Good Morning America Weekend
{{Short description|American television program}}
{{Use mdy dates|date=November 2023}} {{Use American English|date=November 2023}}
{{Infobox television
| alt_name = GMA Weekend
| image =
| caption =
| genre = Morning news and talk show
| creator = Donald L. Perris
William F. Baker
| director =
| presenter = Whit Johnson
Gio Benitez
Janai Norman
Somara Theodore
| theme_music_composer =
| opentheme =
| endtheme =
| composer =
| country = United States
| language = English
| num_seasons = 17
| num_episodes = 2,172
| list_episodes =
| executive_producer =
| producer =
| editor =
| location = ABC Television Center, Lincoln Square, Manhattan (most broadcasts)
Times Square Studios, Times Square (special events)
| camera = Multi-camera
| runtime = 88 minutes (Saturday editions)
44 minutes (Sunday editions)
| company =
| network = ABC
| first_aired = {{Start date|1993|01|03}}
| last_aired = {{End date|1999|02|28}}
| first_aired2 = {{Start date|2004|09|04}}
| last_aired2 = present
| related = Good Morning America
}}
Good Morning America Weekend (often abbreviated as GMA Weekend) is an American morning television program that is broadcast on ABC. It is the Saturday and Sunday edition of Good Morning America, with the regular Monday through Friday edition currently being hosted by Robin Roberts, George Stephanopolous, Michael Strahan, and ABC News chief meteorologist Ginger Zee.
The first weekend edition of Good Morning America premiered on January 3, 1993, airing only on Sundays; it was hosted at various points by Willow Bay, Aaron Brown, John Hockenberry, Dana King, Lisa McRee, Antonio Mora, Kevin Newman and Bill Ritter. The program was cancelled on February 28, 1999.
In August 2010, Bill Weir left the weekend edition to become co-anchor of Nightline; Marysol Castro left the show the following month. While Dan Harris officially took over as Weir's replacement that October, meteorologists from various ABC affiliates across the country filled in to provide the national weather segments for over a year after Castro's departure; eventually in November 2011, Ginger Zee, who previously served as a meteorologist at NBC O&O WMAQ-TV in Chicago, was appointed as weather anchor for the weekend editions.{{Cite web |date=November 2011 |title=ABC News Hires Two Anchors from NBC Station in Chicago |url=http://www.mediabistro.com/tvnewser/abc-news-hires-two-anchors-from-nbc-station-in-chicago_b94904 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20140724073530/http://www.mediabistro.com/tvnewser/abc-news-hires-two-anchors-from-nbc-station-in-chicago_b94904 |archive-date=July 24, 2014 |access-date=July 8, 2014 |website=TVNewser}} After Zee was promoted to weather anchor of the weekday edition of Good Morning America in December 2013, the program returned to having ABC affiliate meteorologists to substitute on the Saturday and Sunday editions, until ABC announced the appointment of Rob Marciano (a former CNN meteorologist who had recently departed as co-host of Entertainment Tonight) as full-time weekend weather anchor in July 2014, effective that September.{{Cite press release |title=Rob Marciano Joins ABC News as Senior Meteorologist |date=July 18, 2014 |url=https://abcnews.go.com/blogs/headlines/2014/07/rob-marciano-joins-abc-news-as-senior-meteorologist/ |author=Alyssa Bernstein |work=ABC News}}
In July 2014, Bianna Golodryga announced she would be leaving ABC to take a correspondent role at Yahoo News. Paula Faris (who previously substituted for Golodryga in the spring of 2012, while she was on maternity leave) was named as Golodryga's replacement as weekend co-anchor.{{Cite web |last=Jordan Chariton |date=July 18, 2014 |title=Bianna Golodryga Leaving 'GMA' for Yahoo!; Paula Faris Promoted to Co-Anchor |url=http://www.mediabistro.com/tvnewser/bianna-golodryga-leaving-gma-for-yahoo-paula-faris-promoted-to-co-anchor_b232605 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20140719062526/http://www.mediabistro.com/tvnewser/bianna-golodryga-leaving-gma-for-yahoo-paula-faris-promoted-to-co-anchor_b232605 |archive-date=July 19, 2014 |access-date=July 18, 2014 |website=TVNewser}}
