Former CBS host Josh Elliott is looking for love eight months after filing for divorce from “Eyewitness News” anchor Liz Cho.
“Josh is hitting the dating scene in Fairfield County,” a spy exclusively tells Page Six. “He has been seen at bars in the area where middle-aged single people congregate.”
Another source told Page Six, “Josh isn’t dating anyone, but he’s open to meeting people. His daughter is his priority.”
Page Six can also reveal that Elliott moved out of his and Cho’s estimated $4.2 million marital home in Connecticut in January.
In a Jan. 29 court document obtained by Page Six, Cho said Elliott moved out of her home and into a new home without her knowledge.
Cho claimed that he was notified by Optimum on January 21 that his ex-girlfriend was installing internet in her new home.
“Through this communication, Defendants first learned that on or about January 15, 2026, Plaintiff had secured an unfurnished rental residence in Southport, Connecticut,” the filing states.
“It is now clear that Plaintiff secretly entered into a new lease…” the court papers continued.
A representative for Elliott did not respond to Page Six’s request for comment.
“Page Six” broke that on June 20, 2025, the ousted CBS anchor filed for divorce from Cho after 10 years of marriage.
“The parties’ marriage has irretrievably broken down,” court documents state. Elliott asked for the “dissolution of the marriage” and “equitable distribution of all real and personal property.”
Ms. Cho filed a counter-complaint against her estranged husband on November 6th in response to his accusations. She also said that their marriage had “broken down beyond repair.”
The divorce became messy when Cho requested “written communications, emails, cards, WeChat messages, Facebook messages, social media messaging, instant messaging, telephone text messages, transcriptions of voicemail messages, or copies of written forms of communication” between Elliott and “any person other than defendant with whom[Elliott]has or has had a romantic or sexual relationship from July 11, 2015 to the present.”
Elliott objected to the request “on the grounds that the period of the request is unreasonable, unnecessary, harassing, and unlikely to result in the discovery of admissible evidence.”
Cho also requested “money expended for the benefit of a person with whom you have a romantic and/or sexual relationship other than the defendant,” “property gifted or transferred by you to a person with whom you have a romantic and/or sexual relationship other than the defendant,” and “money expended for your benefit by a person with whom you have a romantic and/or sexual relationship other than the defendant.”
The TV personality also requested financial records, documents proving Elliott’s job search when he was ousted from CBS in 2017, and travel invoices. Elliot objected to the request.
A source close to the couple previously told Page Six: “This is standard in divorces. Her lawyers are doing a thorough document request. The documents she’s requesting are standard.” Officials also claimed there was no evidence that Elliott had an affair with anyone outside of marriage.
In a Jan. 29 court filing, Cho also filed a contempt motion against Elliott regarding the couple’s joint Connecticut home.
Ms. Cho claimed that while Ms. Elliott was on vacation with her daughter on January 19, she arranged for a moving truck to come to the couple’s residence.
Cho claimed that Elliott removed “a significant amount of furniture and fixtures from the couple’s residence” and that the “two Portuguese water dogs” she had claimed at the time of her application were not returned.
The court papers further asserted, “On Tuesday, January 6, 2026, (Mr. Cho) noticed that a valuable watch and earrings were missing from his jewelry bag. As the only person who had access to the missing watch and jewelry, (Mr. Cho) believes that (Elliott) is in possession of such personal property.”
She claimed his actions were a “willful violation” of the court’s order.
Officials claimed Elliott was caring for the dog and took “a small amount of furniture.”
In Elliott’s response to her allegations, he opposed her requests and claimed her allegations were “false and inflammatory.”
“While (Mr. Cho) alleges that (Elliott) ‘ransacked’ and ‘abandoned’ (Elliott) the couple’s residence, this allegation is demonstrably false and intended to embarrass, harass, and intimidate (Elliott),” he said in court papers.
“(Elliott) did not vandalize the marital home. He did not cause any damage to the property. He did not render the residence uninhabitable. The removal of limited personal property and furniture was intended to provide a safe haven from (Cho’s) escalating and erratic behavior toward (Elliott) as well as his minor children.”
In a separate filing, he continued to defend his actions by claiming that “(Mr. Elliott) removed only limited furniture and furnishings from the basement solely to furnish his new residence after removing himself and his children from the hostile environment (Mr. Cho) had created. All property remains intact and is subject to equitable distribution.”
Regarding the jewelry claims, Elliott said, “Perhaps most egregious is (Cho’s) baseless accusation that (Elliott) stole the jewelry. This allegation is made without evidence or support and without any honest attempt to verify the truth.”
He also accused her of “surveilling and eavesdropping on (Elliott’s) private telephone calls, rummaging through (Elliott’s) personal belongings and closets, and leaving the couple’s residence for extended periods without contacting them, even though they had two dogs that required daily care.”
He has asked the court to dismiss her contempt motion and is scheduled to appear in court on March 20.
Attorneys for Cho and Elliott did not respond to Page Six’s requests for comment on the divorce.
Elliott, 54, and Cho, 55, met while working at ABC and married in July 2015.
This was their second marriage, as they each have daughters from previous relationships.
Cho has appeared on ABC’s “Eyewitness News” since 2003, and Elliott appeared on ABC’s “Good Morning America” from 2011 to 2014.
After a short stint at NBC, he joined CBSN in March 2016 as lead daytime anchor. About a year later, he was fired from the company.
Elliott has been away from the spotlight in recent years, but is currently in talks to appear on “CBS Morning” with Gayle King and Nate Burleson, Awful Announcements reported.
