Los Angeles Times

Pelley said to be out as anchor

- By Stephen Battaglio stephen.battaglio@latimes.com

In a major shake-up, newsman Scott Pelley is leaving the anchor desk of “CBS Evening News.”

Scott Pelley is leaving the anchor desk of “CBS Evening News” in a major shake-up at the storied broadcast network.

The New York Post reported Tuesday that Pelley’s belongings were being removed from his office while he was away on assignment for “60 Minutes,” which will become his full-time home at the network.

CBS News representa­tives did not comment on the account. But a person familiar with the news division’s plans who was not authorized to discuss the matter publicly said Pelley is going to depart “CBS Evening News” to become a full-time correspond­ent at the newsmagazi­ne. The move could be announced Wednesday morning.

Pelley, 59, has been in the “CBS Evening News” anchor chair since June 2011, when he replaced Katie Couric. He has been with CBS News since 1989 and has been a “60 Minutes” correspond­ent since 2004.

Although Pelley has built on the audience he inherited from Couric, his broadcast has been behind “NBC Nightly News With Lester Holt” and “ABC World News Tonight With David Muir” in the ratings throughout its run. The program’s competitiv­e position has been a source of frustratio­n for CBS executives, which has fueled speculatio­n in recent months that Pelley would be replaced.

There are no obvious successors to Pelley inside CBS. The one name mentioned most by TV news insiders in recent months is Norah O’Donnell, who is the co-anchor of “CBS This Morning” with Charlie Rose and Gayle King. The program has been giving CBS its best morning ratings in 29 years and has become a significan­t profit center for the news division. For that reason, the network is likely to consider the impact of breaking up the successful trio for the sake of the evening news time period that accounts for far less revenue than the morning segment.

Evening news programs have long been considered the signature broadcasts for network news. But 24-hour cable news networks and live news on demand through the Internet have eroded the evening news audiences in recent years. In the May sweeps ratings period measured by Nielsen, “ABC World News” averaged 7.59 million viewers a night and “NBC Nightly News” averaged 7.56 million. Pelley’s broadcast averaged 6.1 million.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States