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Inside Edition
American newsmagazine television program
American newsmagazine television program
| Field | Value | |
|---|---|---|
| image | Inside Edition logo.svg | |
| genre | Tabloid television | |
| creator | {{Plainlist | |
| presenter | {{Plainlist | |
| narrator | {{Plainlist | |
| theme_music_composer | {{Plainlist | |
| country | United States | |
| language | English | |
| num_seasons | ||
| num_episodes | 11,257+ | |
| camera | Multi-camera | |
| company | {{Plainlist | |
| network | Syndication | |
| first_aired | ||
| last_aired | present |
- John Tomlin
- Bob Young
- David Frost
- Bill O'Reilly
- Deborah Norville
- Eva Pilgrim
- Steve Kamer
- Jim Cutler
- Edd Kalehoff (1988–1990; 1992–1994)
- Bill Conti (1990–1992)
- Rick Krizman (1994–present)
- Inside Edition, Inc.
- King World (seasons 1–20)
- CBS Media Ventures (season 20−present) Inside Edition is an American tabloid television program that is distributed in first-run syndication by CBS Media Ventures. Having premiered on January 9, 1989, it is the longest-running syndicated newsmagazine program not strictly focused on hard news. It does include some, but the rest of each day's edition mainly features a mix of infotainment stories, entertainment news and gossip, scandals, true-crime stories, and lifestyle features.
From 1995 to 2025, the program's weekday broadcasts were anchored by Deborah Norville. Since 2020, its weekend editions have been presented by Mary Calvi, who also anchored the daily show when Norville was unavailable; Eva Pilgrim was named as Norville's successor in July 2025 and debuted on August 18, 2025.
Overview
Format
Inside Edition is broadcast in two formats: the weekday edition is broadcast as a half-hour program and features a broad mix of news stories of various types and feature segments; a weekend edition (titled *Inside Edition Weekend', though visually referenced as ***Inside Weekend''''' in on-air graphics) is also produced, which also runs for a half hour and comprises a selection of stories featured on the weekday editions the previous week. On major weekday holidays, episodes may feature a format similar to the weekend edition but with a compilation of stories from past editions and occasional lifestyle-oriented stories in relation to certain holidays (such as Independence Day, Thanksgiving and Christmas); from 2002 to 2012, certain episodes aired in the summer also had a similar format, mixing feature packages from past episodes introduced by the anchor of that day's broadcast with current news stories introduced by one of the program's correspondents from its newsroom.
The program is based at the CBS Broadcast Center in Manhattan, which houses its main newsroom and production facilities as well as the set for the broadcast. Some editions are conducted from the program's West Coast newsroom in Los Angeles (from where the program's L.A.-based correspondents sometimes introduce story packages) or on location at the studios of a television station that carries the program or from the sites of events covered by the broadcast. Inside Edition is transmitted live via satellite at 3:00 p.m. Eastern Time Zone on weekdays, with occasional updates to each broadcast conducted to account for new story details or other timely news pieces, and to correct technical or script issues in the original live broadcast.
The program was among the first directly affected by the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on March 8, 2020 (the day when COVID-19 was declared a pandemic) as the CBS Broadcast Center (and thus the Inside Edition newsroom and studio) was closed after building personnel tested positive for the virus. For the following week, Norville originated the program from her home kitchen. She subsequently shot remotely from her home, with contributions from the Los Angeles newsroom before being able to establish a dedicated virtual home studio with the entire staff remote working, as the Los Angeles base was also affected by a stay-at-home order.
History
David Frost and Bill O'Reilly era (1989–1995)
The program was created by John Tomlin and Bob Young, whose concept was picked up by King World Productions (which CBS Corporation—itself having acquired King World through its December 2005 split from Viacom—folded into CBS Television Distribution in September 2007; both CBS and Viacom would re-merge as ViacomCBS in 2019) in early 1988 for a debut during the 1988–89 season. When Inside Edition premiered in January 1989, it took a highbrow approach, focusing on general news and investigative journalism. The first anchor was David Frost, who was demoted to a correspondent after about three weeks due to poor ratings.
In February, Frost was replaced as main anchor by ABC News reporter Bill O'Reilly. By then, the program had shifted toward a mix of tabloid crime stories, investigations, and celebrity gossip. In fact, Inside Edition was one of the original "Big Three" tabloid journalism-style newsmagazines of the early 1990s on U.S. television—alongside Fox's A Current Affair and Paramount's Hard Copy—which fiercely competed with each other in syndication during that period (and is the only one that remains on the air). In addition to being one of the first American broadcasters to cover the dismantling of the Berlin Wall, O'Reilly obtained the first exclusive interview with murderer Joel Steinberg and was the first television host from a national current affairs program on the scene of the 1992 Los Angeles riots.
