> On Jul 28, 2016, at 11:10 PM, Doug Eastick <[email protected]> wrote:
> Ben Scripps may have a bit of an answer on this.
> 
A bit of a myopic answer, as I can only really speak to CBS, and even then only 
in the eastern time zone, but the rule of thumb for 11pm shows is that we get a 
35-minute hole to fill between the end of whatever (Thursday football, 
political convention, whatever) and the start of Colbert.  CBS is usually 
generous about rounding up to the next minute--tonight’s convention coverage 
ended, IIRC, sixteen seconds past the minute; they rounded up and stations 
ended up with a 35:44 hole for local news, much to the joy of newscast 
producers east of the Mississippi.  But not always; for example, an overage of 
under a minute, which we usually only see on awards shows or “Survivor” reunion 
shows, sometimes has to be eaten by the station’s newscast, much to the chagrin 
of those same producers.

But on the weekends, if there’s an overrun that ends before 6:30pm, the network 
newscast still starts at 6:30; some stations will run an abbreviated local 
newscast and go to the network news at 6:30, while others will preempt and run 
their full newscast, either joining the network when the local show is done, or 
adding material to preempt it entirely.  If the sports runs past 6:30, then 
network just starts their newscast at the end of sports, and ends on time.

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