'This One Does Hit Close to Home.' Megyn Kelly Reacts to Matt Lauer's Termination From NBC
NBC anchor Megyn Kelly opened the top of her show on Today Wednesday by addressing the termination of her colleague Matt Lauer for sexual misconduct allegations, acknowledging the shock of the announcement but highlighting the bravery of those who came forward.Before Kelly spoke about her personal experience with Lauer, she read the official statement from the network and showed the comments from Lauer’s former co-host Savannah Guthrie and Hoda Kotb, who was hosting in place of Lauer on Wednesday.
“This one does hit close to home,” Kelly said, referring to Lauer’s firing. “I too have known Matt for a long time, and he has been a friend, and kind and supportive to me in my transition to NBC News and I see the anguish on my colleague’s faces.”
“But when this happens,” Kelly continued, “What we don’t see is the pain on the faces of the women who found the courage to come forward. And it is a terrifying thing to do. We don’t see the career opportunities women lose because of sexual harassment or the intense stress it causes a woman dealing with it when she comes to work each day. I am thinking of those women this morning and hoping they are okay. The days to come will not be easy.”
"We start this morning with this news: Matt Lauer has been terminated from NBC News."
NBC News announced Wednesday morning that Lauer, who had anchored the Today Show for more than two decades, had been fired following accusations of sexual misconduct. “While it is the first complaint about his behavior in the over twenty years he’s been at NBC News, we were also presented with reason to believe this may not have been an isolated incident,” NBC News Chairman Andrew Lack said in a statement.
Kelly, who was at Fox when sexual harassment allegations against now deceased chairman Roger Ailes emerged, said she is confident NBC will weather the storm.
“The good [news organizations] stay standing and forge forward, fulfilling their core mission: Journalism,” she said.
Matt Lauer fired from 'Today' due to 'inappropriate sexual behavior' in the workplace one of the victims is Ann Curry
On the same day the giant Christmas tree is being
lit outside NBC studios at Rockefeller Center in New York City, the
network dumped one of its biggest stars.
“Today” show co-host Matt Lauer was
fired Wednesday due to inappropriate sexual behavior in the workplace,
an incident "Today" honchos said they learned about just two days ago.
"This is a sad morning here at 'Today' and at NBC News," Guthrie said before reading a note from NBC News Chairman Andy Lack.
Matt Lauer
has been terminated from NBC News. On Monday night, we received a
detailed complaint from a colleague about inappropriate sexual behavior
in the workplace by Matt Lauer. As a result, we’ve decided to terminate
his employment and one of the victim is Ann Curry.
"Dear colleagues, on Monday night, we received a detailed complaint from a colleague about inappropriate sexual behavior in the workplace by Matt Lauer," Lack's statement read. "It represented, after serious review, a clear violation of our company's standards. As a result, we've decided to terminate his employment."
The statement said this is the first complaint regarding Lauer's behavior the company has received "in the over 20 years he's been at NBC News."
"We were also presented with reason to believe this may not have been an isolated incident," the statement said.
Matt Lauer's firing from NBC unleashes Twitter torrent
Lack said NBC's "highest priority is to create a workplace environment where everyone feels safe and protected, and to ensure that any actions that run counter to our core values are met with consequences, no matter who the offender. We are deeply saddened by this turn of events.""I'm heartbroken for the brave colleague who came forward to tell her story and any other women who have their own stories to tell."
An emotional Guthrie admitted "we just learned this moments ago" and said the "Today" team is "devastated and we are still processing all of this."
"All we can say is that we are heartbroken. I'm heartbroken for Matt. He is my dear, dear friend and my partner and he is beloved by many, many people here. And I'm heartbroken for the brave colleague who came forward to tell her story and any other women who have their own stories to tell."
Kotb said she and and Guthrie "were both woken up with the news, kind of predawn, and we're trying to process it and trying to make sense of it."
Guthrie said NBC will be "covering this story as reporters" and will share more details "in the hours and days to come."
Lauer firing puts harsh new focus on NBC News boss Andy Lack after Trump tweet
At the begining of the 8 a.m. hour, Stephanie Gosk reiterated the news of Lauer's firing and told viewers the NBC staffer had complained about inappropriate behavior from Lauer throughout 2014, according to The Hollywood Reporter. Meanwhile, The New York Post, citing a source, reported an incident occurred during the coverage of the 2016 Olympics in Rio. The details could not immediately be confirmed.
