TBS and Conan O’Brien are reportedly planning major changes for his 6-year-old late night talk show.

Update: In a statement to Vulture, TBS President Kevin Reilly denies the report. “Conan remains an invaluable franchise, partner, and producer for our TBS brand and we’ll be in business with him for a long time. As the media landscape continues to evolve, Conan will continue to lead the evolution of what a talk show will be in the digital age. At this time, we have no plans to change the format or frequency of his popular TBS show. In addition to Conan’s daily responsibilities to his talk show, we continue to have very ambitious plans that will further broaden and evolve our relationship with Conan.”

Original report: According to Turner CEO John Martin at the Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas on Thursday, Conan will soon switch to a once-weekly schedule. He currently hosts Conan Monday through Thursday at 11 PM.

Martin says in the report that Conan’s at his best when his show hits the road, citing trips to Cuba, Berlin, and South Korea. “Late night’s just too crowded and competitive,” he added.

The red-head’s talk show program hasn’t done well in the ratings in recent years, getting beaten by The Daily Show with Trevor Noah on Comedy Central and even Bravo’s Watch What Happens Live! starring Andy Cohen.

O’Brien got his start as the host of Late Night with Conan O’Brien before replacing Jay Leno on The Tonight Show, then being replaced by Jay Leno on The Tonight Show. (Ugh, all of that drama still burns.)

Conan O’Brien will join his TBS co-star Samantha Bee and HBO’s John Oliver in the weekly format — a schedule that has proven very successful for Full Frontal and Last Week Tonight. With the additional time to plan each episode, the shows have benefited from creating deeper and funnier content.

TBS currently has a deal with Conan that runs through 2018.