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Matt Lauer (right), former host of the Today Show, smiles during an appearance at an NBC Town Hall in April. Photo: EPA

Sacked TV anchor Matt Lauer expresses ‘shame’ as details of sexual misconduct emerge

Three women have come forward to NBC to accuse the host, including one who said she passed out and had to be taken to a nurse after Lauer sexually assaulted her in his locked office

More details emerged Thursday of sexual misconduct allegations against NBC’s Matt Lauer, the second US star anchor sacked in a week as the harassment hurricane pummels television networks after convulsing Hollywood and politics.

The 59-year-old married father of three and affable host of NBC’s Today show, who beamed into American homes for decades, expressed “shame” and “regret” after being sacked when a female colleague accused him of sexual misconduct.

“Some of what is being said about me is untrue or mischaracterized,” he said in a statement read Thursday on Today. “But there is enough truth in these stories to make me feel embarrassed and ashamed.”
Former Today show host Matt Lauer says he is “embarrassed and ashamed”. Photo: EPA
Some of what is being said about me is untrue or mischaracterised. But there is enough truth in these stories to make me feel embarrassed and ashamed
Matt Lauer

Lauer is the biggest media scalp in the firestorm of sexual misconduct allegations that has engulfed the United States, derailing the careers of Hollywood titan Harvey Weinstein, Oscar winner Kevin Spacey, and last week CBS News anchor Charlie Rose.

Paid US$25 million a year, he interviewed four of the last sitting US presidents, anchoring some of the world’s biggest news events for more than two decades including numerous Olympic Games, and breaking news of the September 11 attacks.

His exit leaves George Stephanopoulos at ABC News the last male star standing on national morning news programmes at the traditional three US broadcast networks.

“Repairing the damage will take a lot of time and soul searching,” Lauer said. “It is now my full-time job.”

NBC News confirmed that two additional women had come forward against Lauer. An NBC correspondent covering the story said there could be as many as eight accusers, but that anonymity made it difficult to tabulate.

One anonymous former employee told The New York Times that Lauer summoned her to his office in 2011, locked the door and sexually assaulted her. She told The Times that she then passed out on the floor and had to be taken to a nurse.
Co-anchors Hoda Kotb, centre left, and Savannah Guthrie, right, sit on the set during a news segment of the Today show in New York on Thursday in the wake of the firing of long-time host Matt Lauer. Photo: AP
Hoda Kotb and Savannah Guthrie embrace at the end of Thursday’s Today Show in New York. Photo: Agence France-Presse
Hollywood trade weekly Variety published a two-month investigation resulting from dozens of interviews, suggesting a pattern of inappropriate behaviour.

Allegations included Lauer exposing his penis to a female employee in his office, inviting female colleagues to his hotel room while covering the Olympics and sending a mortified colleague a sex toy with an explicit note about how he wanted to use it on her.

Lauer had a button under his desk that allowed him to lock his office door from the inside without getting up, Variety reported.

“He couldn’t sleep around town with celebrities or on the road with random people, because he’s Matt Lauer and he’s married. So he’d have to do it within his stable, where he exerted power,” one former producer told Variety.

Several women told the magazine that complaints about Lauer fell on deaf ears.

“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,” NBC News said.

Last month NBC News also terminated veteran political journalist Mark Halperin over allegations that he sexually harassed women while working for ABC News.

The Lauer scandal has revived scrutiny of NBC’s apparent reluctance to report other stories of sexual misconduct.

During the 2016 presidential campaign, the network was scooped on Donald Trump boasting of groping women on an NBC Access Hollywood tape, which The Washington Post published first.

The broadcaster also knocked back the chance to publish NBC contributor Ronan Farrow’s explosive reporting about Weinstein, which was instead published by The New Yorker.

But NBC is far from alone.

CBS News fired Charlie Rose, another morning news anchor, on November 21 after eight women told The Washington Post he had made unwanted sexual advances toward them.

Television giant Fox News has struggled to contain allegations that its late former chairman Roger Ailes and ex-star presenter Bill O’Reilly, fired this year, settled multiple cases of sexual harassment brought by female colleagues.

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