Weekend Today
Weekend Today is the collective term for the Saturday and Sunday morning editions of NBC's long-running news and talk program Today, which provide live broadcasts of national and international news, weather updates, interviews, and feature stories from NBC Studios in Rockefeller Center, New York City. [1]
The Saturday edition, co-anchored by NBC News Chief White House Correspondent Peter Alexander and Senior Legal Correspondent Laura Jarrett, airs Saturday mornings and emphasizes timely headlines alongside lifestyle segments. [2][3]
In contrast, the Sunday edition, titled Sunday TODAY with Willie Geist and anchored by journalist Willie Geist, offers extended conversations, profiles, and analysis of current events. [4]
Originating with the Sunday broadcast's debut on September 20, 1987, hosted initially by Maria Shriver and Boyd Matson, the Saturday counterpart followed on August 1, 1992, expanding the Today format to weekends and solidifying NBC's morning programming presence. [1]
These editions maintain the core journalistic approach of the weekday Today show while adapting to weekend audiences through shorter durations and varied pacing.[5]
History
Launch and Early Years
The Sunday edition of NBC's Today program premiered on September 20, 1987, marking the network's first expansion of the morning franchise into weekends.[1] Co-anchored by Maria Shriver and Boyd Matson, the 90-minute broadcast aired from 8:00 a.m. to 9:30 a.m. Eastern Time and emphasized news updates, sports recaps, and feature stories tailored for a weekend audience.[6] The hosts, announced in May 1987, brought journalistic credentials—Shriver as an NBC correspondent and Matson as a veteran reporter—to differentiate the program from lighter weekday fare.[6] The Saturday edition followed on August 1, 1992, extending Today to a seven-day schedule and filling the slot previously occupied by NBC's Meet the Press lead-in programming.[1] Anchored by public radio host Scott Simon and NBC correspondent Jackie Nespral, it ran for two hours starting at 7:00 a.m. Eastern Time, incorporating similar news and interview elements but with a focus on timely weekend developments.[7] This debut aligned with NBC's strategy to compete in morning viewership against ABC's *Good Morning America* weekend segments and CBS's offerings.[1] During these formative years through the mid-1990s, Weekend Today prioritized hard news and analysis over entertainment, often featuring extended segments on global events and policy discussions, though ratings remained modest compared to the weekday edition's broader appeal.[6] Anchor transitions occurred early, with Matson departing after 1988 and Shriver continuing until 1990, reflecting the program's evolution amid shifting network priorities.[6]Expansion and Format Changes
The Sunday edition of Today premiered on September 20, 1987, representing the program's initial expansion beyond weekdays as a 90-minute broadcast anchored by Maria Shriver and Boyd Matson, blending news updates with feature segments tailored for weekend viewers.[8][9] This addition aimed to test audience interest in morning news on Sundays, airing from 7:00 a.m. to 8:30 a.m. ET before affiliates took over for local programming.[10] On August 1, 1992, NBC launched the Saturday edition, completing the expansion to a seven-day schedule and filling a two-hour slot from 7:00 a.m. to 9:00 a.m. ET that often displaced traditional Saturday morning cartoons in affiliated markets.[1][11] The Saturday format emphasized live events, such as outdoor segments on the Today plaza, and lighter lifestyle content to differentiate it from weekday editions while maintaining core news elements.[12] Subsequent format adjustments refined the weekend editions' structure, shifting from a heavier emphasis on breaking news in the early years toward more extended interviews, cultural profiles, and viewer-engaged features by the 2000s.[13] A notable revamp occurred in April 2016 for the Sunday edition, introducing enhanced production elements and a focus on substantive discussions to boost engagement amid competition from magazine-style programs like CBS Sunday Morning.[14] These changes preserved the two-hour duration but prioritized narrative depth over rapid news cycles, aligning with evolving viewer preferences for weekend programming.[1]Recent Developments and Anchor Transitions
