Marin Independent Journal

Couric shares secrets, stories from career

- By Alexandra Jacobs

Early in her broadcasti­ng career, Katie Couric tried using her given name, Katherine, on screen “to counteract my Campbell’s Soup Kid looks,” she writes in a new book that has been leaking like unburped Tupperware throughout the media ecosystem. To “lend an air of authority my face and voice lacked.”

During the chirpy morning hours of “Today,” the show that made Couric famous, relatabili­ty trumped authority, so “Katie” prevailed. But the inner “Katherine” continued to stomp her foot, quite rightly wanting recognitio­n and respect for trips to war zones and interviews with world leaders — even as her fun-loving alter ego did things like fly across Rockefelle­r Center in a Peter Pan costume, sprinkling fistfuls of confetti.

Unmentione­d is yet another name specter: the so-called “Karen,” archetype of entitled white woman — sometimes portrayed, as it happens, with a Peter Pan pixie haircut.

Richer than Croesus, surrounded by trophies and commanding an eponymous media company with her second husband, John Molner, Couric no longer has to worry about a contract or a program being canceled. But her public self — tsked at on Twitter last year for saying Denzel Washington “jumped all over me” in an old interview; loving the problemati­c movie “Breakfast at Tiffany’s” so much that she made her 50th birthday party theme; casually citing Longfellow’s exoticizin­g epic poem “The Song of Hiawatha” — is still vulnerable.

“Going There” (514 pages, Little, Brown & Company, $30), as she calls the Epic of Couric, might as well be subtitled “Owning This,” starting with rattlesome family skeletons: subdued Judaism on one side, “blighted with racists” on the other. Her paternal grandmothe­r, Wilde, gave Couric’s father a first edition of “The Clansman: An Historical Romance of the Ku Klux Klan” inscribed: “This is such a valuable and beautiful book. Never destroy it.” (It was discovered in his study by a horrified great-granddaugh­ter.)

Then there is Couric’s first husband, Jay Monahan, whose bugle-blowing passion for Confederac­y reenactmen­ts Couric once saw as “a benign hobby” — throwing him an

Old South-themed 40th birthday bash complete with a Scarlett O’Hara Barbie doll atop the cake — but now finds queasymaki­ng, even as she still mourns his death from colon cancer at 42.

Failing to visit Black schoolmate­s’ houses in her “de facto segregated” childhood suburb? Attending, however uncomforta­bly, a University of Virginia fraternity party with waiters in blackface as an undergrad? Devoting hours of “Today” to white victims rather than acknowledg­ing institutio­nal racism? Couric regrets. She squirms, cringes and is mortified about her “cluelessne­ss, born of intractabl­e white privilege.” She agonizes over having withheld part of Ruth Bader Ginsburg’s rambly scold of football star Colin Kaepernick’s protests. (“Clearly, this was a blind spot for Ginsburg,

and I wanted to protect her.”) Maybe journalist­ic objectivit­y isn’t all it was cracked up to be?

The patriarchy proves harder to denounce. Soon after our heroine, modeling herself after the fictional Mary Richards, burst into the business as a 22-year-old assistant, a midlife Sam Donaldson leapt atop a desk to serenade her with a World War I song (“K-K-K-Katy, beautiful Katy”). Larry King made advances after poached veal. (“The lunge. The tongue. The hands.”) Years later, Les Moonves, “a close-talker with bad breath,” lured her into becoming the first woman to anchor the “CBS Evening News” solo, “massaging my e-spot (as in ego) so expertly” on the sofa of his Park Avenue apartment.

Help from men

Like Richards, Couric turned the world on with her smile and clearly benefited from the not-always-appropriat­e attentions of powerful men. In such an environmen­t, she confesses, when “someone younger and cuter was always around the corner,” mentoring female correspond­ents “sometimes felt like self-sabotage.”

Katie’s story is one of busting through the doors of a boys club whose members greet each other with “heyyyyy, budddddddy” — not burning that club down. (The bluestocki­ng Katherine might have dared.)

Of sex and the newsroom, her attitude is basically that was the way it was, to paraphrase her avuncular idol Walter Cronkite. Being characteri­zed as “perky” perturbed her, but having dollops of “moxie” was just fine.

While she was a young associate producer for “Take Two,” a daytime program at CNN — then nicknamed Chicken Noodle News — Couric unblinking­ly dated a director and swiped on Frosty Cola lipstick to flirt with playwright Neil Simon at a news conference. (“I knew he knew that I knew that he noticed me.”) When an executive commented on her breasts in a meeting, she banged out a crisp rebuke on an IBM Selectric and personally marched it over to his office. Problem solved!

A kind of borscht-belt ribald humor (“speaking of horny toads,” she once ad-libbed on air, segueing from mention of an amphibian convention, “Gene Shalit just walked into the studio”) becomes as much a part of her armor as shoulder-padded designer jackets. Even at the expense of a beleaguere­d “Today” successor, her contempora­ry

Ann Curry, during a Friars Club roast of Matt Lauer that now seems like a smoking gun.

Ignoring rumors

Hearing salacious rumors about Lauer and a production assistant, Couric wrinkled her nose at the affront to Lauer’s then-wife rather than the big “duh” of workplace harassment. Curry said she internally reported Lauer’s behavior in 2012. He was ousted five years later and eventually became, Couric writes, “the Leon Trotsky of 30 Rock.” Of their awkward texts trailing off: “It was as if Matt never existed.”

Honestly, with all the enablers above her, it’s hard to fault Couric for being oblivious to a colleague’s compartmen­talized exploits. If there’s one thing “Going There” conclusive­ly proves, it’s that she always had a lot going on. The youngest of four children born to a PR man with his own dashed dreams of the Fourth Estate and a homemaker who had done layouts for Coronet magazine, Couric grew up into one of the original and most determined exemplars of that ‘80s shibboleth, “having it all.” After Monahan’s death, she raised piles of money to fight the disease that killed him. Her onair colonoscop­y destigmati­zed the procedure and surely saved many lives — though possibly also left her inured to oversharin­g, like the pointless anecdote in this book about her young daughter’s diarrhea accident on the highway.

But I don’t believe for a second that she, so refreshing­ly candid about her competitiv­eness, wants the first line of her obituary to be “Katie Couric was a tireless advocate for cancer awareness and research.” In this generally sporting tam toss of a memoir, such an assertion lands with the soft plunk of sanctimony. And that’s never good for ratings.

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