No one can say Tony Dokoupil is slipping into his new job as ''CBS Evening News'' anchor unnoticed.
In a week, he's issued a veritable manifesto for how he intends to fulfill the role, cast subtle shade on saintly predecessor Walter Cronkite, had an unexpected debut dominated by Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth and posted a cringeworthy video of people mispronouncing his name.
If attention is currency in trying to revive a television institution fallen on hard times, Dokoupil has earned some. The jury is out on whether it's the kind he needs.
The 45-year-old Dokoupil, a ''CBS Mornings'' host since 2019, inherited the chair once occupied by Cronkite, Dan Rather, Katie Couric, Scott Pelley and Norah O'Donnell. He was supposed to have started Monday with a two-week tour around the country, but his first broadcast instead came Saturday after the U.S. military action in Venezuela.
An estimated 27 million to 29 million people watched the ''CBS Evening News'' each night in Cronkite's last full year as anchor in 1980, the most popular of the three broadcast evening newscasts. The show is now entrenched at No. 3. And with news habits far different now, its nightly audience of 4.04 million people last year was a little more than half of what David Muir gets at ABC.
‘The press missed the story'
In video and printed messages posted last week, Dokoupil said he hoped to earn back the trust that many people have lost in legacy media institutions.
''On too many stories, the press missed the story,'' he said. ''Because we've taken into account the perspective of advocates, and not the average American, or we put too much weight in the analysis of academics or elites, and not enough on you.''