Skip to main content
Rain icon
35º

Former CBS head Zirinsky is new studio boss for docs, series

FILE - Susan Zirinsky attends the CBS 2019 upfront on May 15, 2019, in New York. Zirinsky will lead "See It Now Studios," launched by CBS News. (Photo by Charles Sykes/Invision/AP, File) (Charles Sykes, 2019 Invision)

NEW YORK – Former CBS News President Susan Zirinsky is launching a studio for unscripted programming, with two 9/11-related documentaries debuting over the next two days.

Zirinsky hopes the name See It Now Studios conveys a sense of urgency for younger viewers while reminding the historically-minded of the 1950s-era CBS News series, “See It Now,” featuring Edward R. Murrow.

Recommended Videos



Her No. 2 at the new studio will be an ABC News veteran and documentarian, Terence Wrong, known best for fly-on-the-wall docuseries showing the inner workings of hospitals.

“I want to make some noise,” said Zirinsky, longtime “48 Hours” producer before taking over the news division. “I want to bring you things where you will say, ‘Wow, I didn’t know that.' I want to bring you inside where you didn't have access.”

The studio's first project, “The 26th Street Garage: The FBI's Untold Story of 9/11,” premieres Thursday on the Paramount+ streaming service, Narrated by Tom Selleck, it shows how the FBI was forced to abandon its New York headquarters after the attack and set up in shop in an automotive garage.

On Friday, CBS and Paramount+ will both air “Race Against Time: The CIA and 9/11,” a look at the agency's failed efforts to stop Osama bin Laden and an attack they knew would be coming sometime, somewhere.

Also upcoming are a four-part series on Ghislaine Maxwell, the late Jeffrey Epstein's alleged accomplice in sex trafficking, and a six-part series on the extremists behind the Jan. 6, 2021 attack on the U.S Capitol. Both are planned for Paramount+.

Zirinsky said she believed there was a hunger for long-form storytelling. See It Now Studios is part of CBS News and while the network and its corporate partners will be the destination for many of its projects, the studio will also offer material to outside outlets, she said.

Zirinsky, Wrong and their team will develop their own projects and also purchase material from others, she said.


Recommended Videos