Does this mean more whiny op-eds like the one from that breastfeeder on Friday?
TVNewser breaks down six weeks' worth.
Because it's all Katie.
Hollywood Reporter says Katie's still doing better than Schieffer did, but...
As Johnny Carson used to ask, who do you trust?
She threw a fit when assigned a coach seat on Katie's first foreign trip, Radar reports.
Howie Kurtz on CBS trying to put more hard news content in the Katiecast after being attacked for getting too soft.
DePauw U. professor Jeffrey McCall says in the Indy Star that you shouldn't blame Katie Couric for what the "CBS Nightly News" has become--she's being the perky personality the network wanted.
James Wolcott remembers that Katie Couric can be a good hard newswoman. He wishes that she would remember and quit the girly-girl act.
In this long Rebecca Dana profile: Correspondents are smarting over Couric's increased "magic time" and the newsroom is on the brink of civil war as old-school CBS types, newer CBS types and the Couric inner circle snipe.
This Lara Logan story containing graphic footage is online, but was booted off of the "CBS Evening News"--Logan has protested and is encouraging people to share this link--and we are.
To tvbarn2's Joe Haas, the real story here is near the bottom of David Bauder's summary--the fact that Katie Couric's intro on the "CBS Evening News" more or less dismissed the story as of interest only to "Washington insiders."
Rebecca Dana thinks that Couric's problems at CBS could be a lesson for another love-her-or-hate-her woman who's running for President.
The guy who ruined CNN and MSNBC can now ruin Katie.
Eric Deggans' lessons CBS can learn from Katie Couric, in which they proved that they are not smarter than a fifth-grader.
McPaper founder Alan Neuharth says that we're not liking Katie Couric across the USA and that it's time to get her back to mornings.
Andrew Tyndall writes that in the first six months of her CBS newscast "Couric found opportunities to abandon the norms of journalistic objectivity to become an emotional partisan."
CBS Public Eye blogger Brian Montopoli says that the newsroom is hopeful that Rick Kaplan will turn the "Evening News" back into a hard news program--but they're still skeptical.
Eric Deggans has some tough questions about the changing of the guard--hope Howie Kurtz will let him ask them Sunday on "Reliable Sources."
A Couric commentary written for her and distributed to CBS affiliates was basically a copy of a Jeffrey Zaslow feature story in the WSJ--although Cronkite and Rather's radio commentaries were often written by others, at least they weren't plagiarized.