On October 5, 2019, the Saturday edition of GMA expanded to two hours (thus meeting the runtimes of Weekend Today and CBS This Morning Saturday), with around 100 affiliates carrying the full program in some form (either the entire duration or in two separate timeslots) by the end of the year. The expansion comes as the FCC's reforms of regulations of children's television programming will allow stations to carry Litton's Weekend Adventure in the 6 a.m. local timeslot, opening up the time period once the college football season ends.{{Cite news |last=Steinberg |first=Brian |date=September 27, 2019 |title=ABC Will Expand 'Good Morning America' on Saturday |work=Variety |url=https://variety.com/2019/tv/news/good-morning-america-saturday-abc-news-1203351986/ |access-date=September 30, 2019}}
On August 8, 2021, Dan Harris announced that he would be leaving ABC News. His last day was on September 26, 2021.{{Cite web |last=Johnson |first=Ted |date=August 8, 2021 |title='Good Morning America' Weekend Co-Anchor Dan Harris Announces Departure From ABC News |url=https://deadline.com/2021/08/good-morning-america-weekend-co-anchor-dan-harris-announces-departure-from-abc-news-1234811084/ |website=Deadline Hollywood |accessdate=August 8, 2021}} Janai Norman would be the replacement for Dan Harris in July 2022. On May 11, 2023, Gio Benitez would officially replace Eva Pilgrim, as she had been selected to be one of the new co-hosts for GMA3: What You Need to Know alongside DeMarco Morgan and Dr. Jennifer Ashton to replace T. J. Holmes and Amy Robach, who had both been fired from ABC News in January 2023 due to a romantic scandal they had been involved in.
On-air staff
= Current =
- Whit Johnson – co-host/anchor (2018–present)
- Gio Benitez - co-host/anchor (2023–present)
- Janai Norman - co-host/anchor (2022–Present
- Somara Theodore – meteorologist (2023–present)
= Former on-air staff =
== Anchors ==
- Bill Ritter (1993–1994 and 1997–1998; now at WABC-TV in New York City)
- Dana King (1993; retired from journalism)
- Lisa McRee (1993–1994; now at Spectrum News 1 in Los Angeles as anchor)
- Willow Bay (1994–1998)
- Antonio Mora (1994–1995; later at Al-Jazeera America)
- John Hockenberry (1995–1996)
- Kevin Newman (1996–1997; now at CTV News)
- Aaron Brown (1998–1999)
- Bill Weir (2004–2010; now at CNN)
- Kate Snow (2004–2010; now at NBC News)
- JuJu Chang (2010; 2014)
- Bianna Golodryga (2010–2014; later at CBS News; now at CNN)
- Rachel Smith – lifestyle anchor (2012–2014; remains with GMA as features correspondent and as substitute weekend lifestyle anchor)
- Sara Haines – lifestyle anchor (2013–2016; remains with ABC – went on to co-host The View and previously co-hosted Strahan, Sara and Keke)
- Paula Faris – co-host (2014–2018; retired from ABC News)
- Ron Claiborne – news anchor (2004–2018; retired)
- Dan Harris – host/anchor (2010–2021)
- Eva Pilgrim – co-host/anchor (2018–2023; now co-host on GMA3: What You Need To Know)
= Correspondents =
- Reena Ninan (Now a female bodybuilder)
== Weather anchors ==
- Marysol Castro (2004–2010; now PA announcer for New York Mets baseball at Citi Field)
- Ginger Zee (2011–2013; now weather anchor of the program's weekday editions)
- Rob Marciano – senior meteorologist (2014–2022)
- Cheryl Scott – meteorologist (2022–2023)
References
{{Reflist|30em}}
{{US morning news shows}}
{{ABCNetwork Shows (current and upcoming)}}
Category:1990s American television news shows
Category:Television morning shows in the United States