to end its nearly 100-year run.
- On Friday, CBS News Radio concludes nearly 100 years of operation, ending service to 700 affiliate stations. Audacy-owned CBS News Radio affiliates, including WBBM-AM, preemptively switched to ABC News Radio on Thursday to ensure smooth transition.
- Paramount leadership announced the shutdown in March, citing challenging economic conditions. Executives claimed the decision was purely financial as audiences migrate toward on-demand digital platforms rather than traditional radio.
- Edward Murrow and other legendary broadcasters helped build the service 99 years ago, documenting events from the Blitz to 9/11. The network served as a foundational element of American journalism.
- Seventeen Audacy-owned affiliates shifted their national news provider to ABC News Radio, replacing CBS content. Company sources confirmed the transition does not impact local newsroom staffing or existing programming commitments.
- As advertising revenues migrate to online platforms, radio stations face difficult choices regarding resource allocation. This transition reflects a continued contraction of traditional broadcast formats like CBS News Radio.
24 Articles
24 Articles
Good night and good luck and goodbye — CBS News Radio signs off after nearly 100 years
The service that launched CBS and helped define the broadcast industry had its final newscast Friday.
WGAE Slams End of CBS News Radio as ‘Reckless and Shortsighted Decision’
The Writers Guild of America East mourned the closure of CBS News Radio on Friday, arguing the decision to end the nearly century-old radio service represented a “reckless and shortsighted decision” by Paramount CEO David Ellison and CBS News Editor-in-Chief Bari Weiss. The union said the end of CBS News Radio, which will shut down Friday night, “erodes a vital news source for listeners of more than 700-affiliated stations across the country” an…
Harger: CBS Newsradio signs off after 99 years. I've been chasing that sound since I was 4
I heard it for the first time in the back of my mom’s green 1974 Chevy Impala station wagon. Jimmy Carter was president. I was probably four years old. I was almost certainly the only preschooler in my neighborhood who knew who Jimmy Carter was. A tone. Then this clunky, twangy electronic sequence, pulsing and repeating, like nothing else on the radio. It sounded important. It sounded like the world was about to tell you something. Then a voice …
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