Ownership In September 1981, production of the program was taken over by MacNeil/Lehrer Productions, a partnership between
Robert MacNeil,
Jim Lehrer, and
Gannett; the latter sold its stake in the production company in 1986.
John C. Malone's
Liberty Media bought a 67% controlling equity stake in MacNeil/Lehrer Productions in 1994, but MacNeil and Lehrer retained editorial control. In 2014,
MacNeil/Lehrer Productions, owned by MacNeil, Lehrer, and Liberty Media announced its donation, as
NewsHour Productions LLC, to
WETA-TV as a nonprofit subsidiary.
The Robert MacNeil Report and The MacNeil/Lehrer Report (1975–1983) In 1973,
Robert MacNeil (a former
NBC News correspondent and then-moderator of PBS's
Washington Week in Review) and
Jim Lehrer teamed up to cover the
United States Senate's
Watergate hearings for PBS. They earned an
Emmy Award for their unprecedented gavel-to-gavel coverage. This recognition led to the creation of
The Robert MacNeil Report, a half-hour local news program on WNET, which debuted on October 20, 1975; each episode of the program covered a single issue in depth. On December 1, 1975, the program began to air on PBS stations nationwide. It was renamed
The MacNeil/Lehrer Report on September 6, 1976. Most editions employed a two-anchor, two-city format, with MacNeil based in New York City and Lehrer at WETA's studios in Arlington, Virginia.
Charlayne Hunter-Gault joined the series as a correspondent in 1977, serving as a substitute host for MacNeil and Lehrer whenever either had the night off. She became the series' national correspondent in 1983.
The MacNeil/Lehrer NewsHour and The NewsHour with Jim Lehrer (1983–2009) Having decided to start competing with the nightly news programs on
ABC,
CBS and
NBC instead of complementing them, the program expanded to one hour on September 5, 1983, incorporating other changes, such as the introduction of "documentary reportage from the field"; it became known at that time as
The MacNeil/Lehrer NewsHour.
Lester Crystal was its founding executive producer. MacNeil/Lehrer Productions twice planned to launch late-night newscasts in 1995 and 1999; in both instances, the proposed expansions—which, respectively, were to have involved production and newsgathering partnerships with
Wall Street Journal Television and
The New York Times—were canceled mid-development. MacNeil retired from the program on October 20, 1995, leaving Lehrer as the sole anchor. Accordingly, the program was renamed
The NewsHour with Jim Lehrer on October 23. (Hunter-Gault left in June 1997.) On January 16, 1996,
The NewsHour announced the creation of its official website at PBS Online.
The NewsHour won a
Peabody Award in 2003 for the feature report
Jobless Recovery: Non-Working Numbers. On May 17, 1999,
The NewsHour adopted a new graphics package with refreshed music from 1983, plus the new studio with a blue globe in the middle. On October 4, 1999,
Gwen Ifill and
Ray Suarez joined
The NewsHour team as new correspondents. Ifill was a female anchor of a national nightly news program on broadcast television. Effective January 17, 2000,
The NewsHour added "America Online Keyword: PBS" to its ending screen for a three-year agreement through April 22, 2003. For only the website, the program took effect on April 23, 2003. On March 3, 2003, the program added dates from the 1999 graphics in the beginning. On November 17, 2003,
The NewsHour added music in the beginning with dates. On May 17, 2006, the program underwent its first major change in presentation in years, adopting a new graphics package and a reorchestrated version of its theme music (originally composed by
Bernard Hoffer). On December 17, 2007, the
NewsHour became the second nightly broadcast network newscast to begin broadcasting in
high definition (after
NBC Nightly News on March 26, 2007), with broadcasts in a
letterboxed format for viewers with
standard-definition television sets watching via either
cable or
satellite television. The program also introduced a new set and converted its graphics package to HD.
PBS NewsHour Departure of Jim Lehrer and switch to co-anchors (2009–2013) On May 11, 2009, PBS announced that the program would be revamped on December 7 of that year under a revised title, the
PBS NewsHour. In addition to increased integration between the
NewsHour website and nightly broadcast, the updated production returned to a two-anchor format. Lehrer described the overhaul as the first phase in his move toward retirement. On September 27, 2010,
PBS NewsHour was presented with the Chairman's Award at the
31st News & Documentary Emmy Awards, with MacNeil, Lehrer, Crystal, and former executive producer Linda Winslow receiving the award on the show's behalf. Lehrer formally ended his tenure as a regular anchor of the program on June 6, 2011. He continued to occasionally anchor on Fridays, when he usually led the political analysis segment with syndicated columnist
Mark Shields and
The New York Times columnist
David Brooks, until December 30, 2011.
PBS NewsHour continues with various anchors until September 6, 2013.
Transfer of production, expansion to weekends and the west (2013–present) interviewing US Secretary of Defense
Chuck Hagel on September 18, 2013 On August 6, 2013,
Gwen Ifill and
Judy Woodruff were named co-anchors and co-managing editors of the
NewsHour. They shared anchor duties on the Monday through Thursday editions, with Woodruff anchoring solo on Fridays due to Ifill's duties as host of the political discussion program
Washington Week, which was also produced Friday evenings. For much of its history, the
PBS NewsHour aired only Monday through Friday, but in March 2013, plans to expand the program to include Saturday and Sunday editions were under development.
