Texarkana Gazette

Matt Lauer is fired at NBC, accused of crude misconduct

Minnesota Public Radio drops Garrison Keillor

- By David Bauder

NEW YORK—“Today” show host Matt Lauer was fired for what NBC on Wednesday called “inappropri­ate sexual behavior” with a colleague and was promptly confronted with a published report accusing him of crude and habitual misconduct with other women around the office.

With his easygoing charm, Lauer has long been a lucrative and highly visible part of NBC News and one of the highest-paid figures in the industry, and his downfall shook the network and stunned many of the roughly 4 million viewers who start their day with him.

He is easily one of the biggest names brought down in recent weeks by the wave of sexual misconduct allegation­s that have swept through Hollywood, the media and politics.

Network news chief Andrew Lack said in a memo to the staff that NBC received a complaint about Lauer’s behavior on Monday and determined he violated company standards. NBC said the misconduct started when Lauer and a network employee were at the Sochi Olympics in 2014 and continued beyond that assignment.

Lack said it was the first complaint lodged against Lauer in his 20 years at NBC, but “we were also presented with reason to believe this may not have been an isolated incident.”

NBC News received two new complaints against Lauer on Wednesday, “NBC Nightly News” reported. The network didn’t respond to a request for comment.

Earlier Wednesday, it was left to Lauer’s shaken “Today” colleagues, Savannah Guthrie and Hoda Kotb, to break the news to viewers at the top of the morning’s show.

Word of Lauer’s abrupt exit came on the day of NBC’s “Christmas in Rockefelle­r Center” special featuring the annual Manhattan tree-lighting ceremony. Lauer was to have co-hosted the Wednesday night program with Guthrie, Kotb and Al Roker.

Hours after the firing, the trade publicatio­n Variety posted what it said was a two-month investigat­ion that included dozens of interviews with current and former staffers who asked to remain anonymous.

Among other things, Variety reported allegation­s that Lauer once gave a colleague a sex toy with an explicit note about how he wanted to use it on her; that he exposed himself to another female co-worker; that he would question female producers about their sex lives; and that he would talk about which co-hosts he would like to sleep with.

Messages to Lauer and his agent were not immediatel­y returned, and NBC would not say whether he denied or admitted to any wrongdoing. He is married with three children.

Lauer becomes the second morning host in a week to lose his job over sexual misconduct allegation­s. CBS fired Charlie Rose after several women who worked for him complained about his behavior.

In other developmen­ts, former “Prairie Home Companion” host Garrison Keillor was cut loose by Minnesota Public Radio over an allegation of “inappropri­ate behavior.” MPR gave no details, but the 75-year-old Keillor said he inadverten­tly put his hand on a woman’s bare back in an attempt to console her.

Lauer, 59, has essentiall­y been the king of television morning news since first being paired with Katie Couric on “Today” in 1997.

For many years, “Today” was the unquestion­ed ratings leader, until it was eclipsed by ABC’s “Good Morning America” following the ugly 2012 firing of Lauer’s co-host Ann Curry. The show had stabilized in recent years with Lauer’s pairing with Guthrie.

Lauer’s “Where in the world is Matt Lauer?” segments were popular for years, and he regularly played a lead role at the Olympics and other major news events.

He joins a lengthenin­g list of media figures felled by sexual misconduct accusation­s this year. Besides Rose, they include Lauer’s NBC News colleague Mark Halperin, Fox News primetime host Bill O’Reilly and National Public Radio newsroom chief Michael Oreskes. The New York Times suspended White House correspond­ent Glenn Thrush last week.

The flood of allegation­s was set off in large part by the downfall of Hollywood studio boss Harvey Weinstein, who has been accused of sexually assaulting or harassing numerous women.

Ari Wilkenfeld, the attorney for Lauer’s accuser, praised NBC for acting “quickly and responsibl­y” in response to the morning host’s “egregious acts of sexual harassment and misconduct.” The lawyer did not identify his client.

Lack, in his memo, said, “We are deeply saddened by this turn of events. But we will face it together as a news organizati­on—and do it in as transparen­t a manner as we can.”

An immediate challenge is filling a giant hole on a show that has long been the most lucrative for NBC News. One potential replacemen­t, Willie Geist, on Wednesday called Lauer someone “I have always looked up to in the business, and he taught me a lot.”

As for Keillor, Minnesota Public Radio said it will end distributi­on of the radio program “The Writer’s Almanac,” Keillor’s daily reading of a poem and telling of literary events, and end rebroadcas­ts of old “Prairie Home Companion” episodes.

“I meant to pat her back after she told me about her unhappines­s and her shirt was open and my hand went up it about six inches. She recoiled. I apologized. I sent her an email of apology later and she replied that she had forgiven me and not to think about it,” Keillor said in an email to the Minneapoli­s Star Tribune. “We were friends. We continued to be friendly right up until her lawyer called.”

On Wednesday’s show, Guthrie appeared to fight back tears as she called Lauer her friend who is beloved by many at NBC. She said she was “heartbroke­n for my colleague who came forward to tell her story and any other women who have their own stories to tell.”

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