Current:Home > MarketsKatie Couric recalls Bryant Gumbel's 'sexist attitude' while co-hosting the 'Today' show -Excel Money Vision
Katie Couric recalls Bryant Gumbel's 'sexist attitude' while co-hosting the 'Today' show
View
Date:2025-04-15 11:58:41
Katie Couric is reflecting on the "sexist attitude" she experienced as a female journalist in the '90s.
On Sunday's episode of Bill Maher's "Club Random" podcast, the veteran news anchor reflected on her relationship with former "Today" show co-host Bryant Gumbel while they were the faces of the morning program between 1991 and 1997, when Gumbel left NBC for CBS.
The Television Hall of Fame inductee praised Gumbel as "a seamless broadcaster" who is "really talented" and "incredibly smart," but acknowledged they sometimes butted heads.
"He's a guy's guy. You got that right," Couric, 67, told Maher. "He was prickly, but I mean, what a talent. I mean, my God."
"Complicated guy, though, I think," she added. Gumbel, 75, left "Today" in 1997 after 15 years. Couric also had a 15-year tenure, leaving in 2006.
Couric recalled an incident from 1991 as an example of a time when they were at odds.
Gumbel "got mad at me" as Couric was about to embark on maternity leave when she was pregnant with her first child, she said, and gave her "endless" flack for her upcoming time off.
"I was having my first baby," she told Maher. "He was like, 'Why don't you just drop it in the field and come back to work right away?' or something."
USA TODAY has reached out to Gumbel's representative for comment.
She acknowledged that "he was kidding" and "goofing on me," but Couric said this exchange "was emblematic of sort of an incredibly sexist attitude." Being a female journalist entailed a work environment that was "replete with microaggressions," she said.
"It was a very different environment," she said of working in broadcast news after Maher brought up Matt Lauer, who was fired from "Today" in 2017 amid sexual harassment allegations, which he has denied. "Lots of fraternization, a polite way of saying interoffice schtupping."
Most recently, Gumbel hosted HBO's "Real Sports With Bryant Gumbel," which ended last year after its 29th season.
'I have an obligation':Katie Couric talks breast cancer diagnosis and becoming a grandmother
Katie Couric said 1991 exchange with Bryant Gumbel was 'shocking to watch'
This isn't the first time Couric has taken a look back at her experience working with Gumbel.
In a 2019 installment of her Wake-Up Call newsletter, Couric recalled an "uncomfortable exchange" with Gumbel on her last day at work before taking maternity leave.
"Let’s just say, Bryant Gumbel didn’t quite get it," Couric wrote. "It’s pretty shocking to watch it now, 28 years later!"
In the clip, Gumbel asks Couric why she's taking "so long" off work.
Couric, then 34 and expected to give birth to her first daughter, Elinor Monahan, in three weeks, said she would be away from the show for nine weeks total. She ultimately only took four weeks off, Couric told USA TODAY in 2019.
"I'm going to relax for three weeks, as much as you can relax when you're carrying around 30 extra pounds," Couric told Gumbel during the segment. "Then hopefully I'll have the baby and everything. It's a major shock to your body, I hope you realize, when you have a baby. And it takes a while to get back to normal and get on a schedule."
Gumbel apparently thought that was too much time: "Our ancestors didn't worry about that shock to your body. They came right back and worked."
"And they died when they were, like, 32 years old," Couric said.
"You're 34 − what are you worried about?" he responded.
After Couric noted she hadn't had more than a week off of work in a year, Gumbel asked, "How many men get nine weeks off?"
She retorted, "Do we have to do this in, like, a sexist debate?" and asked him to "be nice to me" on her last day.
Katie Couric and Bryant Gumbel were 'very friendly' post-'Today'
Couric told USA TODAY in 2019 that her relationship with Gumbel was "very friendly."
"It'll be interesting to hear his reaction, but we had a great working relationship," she said. "I think some of (his attitude) was sort of in jest and clearly he was giving me a hard time, but just in context of all the conversations these days, it was interesting to watch."
Couric made it clear she had no ill will against Gumbel, but that the "funny/not funny" clip was a great starting point to launch a discussion about the stigma against maternity leave in the U.S.
"Times have changed so much, but I do think there's a lot of implicit bias against moms," Couric told USA TODAY. "I think it's important to make sure your employer is up on the times and that women aren't penalized, consciously or unconsciously, when they have children."
Contributing: Hannah Yasharoff
veryGood! (837)
Related
- Where will Elmo go? HBO moves away from 'Sesame Street'
- Tupac Shakur's estate threatens to sue Drake over AI voice imitation: 'A blatant abuse'
- Woman wins $1M in Oregon lottery raffle, credits $1.3B Powerball winner for reminder
- US applications for jobless claims fall to lowest level in 9 weeks
- Military service academies see drop in reported sexual assaults after alarming surge
- Trump Media asks lawmakers to investigate possible unlawful trading activity in its DJT stock
- South Carolina sheriff: Stop calling about that 'noise in the air.' It's cicadas.
- Flint, Michigan, residents call on Biden to pay for decade-old federal failures in water crisis
- Whoopi Goldberg is delightfully vile as Miss Hannigan in ‘Annie’ stage return
- Alabama Coal Mine Keeps Digging Under A Rural Community After Hundreds of Fines and a Fatal Explosion. Residents Are Rattled
Ranking
- Senate begins final push to expand Social Security benefits for millions of people
- Massachusetts House launches budget debate, including proposed spending on shelters, public transit
- The Rolling Stones set to play New Orleans Jazz Fest 2024, opening Thursday
- Can you prevent forehead wrinkles and fine lines? Experts weigh in.
- All That You Wanted to Know About She’s All That
- Portland strip club, site of recent fatal shooting, has new potential tenant: Chick-fil-A
- Biden signs foreign aid bill into law, clearing the way for new weapons package for Ukraine
- Biden meets 4-year-old Abigail Edan, an American who was held hostage by Hamas
Recommendation
How to watch new prequel series 'Dexter: Original Sin': Premiere date, cast, streaming
Missouri House backs legal shield for weedkiller maker facing thousands of cancer-related lawsuits
NFL draft trade candidates: Which teams look primed to trade up or down in first round?
Can you prevent forehead wrinkles and fine lines? Experts weigh in.
Head of the Federal Aviation Administration to resign, allowing Trump to pick his successor
Biden meets 4-year-old Abigail Mor Edan, the youngest American hostage released by Hamas
Dolphin found dead on a Louisiana beach with bullets in its brain, spinal cord and heart
Maple Leafs' Sheldon Keefe: Bruins' Brad Marchand 'elite' at getting away with penalties