It wouldn’t be Sunday night on CBS without 60 Minutes. This series has been around longer than most TV viewers have been alive and still draws very good ratings compared to the rest of the CBS schedule. Could 60 Minutes possibly be cancelled, or is it guaranteed to be renewed for season 58? Stay tuned.
A newsmagazine series, the 60 Minutes TV show was created by Don Hewitt and Bill Leonard in 1968. The longest-running network primetime series features investigative reports, interviews, human interest segments, and news-maker profiles. Three long-form news stories typically air each episode. The CBS News correspondents and contributors include Lesley Stahl, Scott Pelley, Bill Whitaker, Anderson Cooper, Sharyn Alfonsi, Jon Wertheim, and Cecilia Vega with Norah O’Donnell.
The ratings are typically the best indication of a show’s chances of staying on the air. The higher the ratings, the better the chances of survival. This chart will be updated as new ratings data becomes available.
1/14 update: You can see the latest night’s ratings in context.
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For comparisons: Season 56 of 60 Minutes on CBS averaged a 0.68 rating in the 18-49 demographic and 7.52 million viewers.
Note: These are the final national ratings, including all live+same day viewing and DVR playback (through 3:00 AM). While these numbers don’t include further delayed or streaming viewing, they are a very good indicator of how a show is performing, especially when compared to others on the same channel. There can be other economic factors involved in a show’s fate, but typically the higher-rated series are renewed and the lower-rated ones are cancelled.
What do you think? Do you like the 60 Minutes TV series on CBS? Should it be cancelled or renewed for a 58th season?
No, they have gone from reporting interesting stories to creating narratives to fit their agenda. Completely lost their way.