Media

Chris Cuomo says he will never be ‘what he was’ at CNN

Chris Cuomo claims he’s moved on from his fall from CNN — yet spent much of a recent 90-minute interview licking his wounds over his unceremonious exit from the cable news network.

“I’ll never be what I was,” the fallen anchor told ex-New York Times scribe Charlie LeDuff and Karen Dumas on the Jan. 16 podcast of No Bulls–t Newshour. “I was number one on the most powerful media platform in the world.”

He whined about not being “allowed to say goodbye to [my show’s team], an office I was never allowed to clear out,” and complained that his office supplies were sent to him “in boxes with half my s–t broken.”

Cuomo, 52, was axed by CNN in Dec. 2021 after it was revealed that he had helped his older brother, disgraced ex-Gov. Andrew Cuomo, navigate a series of sexual scandals

He called CNN the “best news organization in the world” but seethed about how his former boss, ex-CNN president Jeff Zucker, gave him the boot. 

Cuomo complained to journalist Charlie LeDuff that he wasn’t able to say goodbye to his team at CNN. @NoBSNewshour
Cuomo also complained about the way he was fired by CNN. @NoBSNewshour

“He did not have lie about what he knew and what I did and what I didn’t do. I never did anything to have to lie about,” Cuomo claimed. “I never did anything to manipulate media coverage of my brother.”

Last year, Cuomo began hosting a primetime show on the startup NewsNation cable channel, where he has landed some scoops — including an explosive interview with the artist Ye, formerly Kanye West. But he is drawing paltry ratings, especially compared to his previous perch, and has even demanded a new time slot for any edge. 

“I’ll never be number 1, 2, 3, 4, 5 on some bulls–t media power list. I’m okay with that,” Cuomo claimed.

Cuomo has drawn paltry ratings at his new primetime show on NewsNation. Evan Agostini/Invision/AP

Asked whether he has more creative freedom on his new show, Cuomo snapped that he always had “control,” but because of his clobbering in the news over the last year, his “show is different.” 

“I am, emotionally and psychologically beat up and changed by what I went through,” he said. “My show is different because I am different, not that I was in some lefty silo.”

He also complained that reporters didn’t fairly cover a 2019 viral video where he was captured exploding at a heckler who had called him “Fredo,” a demeaning “Godfather” reference, on Shelter Island.  

“They called me Fredo [in front of] my 9-year-old daughter, and all the media was told that and none of them reported it. I wonder why,” he said. “Because it takes the sting out of me being a bully.”