The "Today" show anchors weren't the only ones reacting to the surprising development. President Trump also chimed in on Lauer's firing on Twitter as the news broke.
Wow, Matt
Lauer was just fired from NBC for “inappropriate sexual behavior in the
workplace.” But when will the top executives at NBC & Comcast be
fired for putting out so much Fake News. Check out Andy Lack’s past!
Lauer married Annette Roque in 1998. She filed for divorce in 2006 and accused the anchor of "cruel and inhumane" behavior before withdrawing her petition one month later after reaching a private agreement. They have 3 children.
According to Page Six, Lauer and Roque live separate lives.
You can find Sasha Savitsky on Twitter @SashaFB.
Today Show
Lauer’s “Double Life”: Inside NBC, the Network Is Trying to Expunge the Lauer Era
NBC
executives have moved swiftly and adroitly to clean up Lauer’s mess.
The question that remains, however, is if they are in for any surprises.
By
Friday evening, for the employees of NBC News and sister network MSNBC,
it was about time for a drink. At P.J. Clarke’s, near Lincoln Center, Morning Joe’s Willie Geist was co-hosting his annual holiday party for friends and colleagues. Blocks away, at the Oak Room in the Plaza Hotel, Morning Joe and Today regular Donny Deutsch threw himself a 60s-themed 60th birthday where MSNBC President Phil Griffin and on-air talent Hoda Kotb, Joe Scarborough, Mika Brzezinski, and John Heilemann chitchatted beneath blown up photos of Raquel Welch and Ursula Andress. The words “F*%# the sixties” were emblazoned in black script upon the red acrylic dance floor.
There were conversations regarding the foibles of Mike Flynn, Donald Trump’s
former national security adviser and longtime ally, who had pleaded
guilty that morning to a charge of lying to the F.B.I., and was now
cooperating with Robert Mueller’s investigation. But
much of the attention was focused inward. Two days earlier, after all,
NBC News had shocked the broadcasting business by abruptly firing Matt Lauer, the $25-million man at the center of its half-billion dollar Today show franchise, some 36 hours after a former employee accused him of sexual misconduct. At Geist’s party, Today co-host Savannah Guthrie was seen chatting with CBS This Morning’s Gayle King, whose former co-host, Charlie Rose, had recently, and just as stunningly, been felled by similar accusations.
Lauer’s fall from NBC precipitated seismic convulsions throughout 30 Rock. In the wake of his dismissal, reports in Variety and The New York Times described an alleged pattern of behavior
that was, at best, “inappropriate,” and, at worst, downright
predatory—an unwanted sex-toy gift; summoning a female employee to his
office and promptly dropping his pants in front of her; an aggressive
sexual encounter that allegedly left one woman passed out on the floor
of Lauer’s office in need of medical attention. Suddenly NBC found
itself at the white-hot center of a cultural reckoning that had already
claimed the careers and reputations of powerful media and entertainment
figures ranging from Harvey Weinstein and Rose to Louis C.K. and its own Mark Halperin.
As the story unfolded, media insiders began speculating about whether
any key executives knew anything about Lauer’s behavior during his
20-odd-year tenure; the network’s decision to pass on Ronan Farrow’s investigation of Weinstein was re-litigated, too.
While
Lauer issued a statement expressing “sorrow and regret for the pain I
have caused,” NBC News went into crisis mode in the hope of containing
the incident. NBC insisted that its top managers were unaware of Lauer’s
alleged transgressions; the network also announced a thorough review of
its workplace culture and promised, in the words of network chairman Andy Lack,
to “share what we’ve learned, no matter how painful, and act on it.”
For employees of NBC News and MSNBC, it was all a lot to process, and by
Friday night, they were surely ready to blow off some steam. At P.J.
Clarke’s, where Brzezinski, Scarborough, and Heilemann also were in
attendance, there was beer and bar food for all, plus a band playing
holiday jingles. At the Oak Room, Comedian Susie Essman roasted Deutsch and gently poked fun of Scarborough’s interview style. Guthrie, Today regular Jenna Bush Hager, senior producer Libby Leist, and MSNBC anchor Stephanie Ruhle posed, all smiles, outside of Lincoln Center, across the street from Geist’s party, and posted it to Instagram with “#girlpower” affixed to the end of the caption.