In August 2023, NBC News announced that Kristen Welker, who had co-anchored Saturday editions since 2014, would depart to become moderator of Meet the Press, effective September 2023.[3] Laura Jarrett, NBC News' senior legal correspondent, was appointed as her replacement, debuting as co-anchor alongside Peter Alexander on September 9, 2023.[3] [15] This transition coincided with Saturday Today's relocation from Washington, D.C., back to Studio 1A at 30 Rockefeller Plaza in New York City, aligning the weekend broadcast more closely with the weekday program's production environment.[16] The Jarrett-Alexander pairing has anchored Saturday news segments consistently through 2025, with no further anchor departures or promotions reported for the weekend editions.[5] Dylan Dreyer has continued providing weather coverage, while feature reporting has featured contributors like Joe Fryer.[5] Sunday editions, under Willie Geist since 2017, have maintained their established format without personnel shifts.[5] Sheinelle Jones, a regular third-hour co-anchor on weekdays and occasional weekend contributor, took an extended leave starting in December 2024 to address a family health matter, which later involved the illness and death of her husband, Uche Ojeh.[17] [18] She returned to Today full-time on September 5, 2025, resuming contributions that may include weekend segments.[17] [19] This personal hiatus did not alter the core weekend anchor lineup but highlighted rotational flexibility among Today personnel.[20] Beyond personnel, recent developments have emphasized experiential content, such as on-location scavenger hunts and circus visits in 2024, to differentiate weekend broadcasts amid stable viewership.[21] No substantive format overhauls or production relocations have occurred since the 2023 Studio 1A return.Program Format and Content
Core Structure and Segments
The Saturday edition of Weekend Today airs live from 7:00 a.m. to 9:00 a.m. Eastern Time, featuring a co-anchor team that delivers a blend of breaking news coverage, in-depth reporting on current events, and lighter lifestyle features.[22][23] The program opens with headlines and top stories, often including correspondent reports from the field on domestic and international developments, followed by segments on human-interest topics such as health, travel, and consumer advice.[1] Weather forecasts form a recurring element, typically presented by a dedicated meteorologist with national overviews and ties to ongoing stories, such as severe weather impacts or seasonal trends; local affiliates may insert customized reports during the broadcast.[1] Interviews constitute a core component, ranging from discussions with political figures and experts on policy matters to conversations with celebrities promoting books, films, or projects, emphasizing substantive exchanges over promotional fluff.[1][5] Special features, like extended "cover stories" on investigative or profile pieces, add depth, often highlighting underreported angles on science, environment, or cultural shifts.[24] In contrast, the Sunday edition, rebranded as Sunday Today with Willie Geist, broadcasts from 8:00 a.m. to 9:00 a.m. Eastern Time and adopts a more conversational tone centered on extended interviews with newsmakers, authors, and cultural commentators, alongside curated news summaries.[25][5] It omits a standalone national weather segment in favor of integrated updates within stories, prioritizing narrative-driven content such as personal essays or reflective pieces on weekly events. Both editions maintain a runtime focused on efficiency, avoiding the extended commercial breaks and variety acts of the weekday program, while incorporating occasional live elements like viewer Q&A or plaza events during warmer months.[1][26]Distinctions from Weekday Edition
The weekend editions of Today broadcast for shorter durations than the weekday program, which airs four hours from 7:00 a.m. to 11:00 a.m. Eastern Time. Saturday Today runs two hours from 7:00 a.m. to 9:00 a.m. ET, aligning with the weekday start time, while Sunday Today occupies a single hour from 8:00 a.m. to 9:00 a.m. ET, omitting the earlier slot and extended segments.[22] This condensed format excludes the weekday's third and fourth hours, which feature dedicated lifestyle blocks such as Today with Jenna & Friends and Today with Hoda & Jenna.[27] In content and tone, the weekend broadcasts maintain core traditions of news coverage, newsmaker interviews, weather updates, and lifestyle reporting but adopt a more relaxed, conversational style distinct from the weekday edition's faster-paced, news-heavy structure.[1] Emphasis shifts toward human-interest stories, popular culture features, and lighter segments suited to weekend audiences, with reduced focus on in-depth political or breaking news analysis that dominates weekdays.[1] Production elements, such as anchor rotations and segment pacing, further differentiate the editions, prioritizing engaging, less formal interactions over the weekday's ensemble-driven, multi-anchor news desk approach.[22]Evolving Features and Innovations
