Christiane Amanpour will replace Charlie Rose permanently with a new expanded show in the 11 p.m. time slot on PBS stations nationwide, the broadcaster announced during its annual meeting Tuesday.
Amanpour is CNN's chief international correspondent, and PBS has been rebroadcasting her 30-minute weekday program after Rose's show was canceled amid sexual harassment and misconduct allegations against him, CNN reported.
The new show, "Amanpour & Company," will be an hour long, feature regular contributors and is a collaboration between CNN and New York's WNET, CNN said. Walter Isaacson, Michel Martin, Alicia Menendez and Hari Sreenivasan will serve as regular contributors.
"I'm delighted to expand my role at PBS from interim to permanent along with this remarkable diversity of voices and views," Amanpour said in a statement. "Never has the time for exploring our world and America's place in it been so urgent."
Amanpour's expanded public affairs program will launch in July, and Amanpour will remain based in London, according to The Hollywood Reporter.
Amanpour, 60, has hosted her show on CNN since 2012, according to the New York Daily News.
Twitter users posted mixed reactions to the news.
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