A
week after Lauer’s termination, NBC’s efforts to stabilize the
situation appear to have worked—at least thus far. Unlike in the cases
of Weinstein or even Al Franken, where revelations
unfolded across manifold news cycles lasting weeks and even months, NBC
appeared to endure its beating in a single, horrid day. Lack, who was
brought back to the network partly to manage the fallout from the Brian Williams
scandal, has demonstrably put his considerable experience as a crisis
manager to work in the post-Lauer era. In the past week, top-level
managers, including Lack, NBC News president Noah Oppenheim, and editorial senior vice president Janelle Rodriguez,
have hosted nearly 60 H.R.-oriented meetings with small groups of
employees in order to provide reassurance and, potentially, to get ahead
of any other possible scandals that could be lurking beneath the
surface.
The question of who knew what, and
when, has been raised at these confabs, according to people with
knowledge of them. In the main, however, these caucuses have served to
reinforce executives’ hopes that employees will report any sort of
improper workplace behavior in the wake of the Lauer affair. “It’s like Spotlight,” one senior staffer said recently, referring to the 2015 movie about The Boston Globe
reporters wading through the Catholic Church sexual abuse cover-up.
“But there was definitely a sense that things were being handled.” We’ve
learned that NBC brass, as part of its review, has begun conducting
interviews internally pertaining to Lauer’s behavior, and that they’re
bringing in an outside firm to do in-person harassment training.
Some inside 30 Rock felt at least a little “spooked,” as an NBC journalist put it, by Donald Trump’s tweet
last week encouraging his 44.2 million followers to “Check out Andy
Lack’s past!” But the dozen or so NBC sources we spoke with for this
article agreed the initial speculation about whether the Lauer scandal
might metastasize into a situation that could cost Lack or Oppenheim
their jobs—similar to how things played out in the wake of the
allegations and internal investigation at Fox News, after which
co-president Bill Shine left the network and longtime Fox News legal counsel Dianne Brandi,
several months later, took a voluntary leave of absence—has since
tempered. People saw how quickly NBC News acted, at a great cost to the
network, and insiders seem to be taking leadership at its word that the
transgressions leading to Lauer’s defenestration were previously unknown
at the highest levels of the organization. “If people stop and think
about it,” a senior journalist inside the company said, “it’s not
surprising a lot of people didn’t know, because it was all done in
secret. Matt’s a very organized guy and very adept at leading that kind
of double life.”
It also certainly hasn’t yet
hurt that the news division, in the Trump era, has been minting money.
And while the scandal took a sledgehammer to Today’s image,
there was no shortage of viewers tuning in to gawk at the wreckage.
Incredibly, Lauer’s fall turned into a ratings win. Last week, for the
first time in three months, Today was the most-watched
morning-news show, handily beating out its rivals in the week’s overall
ratings with more than a 12 percent increase in total viewers from a
week earlier. On Wednesday alone—the day Guthrie announced Lauer’s
firing on air—5.74 million viewers tuned into Today, up from the 4.48 million and 4.21 million who watched the two days prior. The streak continued throughout the rest of the week.
Those
kinds of numbers won’t continue forever, however, and talk has
naturally started shifting to who could fill the role that Lauer left
behind. There has been some suggestion that the show may benefit from
having a so-called “leading man” to fill Lauer’s void. But the names
initially floated in the mix—including Today weekend co-host Craig Melvin, and Geist, who, along with his Morning Joe duties, hosts Sunday Today on the network—haven’t assuaged all naysaying observers. Others reject the idea that Today
needs a man in its lineup at all. Daytime television is, of course, a
female-driven demo and, at least for now, the show is up against another
female duo—King and Norah O’Donnell—on CBS. Since
Wednesday, Kotb has taken on the co-anchor chair, and several sources
consider her a reliable contender to keep the spot permanently. “It’s a
no-brainer. They 1,000 percent shouldn’t touch it. It’s working,” a
television veteran said on Thursday. “If, in a few weeks, the ratings
dip, then they can re-assess things and maybe bring on a few guys to see
if there’s chemistry.” This person continued: “In this climate, having
two women who people seem to really like is a good thing. They’d be
idiots to touch that.”
Network morning
television has already entered an age in which it feels like somewhat of
a relic. The dollars are still there, but viewership has steadily
declined. Undoubtedly, there will have to be a shift at some point, and a
strategy for how to keep an audience engaged through a transition in
which a show like Today is reimagined for a model that does not
yet exist. Perhaps what is currently being tested is whether or not men
are superfluous.
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