In response to the growing demand for on-demand content, NBC launched TODAY All Day in July 2020 as a 24/7 streaming channel featuring clips, highlights, and original segments from the Today franchise, including Weekend Today material, accessible via Peacock and other platforms.[28] This digital enhancement extended Weekend Today's reach beyond traditional broadcast, allowing viewers to access news updates, interviews, and lifestyle features asynchronously.[29] Sunday TODAY introduced the "Sunday Mail" segment in October 2018, an interactive feature where host Willie Geist and meteorologist Dylan Dreyer respond to viewer-submitted questions via email or social media, fostering audience engagement at the close of each broadcast.[30] Complementing this, the Sunday Sitdown podcast debuted alongside the program's rebranding under Geist in April 2016, offering extended celebrity interviews and analysis available on platforms like Simplecast, which has evolved to include live taping events such as Sunday Sitdown LIVE for select audiences.[4] Saturday TODAY shifted production to NBC's Studio 5N in Washington, D.C., in December 2020, incorporating advanced LED walls and multi-camera setups for enhanced visual storytelling and remote integration during hybrid news coverage.[31] These upgrades supported more dynamic segments, such as extended weather reports and live field contributions, aligning with broader NBC News transitions to story-centric digital workflows announced in October 2025.[32] Additional innovations include Saturday Today Extra, a supplementary feed with feature tapes, live production elements, and weather updates, streamed via YouTube TV to provide overflow content beyond the main hour-long broadcast.[33] These developments reflect Weekend Today's adaptation to multi-platform consumption, prioritizing viewer interactivity and extended accessibility without altering core broadcast durations.On-Air Personnel
Current Anchors and Hosts
Saturday TODAY is co-anchored by Peter Alexander, NBC News' chief White House correspondent, and Laura Jarrett, a senior legal correspondent, a role Jarrett assumed on September 9, 2023.[27][5][34] Peter Alexander joined as co-anchor in 2018.[5] Additional contributors include Sheinelle Jones, who serves as an anchor and meteorologist for the weekend editions while also contributing to weekdays.[35] Sunday TODAY with Willie Geist is hosted by Willie Geist, who has led the program since its rebranding and expansion in 2017 to focus on in-depth interviews, news analysis, and cultural discussions.[27] The format features Geist conducting extended conversations with political figures, authors, and experts, often from NBC's Studio 1A or remote locations.[36]| Day | Primary Anchors/Hosts | Roles and Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Saturday | Peter Alexander, Laura Jarrett | Co-anchors; Alexander handles national reporting, Jarrett legal segments |
| Saturday | Sheinelle Jones | Anchor and meteorologist |
| Sunday | Willie Geist | Host; emphasizes interviews and analysis |
Reporters and Correspondents
Peter Alexander serves as NBC News' chief White House correspondent and co-anchors Saturday TODAY, delivering political analysis and on-location reports from Washington, D.C., with coverage extending to foreign affairs during major events.[27][37] Laura Jarrett functions as the senior legal correspondent, contributing expertise on court cases, policy implications, and justice system developments while co-anchoring the Saturday broadcast, drawing from her background in legal journalism.[27][38] Joe Fryer, an NBC News correspondent based in New York, regularly reports for Saturday TODAY on consumer issues, health topics, and investigative features, often incorporating field segments and interviews to complement the program's weekend focus on practical storytelling.[39] Additional correspondents, such as Aaron Gilchrist for White House updates and Dana Griffin for general news, contribute to specific episodes, as seen in the January 11, 2025, broadcast, reflecting the flexible use of NBC's broader reporting network for timely coverage.[40] This structure allows Weekend Today to integrate specialized expertise without a fixed roster beyond core anchors, prioritizing empirical reporting over scripted segments.[27]Former Key Personnel