An Australian version was produced by Network Ten and was presented by veteran journalist Peter Luck and ran for two years.
In September 1992, the program launched a spin-off newsmagazine, Inside Edition Extra, which was co-produced by King World and then CBS affiliate WHDH (Channel 7, now an independent station), which broadcast its parent series in the Boston market. Tom Ellis, who had previously served as an anchor at WHDH, hosted the program. Unlike its parent show, Inside Edition Extra did not attain high ratings and was canceled at the end of the 1992–93 season, replaced by American Journal, which had a five-year run.
Deborah Norville era (1995–2025)
In July 1994, O'Reilly began expressing a desire to leave Inside Edition. In March 1995, a little over six years after the show premiered, he left. Deborah Norville, at the time a weekend anchor for CBS News known for her brief stint as co-anchor of Today on NBC, was chosen to take over. Norville hosted her first show on March 6, 1995.
By the late 1990s, as its similarly formatted syndicated competitors had already begun waning in the ratings, the program tweaked its format in an effort to retain viewers. While its focus continued to revolve partly around entertainment and crime stories, it also began phasing in additional hard news content (consisting of select major headlines of given warranty and other notable general news and legal-related stories) as well as lifestyle and human-interest story features. On February 14, 2001, Inside Edition marked its 4,000th episode.
In the late 2000s, as video sharing websites such as YouTube came into prominence, Inside Edition began incorporating viral videos in most broadcasts, relating to a news story covered in that day's edition or, more commonly, humorous or amazing videos (including clever marriage proposals, people and animals displaying interesting talents or stunts, active military personnel returning home from duty surprising family members, and practical jokes); videos of the latter type are typically included in the "D" block that closes each broadcast.
In April 2025, Norville announced she would depart from her role as anchor after 30 years at the end of the season. Her final day as anchor of Inside Edition was May 21, 2025.
Eva Pilgrim era (since 2025)
On July 7, 2025, it was announced that ABC News correspondent and GMA3: What You Need to Know co-host Eva Pilgrim would succeed Norville as host of Inside Edition, beginning with the 38th season. In a statement, Pilgrim described anchoring the program as a dream job, and herself as an "avid viewer and fan". She hosted her first show on August 18, 2025.
Criticism
In the 1990s, Inside Edition was classified by the Pew Research Center Project for Excellence in Journalism as "tabloid press" and a "pseudo news program."
On-air staff
Current on-air staff
Anchor
- Eva Pilgrim (since 2025)
Correspondents
- Paul Boyd – correspondent/weekend fill-in anchor (2020–present; previously served as weekend anchor/New York–based correspondent 2001–2014)
- Mary Calvi – weekend/weekday fill-in anchor (2020–present)
- Jenna DeAngelis – correspondent (2023–present)
- Steven Fabian – New York–based correspondent/weekend/weekday fill-in anchor (2014–present)
- Alison Hall – New York–based correspondent (2021–present)
- Astrid Martinez – correspondent (2022–present)
- Ann Mercogliano – New York–based correspondent (2015–present)
- Jim Moret – Los Angeles–based chief correspondent (2004–present)
- Victoria Recaño – Los Angeles–based correspondent (2002–2004, 2012–present)
- Les Trent – New York–based correspondent (2000–present)
- Sibila Vargas – correspondent (2022–present)
- Chris Welch - correspondent (2024–present)
Former on-air staff
- Megan Alexander – New York–based correspondent (2007–2025)
- Trish Bergin – weekend anchor/correspondent (2002–2003)
- Logan Byrnes – correspondent (?–?; now at KUSI-TV in San Diego)
- Tony Cox – correspondent (?–?)
