Variety said it contacted NBC about accusations of sexual impropriety before the Thanksgiving holiday, but it’s unclear exactly what happened afterwards.Ī network spokesperson declined to comment. Matt Lauer was remorsely vindictive and tyrannical to everyone at NBC News and management repeatedly enabled him and buried the issue.Īnd, I DID kinda tip you on this #NotAtAllHumbleBrag /eOSI17bIugīut the new accusations sent internet sleuths a-sleuthing after old stories that now seem like warning signs - like the time Katie Couric bluntly told Andy Cohen in 2012 that Lauer “pinches me on the ass a lot.” Sheesh, this is what I get for arranging to not have to look at twitter all morning ? “Matt Lauer was remorselessly vindictive and tyrannical to everyone at NBC News and management repeatedly enabled and buried the issue,” Olbermann wrote. The former host of MSNBC’s first breakout hit, “Countdown With Keith Olbermann” from 2003 to 2011, took to Twitter Wednesday to accuse his former bosses of enabling Lauer. The credibility of NBC’s denials was also very publicly called into question by one of the company’s brightest former stars, Keith Olbermann. Not even a whisper of it, nothing like that.” “There was never a suggestion of that kind of deviant, predatory behavior. “No one ever brought to me, or to my knowledge, there was never, there was never a complaint about Matt,” Zucker said during an interview at Business Insider’s Ignition conference in Manhattan on Thursday. Jeff Zucker, the president of CNN and Lauer’s former boss at “Today,” denied knowing anything about problems with Lauer. The network added that it was “not aware of any settlements” related to their former star. “We can say unequivocally, that, prior to Monday night, current NBC News management was never made aware of any complaints about Matt Lauer’s conduct,” an NBC spokesperson told TheWrap. Variety and the New York Times followed up with specific details of the accusations against him, which included allegations that he gave a sex toy to one co-worker and exposed himself to another. Lauer’s “Today” co-host announced his exit Wednesday, two days after NBC said it first received a detailed accusation against Lauer. “As I am writing this, I realize the depth of the damage and disappointment I have left behind at home and at NBC.” To the people I have hurt, I am truly sorry,” he said, without responding to specific accusations. Lauer apologized Thursday: “There are no words to express my sorrow and regret for the pain I have caused others by words and actions. “They loved their sexy young interns.”Īnother “Today” show staffer called Lauer’s inappropriate behavior “an open secret” and described NBC as “a cesspool of affairs and hook-ups.”Ī fourth individual, a current senior NBC official, added that Lauer’s philandering was aided by a former booker, Matthew Zimmerman, who himself was fired this month for what a network spokesperson called “inappropriate conduct with more than one woman at NBCU.” “It was definitely a boys club,” said another former producer.
“Everybody knew that Matt Lauer was having inappropriate relationships with women,” said a former “Today” producer who worked on the show for 12 years.
Two former “Today” producers who worked closely with Lauer told TheWrap that his transgressions were widely known. But a growing number of people find that hard to believe.
NBC says no one at the network knew anything about the accusations of sexual misconduct against Matt Lauer before Monday night.