Lester Holt co-anchored Weekend Today from 2003 until June 2015, when he transitioned to anchor NBC Nightly News following Brian Williams' departure from that role.[41] During his tenure, Holt contributed to coverage of major events including the Iraq War, where he reported from the field.[42] Kristen Welker served as co-anchor of Saturday Today from October 2020 until August 2023, partnering with Peter Alexander before departing to become moderator of Meet the Press.[43][3] Her exit was marked by a special segment highlighting her contributions to the program.[44] Earlier key figures included Jack Ford, who co-anchored Weekend Today from 1995 to 1999 and later pursued legal and authoring careers.[45] Boyd Matson, one of the inaugural Sunday Today co-anchors starting in 1987, helped launch the weekend format.[46] Garrick Utley anchored news segments and later co-anchored in the late 1980s and early 1990s.[46] Scott Simon co-anchored Saturday editions beginning in 1992.[13] Mary Alice Williams also served as a co-anchor during the program's formative years.[46]Production Elements
Theme Music and Branding
The theme music for Weekend Today derives from John Williams' compositions for NBC News, specifically "Scherzo for Today," introduced in 1985 as part of a suite including themes for NBC Nightly News and Meet the Press.[47] [48] This orchestral piece, characterized by its energetic and uplifting motifs, was adapted for the weekend editions to provide a lighter, more relaxed tone compared to the weekday broadcast.[48] In 2013, NBC updated the overall Today branding, simplifying the iconic sunrise logo to three horizontal bands representing the weekday, Saturday, and Sunday editions, rendered in an all-orange palette evoking a morning sunrise. [49] The Saturday edition employs a dedicated logo variant emphasizing this sunrise element, while Sunday Today with Willie Geist, which adopted its current title in April 2016, features a customized logo incorporating the host's name alongside the program's sunrise graphic for distinct visual identity.[4] These branding elements, including lower-thirds graphics and opening sequences, maintain consistency with NBC's peacock network identity while differentiating the weekend format through softer color schemes and streamlined animations to align with its more conversational programming style. Post-2013 theme music updates for NBC News properties shifted toward production library cues from sources like Non-Stop Music, though specific weekend adaptations retain orchestral influences from Williams' original work.[50]Studios, Technology, and Broadcasting Logistics
Weekend Today originates primarily from NBC's Studio 1A, located at 30 Rockefeller Plaza in New York City, a facility shared with the weekday editions of the Today show.[51][52] This ground-level studio, positioned between 48th and 49th Streets with windows overlooking the TODAY Plaza, supports live audience interactions and outdoor segments during weekend broadcasts.[53] Studio operations extend to weekends, with hours typically from 10:00 a.m. to 6:00 p.m. to facilitate pre-broadcast preparations.[52] The production employs a multi-camera setup within an all-digital, high-definition environment upgraded by NBC in 2007 to enable redundant, reliable live feeds and enhanced visual quality.[54] This infrastructure supports seamless integration of video elements, graphics, and remote contributions from correspondents, minimizing downtime in fast-paced morning news formats.[55] Broadcasting logistics center on live East Coast transmissions distributed via NBC's national affiliate network, with Saturday editions airing from 7:00 a.m. to 9:00 a.m. ET and Sunday editions from 8:00 a.m. to 9:00 a.m. ET.[22][26] Signals are routed from New York control rooms to local stations for simultaneous or time-shifted playback in other zones, supplemented by streaming on NBC.com and apps for broader accessibility.[56] While the core setup remains in Studio 1A, select Saturday broadcasts have utilized remote facilities, including a Washington, D.C.-area studio introduced in 2021 for enhanced political coverage proximity.[57]Special Broadcasts
