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Katie Couric says she's leaving ‘Today’

After 15 years on NBC morning program, she'll become CBS anchor

NBC VIDEO
Couric confirms she will leave 'Today'
April 5: "Today" show host Katie Couric confirms that she is leaving the show after 15 years to become the first woman to anchor a major U.S. network evening newscast solo.

Today show

MSNBC staff and news service reports
updated 6:48 p.m. ET April 7, 2006

NEW YORK - Katie Couric on Wednesday confirmed numerous reports that she would leave NBC and join CBS, where she is set to become first solo female anchor in weekday evening network news history.

“I wanted to tell all of you out there who have watched the show for the past 15 years that after listening to my heart and my gut — two things that have served me pretty well in the past — I’ve decided I’ll be leaving ‘Today’ at the end of May,” she told viewers. “I really feel as if we’ve become friends through the years.”

Couric, 49, will replace Bob Schieffer on the “CBS Evening News,” beginning in September, CBS confirmed in a statement. As both anchor and managing editor of the program, which will bear her name, she will take on the responsibility of hoisting it from its current third-place ratings.

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She agreed to a salary near her current range of $13 million to $15 million for five years, the Associated Press reported, citing a non-network person close to Couric.

Her announcement draws to a close seemingly endless rounds of speculation in media circles, and came on a momentous day: the 15th anniversary of her first day as “Today” co-host in 1991. “Today” ran a clip of her first day with then co-host Bryant Gumbel, which Couric joked was “172 hairstyles” ago.

“Sometimes I think change is a good thing,” Couric said. “Although it may be terrifying to get out of your comfort zone, it’s also very exciting to start a new chapter in your life.”

NBC VIDEO
Zucker on Couric's departure
April 5: Jeff Zucker, CEO of NBC Universal Television Group, reflects on 'Today' show host Katie Couric's decision to leave the 'Today' show.

MSNBC

“It’s hard to imagine being here and not having you sitting next to us,” co-host Matt Lauer told her.

(MSNBC.com is a joint venture of NBC News and Microsoft.)

NBC news personnel also commented on the change. "Katie is a friend of many years, and a gifted broadcaster,” said NBC Nightly News anchor and managing editor Brian Williams. “While I am losing her as an NBC News colleague, I am gaining an able new competitor. I want to welcome Katie to the evening shift and I look forward to competing with my friend as we all continue to cover the stories that matter, all over the world, each night, for years to come." 

Former anchor and NBC Nightly News managing editor Tom Brokaw said of Couric's decision, "As I told Katie privately and on the air, this is an exciting new time for her and I wish her all the best.  She has no illusions about the challenges ahead and she's eager to take them on. We'll miss her at NBC News, but as Katie and I know, this great organization has always been about much more than one or two people."

For NBC, her departure presents a challenge. Couric has served as the show's longest-running co-anchor and she, along with Lauer, newsreader Ann Curry and weathercaster Al Roker, have formed TV news’ most successful morning team. Their combined appeal has helped “Today” enjoy an unprecedented 10-year streak at the top of the ratings.

Bob Wright, chairman and CEO of NBC Universal, said Couric “has had an immensely positive impact both on this company and on the public at large.”

“I've been fortunate to call Katie a friend and a colleague, and I can't thank her enough for what she has brought to NBC,” Wright continued in a statement.

“I never would have dreamed that we would be lucky enough to have her on the program as long as we have,” added Jeff Zucker, the network's CEO and Couric's producer when she became a “Today” correspondent in 1990. “But there comes a time for everyone, when new challenges become hard to resist, and I fully understand that. I couldn't be happier for Katie.”


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