CBS Evening News expanded to weekend evenings on February 5, 1966, originally anchored by
Roger Mudd. The Sunday edition of the program was dropped in September 1971, when CBS began airing
60 Minutes in the 6:00 pm Eastern (5:00 pm Central) time slot to help affiliates fulfill requirements imposed by the
Federal Communications Commission's
Prime Time Access Rule. The Sunday edition returned in January 1976, when the network moved
60 Minutes one hour later to 7:00 pm Eastern Time, where that program remains (except when
NFL on CBS is scheduled to air a doubleheader; on those Sundays,
60 Minutes is scheduled for 7:30 pm ET). From 2011 to 2014,
CBS Evening News was the only remaining network evening newscast that used separate anchors for its Saturday and Sunday editions (
NBC Nightly News previously used separate anchors for both weekend broadcasts until
John Seigenthaler was appointed anchor of both the Saturday and Sunday editions in 1999, while
ABC World News Tonight maintained separate anchors for its weekend editions until Saturday anchor
David Muir also assumed anchor duties on the program's Sunday edition in 2011).
John Roberts did anchor both Saturday and Sunday editions of
CBS Evening News for several months in 1999. More recently,
Russ Mitchell served as the weekend anchor for
CBS Evening News until December 2011, when he announced his resignation from CBS News to take a lead anchor position with NBC affiliate
WKYC-TV in
Cleveland, Ohio. The following year, Mitchell was replaced on the weekend editions by
Jim Axelrod on Saturdays and
Jeff Glor on Sundays. Weekend editions of
CBS Evening News were periodically abbreviated or pre-empted outright due to
CBS Sports programming. On May 2, 2016, CBS announced that the weekend editions of
CBS Evening News, effective May 7, would be revamped as
CBS Weekend News, with the Saturday and Sunday editions anchored by
Reena Ninan and
Elaine Quijano, respectively. (The Saturday edition airs only on the
West Coast from September through mid-December due to
CBS's college football coverage; the Sunday edition similarly only airs on the West Coast most weeks from September through January due to the network's
NFL coverage, except when a
doubleheader is not scheduled.) The new program would rely on resources from CBS's streaming news channel CBSN (now
CBS News 24/7), as well as reports from local affiliates, and highlights from the past week. CBS News executive editor Steve Capus argued, "given the number of sports overruns and out-and-out pre-emptions, it would be better for us as a news organization to come up with what I think is a smarter, 24-hour approach to covering the world, and making sure we've got all the bases covered." == Impact of COVID-19 ==