Themed Episodes and Events
Weekend Today has incorporated themed elements into select broadcasts, particularly around holidays and program milestones, to blend news with engaging, viewer-oriented content. These episodes typically feature lighter segments amid standard news coverage, such as host costumes or retrospective montages, distinguishing them from the weekday edition's more elaborate productions.[58] Halloween episodes have emphasized festive participation by anchors. On October 30, 2021, co-hosts Peter Alexander and Kristen Welker donned costumes portraying Sam Elliott and Lil Nas X, nodding to the actors' roles in a 2020 commercial for a denim brand, as part of the program's holiday-themed approach to morning entertainment.[58] Anniversary celebrations have served as another recurring theme. The December 28, 2012, broadcast marked Weekend Today's 25th anniversary since its debut in 1987, including reflective segments on its evolution and key moments in morning weekend programming history.[59] Year-end episodes often adopt a thematic recap format, compiling highlights of entertaining or uplifting stories from the prior 12 months. Examples include the December 31, 2017, edition reviewing "fun" segments like celebrity interviews and light-hearted news, and a similar 2016 retrospective aired January 1, 2017, focusing on shared joy amid headlines.[60][61]Coverage of Major News and Holidays
Weekend Today integrates coverage of significant national and international news events into its weekend broadcasts, featuring live reports, correspondent analysis, and updates from NBC News teams. The program responds to breaking developments by dedicating segments to unfolding stories, such as acts of solidarity during the George Floyd protests, highlighted in a June 6, 2020, report by NBC's Erin McLaughlin.[62] Similarly, amid the COVID-19 pandemic, it addressed public health updates, including medical correspondent Dr. Kavita Patel's assessment of the Pfizer vaccine's safety on February 11, 2021.[63] Political events receive focused attention, with examples including reporting on President Donald Trump's campaign activities following the Republican National Convention, covered on August 29, 2020.[64] The show also provides previews and context for major milestones like presidential inaugurations, aligning with NBC's broader election and transition coverage, though primary live events typically occur midweek.[65] For holidays, Weekend Today emphasizes seasonal news, family impacts, and preparatory segments, often blending journalism with lifestyle elements. On December 25, 2021, it examined how the Omicron variant disrupted Christmas travel plans, featuring NBC's Sam Brock.[66] Broadcasts around major holidays like Thanksgiving and Christmas include reports on travel trends, weather disruptions, and cultural traditions, frequently leading into NBC's network specials such as parades, while maintaining a news-oriented format distinct from purely festive programming.[67]Viewership and Ratings
Historical Trends and Data
Saturday editions of Today averaged 1,861,000 total viewers and a 0.6% rating among adults 18-49 as measured on June 17, 2023, reflecting a 6% decline in total viewers from the prior period tracked by Nielsen.[68] Sunday editions typically draw comparable audiences, though specific breakdowns are less frequently reported separately from weekday metrics. These figures represent roughly 70-75% of the weekday Today show's average viewership, which stood at 2,551,000 total viewers in recent 2025 measurements.[69] Viewership for network morning news, including weekend programming, has followed a broader downward trend amid cord-cutting and the rise of streaming alternatives. NBC's morning news audience decreased by 11% between 2020 and 2022, outpacing ABC's 9% and CBS's 8% drops during the same interval, per Nielsen data analyzed by Pew Research Center.[70] For the 2024-2025 TV season, the weekday Today show posted a 5% decline in total viewers to 2.604 million, a pattern likely mirrored in weekend slots given shared production elements and audience habits.[71]| Period/Season | Saturday Today Total Viewers | Key Demographic Rating (A18-49) | Year-over-Year Change |
|---|---|---|---|
| June 2023 | 1,861,000 | 0.6% | -6% (from prior period)[68] |
| 2020-2022 (NBC Morning Overall) | N/A (11% decline in avg. audience) | N/A | -11%[70] |
| 2024-2025 (Weekday Proxy) | N/A (down to 2.604M avg.) | N/A | -5%[71] |