Oveer the years, bnoth CBS and Fox have had to deal with NFL football "run-overs": Games going past 7 P.M. Eastern time.
Fox usually deals with this by joining programs in progress so local affiliates' late newscasts in the Eastern half of the country (10 P.M. EDT/EST; 9 CDT/CST) start on-time.
CBS usually will "push back" the Sunday prime-time scehdule, meaning that sometimes, Sunday-night late local news on CBS stations, usually at 11 P.M. ET, sometimes doesn't start until 11:30.
I would think CBS affiliate managers are probably unhappy over this state of affairs.
Therefore, I wonder if CBS might consider making a change during the Fall:
(1) Have an "NFL Today" post-game show (or the conclusion of the game itself) run until 7:30 P.M. ET.
(2) Expand "60 Minutes" to 90 minutes during football season, and have it run from 7:30 to 9 ET.
(3) Include two short (5-6 minutes each) segments in each show that would not be promoted and could be deleted should "60" not begin until afetr 7:30.
(4) The idea is that "60 Minutes" would always end at 9, and late local Sunday-night news on local CBS stations would always start at 11.
(5) After football season, "60 Minutes" goes back to it's regular time (7-8 P.M. ET) and length (one hour). Something else goes into the 8-9 timeslot.
What do you think??
Joseph