- Don Criqui – weekend anchor/correspondent (1995–2002, longtime sports broadcaster for CBS and NBC)
- Rita Cosby – New York–based correspondent (2008–2009, still special correspondent)
- Kim Dean – correspondent (2004–2007, now at WRAL-TV in Raleigh)
- David Frost – inaugural anchor correspondent (1989, deceased)
- Rudy Giuliani – chief legal analyst (1990–1993, former New York City mayor and former presidential candidate)
- Nancy Glass – weekend anchor/senior correspondent (1992–1993, later host of American Journal)
- Stacey Gualandi – Los Angeles–based correspondent (1997–2006, now at Radar Online)
- Kristina Guerrero – Los Angeles–based correspondent (2007–2008, later at E! News)
- Lisa Guerrero – chief investigative correspondent (2006–2025)
- Star Jones – chief legal analyst (1994–1997, later co-host of The View and at TruTV, now host of Divorce Court)
- Rick Kirkham – correspondent (1989–1997)
- Diane McInerney – weekend/weekday fill-in anchor/New York–based correspondent (2003–2020)
- Matt Meagher – senior investigative correspondent (1989–2010)
- Deborah Norville – anchor (1995–2025, now host of The Perfect Line)
- Bill O'Reilly – anchor/correspondent (1989–1995, later host of The O'Reilly Factor on Fox News)
- Jon Scott – reporter (1989–1992, now host/anchor of Fox Report Weekend on Fox News)
- Janet Tamaro – correspondent (1989–1994, 1996–1999)
- Rolonda Watts – senior correspondent, weekend anchor, and producer (1989–1993, later host of the syndicated talk show Rolonda)
- Steve Wilson – reporter (1992–1995, later at WXYZ-TV in Detroit)
- April Woodard – New York-based senior correspondent (2001–2014, now at WTKR in Norfolk)
Awards
- George Polk Award – Special Achievement in Journalism 1996
- Lifetime Achievement Award – Presented by the National Association of Consumer Agency Administrators, 2007
References
References
- "Deborah Norville Bids Farewell to 'Inside Edition': How She Wrapped Her Emotional Final Episode as Host". People.com.
- "Inside Edition Weekend (1989)".
- Thompson, Simon. "How Magazine Shows Endure In An Increasingly Challenging Media Landscape".
- Koester, Megan. (2016-06-07). "I Got All of My News From 'Inside Edition' for One Whole Week".
- Logan, Joe. (February 4, 1989). "Tubenotes Joe Logan - Page 7". The Lewiston Journal.
- (February 3, 1989). "'Inside Edition' Boss has Chilling News for David Frost". [[The Pittsburgh Press]].
- Logan, Joe. (February 14, 1989). "Today's Television Listings". [[The Beaver County Times]].
- Peterson, Bettelou. (April 30, 1989). "Ben Cross: Age, We. West - Page 62". Boca Raton News.
- (June 28, 1989). "'Inside Edition Keeping Anchor - Page 5". Rome News-Tribune.
- Williams, Scott. (December 18, 1992). "Bill Reilly Not Celebrating. - Page 17". Sun Journal.
- Richmond, Ray. (February 11, 1993). "Tabloid TV. Inside Edition Casts Show With Dahmer In Wrong ...". Lawrence Journal-World.
- Slewinski, Christy. (June 20, 1995). "Newsmags Are A Lucrative Business, And Competition Fierce. - Page 1". The Vindicator.
- Johnson, Richard. (June 19, 1989). "Eavesdropping - Page 14". The Hour.
- (October 18, 1994). "O'Reilly Leaving Inside Edition'. - Page 7". Portsmouth Daily Times.
- Kitman, ''The Man Who Would Not Shut Up'', p. 148.
- (October 19, 1994). "Norville May Leave Cbs, Join Inside Edition'. - Page 7". Sun Journal.
- (October 21, 1994). "Inside Edition Signs Norville. - Page 11". Record-Journal.
- (January 3, 2008). "INSIDE EDITION MARKS 20TH SEASON WITH WEEK-LONG CELEBRATION". Paramount Press Express.
- (February 12, 2001). "Inside Edition Marks 4,000th Episode. News Magazine: The ... - Page 14". The Telegraph-Herald.
- Weprin, Alex. (2025-04-02). "Deborah Norville to Exit 'Inside Edition' After 30 Years".
- Robledo, Stahl, Anthony, Jay. (May 21, 2025). "Deborah Norville exits 'Inside Edition' after 30 years". USA Today.
- "Deborah Norville Shares Final Thoughts on Inside Edition".
- (July 7, 2025). "Eva Pilgrim Exits ''GMA3'' to Anchor ''Inside Edition''". [[Penske Media Corporation]].
- (July 7, 2025). "''Inside Edition'' Taps ABC News Correspondent Eva Pilgrim as New Anchor".
- (July 7, 2025). "''Inside Edition'' Taps Eva Pilgrim as Its New Anchor". [[Eldridge Industries]].
- (27 March 1998). "The Clinton Crisis and the Press – Pew Research Center's Journalism Project". [[Pew Research Center]].
- (6 March 1998). "Changing Definitions of News – Pew Research Center's Journalism Project". Pew Research Center.
- Mifflin, Lawrie. (January 18, 1999). "Big Television Shocker: Tabloid Shows Go Soft; The Mainstream Networks Are Co-opting What Was Once Too Lurid for Prime Time". [[The New York Times]].
- "George Polk Awards – Previous Winners".
- "Inside Edition – Awards".
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