PBS NewsHour announced that the weekend editions of the program would premiere on September 7, 2013, with
Hari Sreenivasan serving as anchor. Although they aired for a half-hour, the weekend broadcasts were branded with a modified program name,
PBS NewsHour Weekend. The program was based on the duration of WNET's involvement with the program. From the weekend broadcasts' debut until the March 27, 2022, edition, the Saturday and Sunday editions originated from the Tisch/WNET Studios at
Lincoln Center in
Manhattan, rather than the program's main production facilities at the Arlington, Virginia, studios of WETA-TV. MacNeil/Lehrer Productions announced in October 2013 that it had offered to transfer ownership in the
PBS NewsHour to WETA. Lehrer and MacNeil cited their reduced involvement with the program's production since their departures from anchoring, as well as "the probability of increasing our fundraising abilities." WETA's board of trustees approved the transfer on June 17, 2014, and it took effect on July 1. At that time, NewsHour Productions, LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of WETA, took over production of the program. WETA also acquired MacNeil/Lehrer Productions' archives, documentaries, and projects, though not the company's name.
PBS NewsHour Weekend was not affected by the ownership transfer and continued to be produced by WNET until 2022 when the program moved back to Washington.
PBS NewsHour Weekend retained its original graphics package and the theme music by David Cebert and Bernard Hoffer until August 29, 2015, when it transitioned to the same theme music and a reworked version of the graphics package used for the weekday broadcasts. Ifill took brief breaks from her
NewsHour anchor duties in the late spring and in November 2016 (and was also absent from the program's
presidential election coverage on November 8), as she had been undergoing treatment for advanced stage
breast and
endometrial cancer. After her death was announced on November 14, 2016, that evening's edition of the
PBS NewsHour was dedicated to Ifill and her influence on journalism, featuring tributes from Woodruff, Sreenivasan, former colleagues and program contributors (news content was relegated to the standard news summary, which aired during the second half-hour). Although the program initially featured guest anchors on some editions between January and March 2017, Woodruff went on to become sole anchor.
The Plastic Problem aired in 2018 and went on to win a
Peabody Award, presented at
the 2019 ceremony.
PBS NewsHour West launched on October 14, 2019, a regional bureau affiliated with the
Walter Cronkite School of Journalism and Mass Communication at
Arizona State University in
Phoenix. Anchored by Stephanie Sy, the bureau produces its own news summary with up-to-date information on events that develop after the original broadcast. A version of the program with this summary is shown to viewers in the Western United States and to online and East Coast viewers watching re-broadcasts. The program PBS NewsHour West ended on December 19, 2025. On April 2, 2022, WETA assumed production responsibilities for the show's Saturday and Sunday editions, which concurrently began originating from the studio at the station's Washington facility used for the weekday broadcasts. The broadcasts were retitled
PBS News Weekend, with respect to their shorter duration. NewsHour Productions transferred production of the weekend broadcasts from WNET in a move to streamline the program's production and news-gathering resources, allowing the weekday and weekend news broadcasts to have the same pool of correspondents and to share resources with
Washington Week (also produced by WETA-TV). Coinciding with the move, the weekend editions began carrying feature segments covering culture and the arts. Sreenivasan (who remains a New York-based correspondent for the weekday broadcasts and serves as a contributor for the PBS latenight news program
Amanpour & Company) was initially replaced as weekend anchor by former
NBC News and
MSNBC correspondent Geoff Bennett, until John Yang was established as the weekend anchor beginning December 31, 2022 (New Year's Eve). Woodruff announced in May 2022 that she would step down as anchor at the end of the year, with plans for ongoing reporting on longer pieces as well as WETA projects and specials.
Amna Nawaz and
Geoff Bennett were named Woodruff's successors. Woodruff made her final anchor broadcast on December 30, 2022, while Nawaz and Bennett co-anchored their first broadcast on January 2, 2023.
PBS News Weekly, a digital-only half-hour series of
News Hour segments from the prior week, premiered on December 15, 2023, initially hosted by
Nick Schifrin and broadcast on Fridays.
PBS News Hour introduced a new logo and the new studio (still at WETA) on June 10, 2024, now featuring the current PBS logo, with the program's graphics rendered in the system's proprietary PBS Sans
typeface family introduced in 2019. At the same time, the program's longstanding use of
camel case in its name was discontinued, with "NewsHour" becoming "News Hour", in conjunction with the network's rebranding news operation as PBS News. Among the impact of funding cuts,
News Hour West ceased operations on December 19, 2025, and
News Hour Weekend aired its last episode on January 11, 2026. PBS News is replacing the weekend show with two new current affairs programs:
Horizons hosted by
William Brangham and
Compass Points hosted by
Nick Schifrin. ==Production and ratings==