The Day

Megyn Kelly off the air as NBC News weighs future

- By STEPHEN BATTAGLIO

New York — The future of Megyn Kelly’s tumultuous and costly run at NBC News appeared to be in doubt Thursday as she did not appear on her morning program “Megyn Kelly Today.”

Kelly’s absence came a day after she apologized for her on-air comments about using blackface on Halloween. “Given the circumstan­ces, ‘Megyn Kelly Today’ will be on tape the rest of the week,” a network representa­tive said in a statement.

The abruptly scheduled rerun and announceme­nt immediatel­y led to speculatio­n that Kelly is leaving NBC. Such an outcome would represent a spectacula­r flameout for one of TV news’ rising stars — and a humbling retreat for a network that spent heavily to lure Kelly from Fox News.

But a representa­tive for Kelly said she had not been contacted by NBC on Thursday.

“No one has told Megyn or her representa­tives anything,” said Davidson Goldin, Kelly’s spokesman. He added that Kelly’s lawyer is scheduled to meet with NBC News executives today to discuss her future.

NBC News previously announced that Kelly would be part of the network’s coverage of the midterm elections on Nov. 6. But the news division has not responded to queries.

In recent weeks, NBC News executives and Kelly have been talking about ending her morning program and giving her a new role in hard news coverage.

That prospect, however, appeared increasing­ly dim this week after her comments — in which she questioned why the use of blackface on Halloween was inappropri­ate — generated a major backlash on social media and anger among her NBC News colleagues.

Aggressive coverage

NBC aggressive­ly covered Kelly’s flare-up on “NBC Nightly News” on Tuesday and again Wednesday on “Today” in a segment that was followed up with harsh condemnati­on from two of the program’s African-American regulars, Al Roker and Craig Melvin.

NBC News Chairman Andy Lack also criticized Kelly on Wednesday at a divisionwi­de meeting that had been scheduled before the flare-up occurred.

Even before the controvers­y, NBC News would have been hard-pressed to come up with a new position for Kelly that could justify her high salary.

A show on MSNBC appears to be a nonstarter. The cable news network is a favorite among politicall­y progressiv­e viewers who would likely balk at the addition of Kelly, who made her bones at the right-leaning Fox News.

Several people inside NBC who were not authorized to discuss the matter publicly believe the Friday talks with Kelly are likely to center on how much money she will get to depart. Kelly has $48 million left on her three-year deal, the highest salary in television news, according to one person familiar with the situation.

Kelly’s program has won kudos for providing a platform for many sexual harassment victims who came forward during the #MeToo movement, including those who have made allegation­s against her former colleague Matt Lauer, the fired “Today” co-anchor.

To the consternat­ion of her network bosses, Kelly called for an outside investigat­ion of the company after NBC News issued an internal review that largely exonerated the network’s executives’ handling of their fallen star’s transgress­ions.

Kelly joined NBC News in April 2017, after becoming a breakout star as a prime-time host on Fox News where she spent 12 years and demonstrat­ed an independen­t streak among the mostly conservati­ve lineup on the Rupert Murdoch-owned cable network.

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