Chris Licht out at CNN after tumultuous run as CEO

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Chris Licht is out as chairman and chief executive of CNN, the news organization's parent company announced Wednesday, drawing a close to a rocky tenure that drew national media attention — including a lengthy profile in The Atlantic — and raised questions about the future of the company.

Licht, 51, who rose through the media industry ranks as a television producer, took the reins at CNN in February 2022 after the abrupt resignation of Jeff Zucker, who stepped down because he had failed to disclose a consensual relationship with a colleague.

In a statement announcing Licht's ouster, Warner Bros. Discovery chief David Zaslav said: "I have great respect for Chris, personally and professionally."

“The job of leading CNN was never going to be easy, especially at a time of huge disruption and transformation, and he has poured his heart and soul into it. While we know we have work to do as we look to identify a new leader, we have absolute confidence in the team we have in place and will continue to fight for CNN and its world class journalism," Zaslav added.

CNN will be steered by an "interim leadership team" that includes executives Amy Entelis, Virginia Moseley and Eric Sherling, as well as David Leavy, the organization's newly installed chief operating officer, Zaslav said.

When Licht took over CNN, he sought to differentiate himself from Zucker, who had publicly clashed with former President Donald Trump. Licht, reportedly following a mandate from Zaslav, attempted to move the news brand to the political center and make it more palatable to both conservative viewers and GOP newsmakers.

Chris Licht during the Warner Bros. Discovery Upfront 2022 show in New York City (Kevin Mazur / Getty Images file )
Chris Licht during the Warner Bros. Discovery Upfront 2022 show in New York City (Kevin Mazur / Getty Images file )

He also rolled out a new morning program co-anchored by Don Lemon, who was fired in April after Variety published an article detailing allegations that he had mistreated female colleagues. Lemon, who also faced backlash for on-air comments suggesting GOP presidential contender Nikki Haley was not “in her prime” because she is in her 50s, denied the allegations.

Licht drew intense scrutiny in recent months as CNN prime-time ratings dipped and the new morning show flailed. He found himself where few news executives wish to be: the center of the story.

He was harshly criticized by pundits for hosting a live town hall event with Trump on May 10. In response, commentators faulted Licht for having given the Republican front-runner a platform to make baseless claims about 2020 voter fraud and other issues in front of a crowd of Trump loyalists. The New York Times headline: “Trump’s Falsehoods and Bluster Overtake CNN Town Hall.”

The veteran CNN anchor Christiane Amanpour publicly rebuked the network’s decision during a commencement address at Columbia University the week after the town hall aired, noting that she had “a very robust exchange of views” with Licht. Licht is said to have stood by his decision, reportedly saying in part: “America was served very well by what we did last night.”

The negative assessments reached a fever pitch on Friday after The Atlantic published a 15,000-word article titled “Inside the Meltdown at CNN.” Tim Alberta, a reporter who had shadowed Licht for months (including during a personal training session), detailed the executive’s fixation on his own press coverage and quoted him mocking CNN journalists’ coverage of the pandemic.

“Every move he made, big programming decisions and small tactical maneuvers alike, seemed to backfire. By most metrics, the network under Licht’s leadership had reached its historic nadir,” Alberta wrote.

The Atlantic article circulated widely on social media in the days that followed, and high-profile media observers — including Brian Stelter, a former CNN journalist who was fired last year — publicly speculated that Licht might not be long for the job.

Licht apologized to staff members on an internal conference call the Monday after the article ran, CNBC reported, citing people familiar with the matter. He told employees that he did not recognize the person depicted in Alberta’s article.

Licht came to CNN from CBS’ “The Late Show with Stephen Colbert,” where he served as executive producer and showrunner. He was previously known for having launched MSNBC’s “Morning Joe” and overseeing the successful revamp of “CBS This Morning” — career experiences that burnished his reputation as a wunderkind television producer.

In a profile of Licht published in The New York Times in December, Colbert recalled warning his executive producer not to take the CNN job. "CNN would be lucky to get you," the late-night comedian is quoted as saying. "But you’re my friend, and I’m telling you not to go."

Licht began his career at the KNBC station in Los Angeles, roughly around the time the O.J. Simpson murder trial dominated national attention. (KNBC is one of the 12 local media channels owned and operated by NBCUniversal, the parent company of NBC News.)

This article was originally published on NBCNews.com