Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Now we learn that she protected RBG.
I think it's insulting that she thought RBG needed protecting.
Really?
Had RBG’s comments aired, she would have likely been labeled a paternalistic racist.
Imagine if any white person said those exact words today. They would surely be canceled.
If any rational person looked at RBG and her career I don't know how anyone would of thought of her as a racist. Couric also has no right to edit someone like that, it's disingenuous as a journalist.
How many black clerks did she hire during her tenure as a COA or SCOTUS judge? It wouldn't be the first time this sort of critique came up.
Are you suggesting she didn't pick more Black clerks because she didn't like Black people?
And how many do you think applied??? She was only obligated to pick those most qualified. She wasn't racist, but you can bet Couric lies and is a narcissist.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I used to work at NBC in the early 2000s. Katie was one of the good ones. There were plenty of ice queens. I'll let you guess which ones those are. Including some who began in DC. Ahem.
I'm amazed that people are reaming her for being honest. This is what goes on at network news. People are competitive. If she were a man, she wouldn't be getting this backlash for competing with colleagues. But because she's a woman, she's being called a b*** and a narcissist. I applaud her for actually being open and unvarnished about how people jockey for power in this industry, and making herself vulnerable.
I asked myself this, if she were a man would I feel differently if he dished about a former colleague's bad breath, lack of humor, rigidity, the time they came on to him, all the personal former colleague content she seems to have written. My answer was I think I would still find it appalling...I would think he was an arrogant di#k. If it was just her writing about the industry and processes, etc. Her experiences fine...she got into personality attacks, who people were in her opinion, or people's vulnerable moments, like she's writing for tmz or or something. These were her colleagues. That was my main issue. Yea it is obviously an ugly industry, no doubt. So I guess if that was the goal, to share that, she certainly achieved it.
Have you read the whole book or excerpts on gossip sites, though? I am reserving full judgment until I read the whole thing.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I always think about that line about how no one should publish anything with their name on it without their psychiatrist reading it first. A joke obviously...but it speaks to how easy it is to not see your blindspots and how when writing you are revealing yourself more deeply than you realize and I think this happened here.
Apparently, She was jealous that a woman confided in ann curry rather than her about Matt lauer. She genuinely wondered why the woman did not come to her instead and see her as a confidante. This stuck with her so much it's in the book...Yet based on her showing who she was, was this that surprising? She sounds oblivious. It's ridiculous. The women went to who she felt safest with. Other people actually have close connections that don't involve you. The egocentricity is astounding.
Agree with all of this, and more evidence that she's a raging narcissist. Narcissists are known for being surprised when they find out that people have conversations without them.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Now we learn that she protected RBG.
I think it's insulting that she thought RBG needed protecting.
Really?
Had RBG’s comments aired, she would have likely been labeled a paternalistic racist.
Imagine if any white person said those exact words today. They would surely be canceled.
If any rational person looked at RBG and her career I don't know how anyone would of thought of her as a racist. Couric also has no right to edit someone like that, it's disingenuous as a journalist.
How many black clerks did she hire during her tenure as a COA or SCOTUS judge? It wouldn't be the first time this sort of critique came up.
Are you suggesting she didn't pick more Black clerks because she didn't like Black people?
And how many do you think applied??? She was only obligated to pick those most qualified. She wasn't racist, but you can bet Couric lies and is a narcissist.
Anonymous wrote:I always think about that line about how no one should publish anything with their name on it without their psychiatrist reading it first. A joke obviously...but it speaks to how easy it is to not see your blindspots and how when writing you are revealing yourself more deeply than you realize and I think this happened here.
Apparently, She was jealous that a woman confided in ann curry rather than her about Matt lauer. She genuinely wondered why the woman did not come to her instead and see her as a confidante. This stuck with her so much it's in the book...Yet based on her showing who she was, was this that surprising? She sounds oblivious. It's ridiculous. The women went to who she felt safest with. Other people actually have close connections that don't involve you. The egocentricity is astounding.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I used to work at NBC in the early 2000s. Katie was one of the good ones. There were plenty of ice queens. I'll let you guess which ones those are. Including some who began in DC. Ahem.
I'm amazed that people are reaming her for being honest. This is what goes on at network news. People are competitive. If she were a man, she wouldn't be getting this backlash for competing with colleagues. But because she's a woman, she's being called a b*** and a narcissist. I applaud her for actually being open and unvarnished about how people jockey for power in this industry, and making herself vulnerable.
I asked myself this, if she were a man would I feel differently if he dished about a former colleague's bad breath, lack of humor, rigidity, the time they came on to him, all the personal former colleague content she seems to have written. My answer was I think I would still find it appalling...I would think he was an arrogant di#k. If it was just her writing about the industry and processes, etc. Her experiences fine...she got into personality attacks, who people were in her opinion, or people's vulnerable moments, like she's writing for tmz or or something. These were her colleagues. That was my main issue. Yea it is obviously an ugly industry, no doubt. So I guess if that was the goal, to share that, she certainly achieved it.
Have you read the whole book or excerpts on gossip sites, though? I am reserving full judgment until I read the whole thing.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I saw some pieces that portrayed this as so shocking Katie had bad things to say about people.
Why can't someone say Larry King was a creeper? He was. THere's nothing shocking or untoward about that.
Keep up, this is not about Larry King or any other man, this is about a perceived American sweetheart burning bridges for attention. Never like her and her sugary sweet garbage, and as a woman would never trust her. Now all those women will know what she things of them and she should have kept that sh..t to herself. Self serving mean girl.
Wow, you're so triggered.![]()
PP is right. She admits she went out of her way to ruin other women's careers to protect her own. She's vile.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Now we learn that she protected RBG.
I think it's insulting that she thought RBG needed protecting.
Really?
Had RBG’s comments aired, she would have likely been labeled a paternalistic racist.
Imagine if any white person said those exact words today. They would surely be canceled.
If any rational person looked at RBG and her career I don't know how anyone would of thought of her as a racist. Couric also has no right to edit someone like that, it's disingenuous as a journalist.
How many black clerks did she hire during her tenure as a COA or SCOTUS judge? It wouldn't be the first time this sort of critique came up.
Are you suggesting she didn't pick more Black clerks because she didn't like Black people?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I find her more relatable than 99.99 percent of other TV news ice queens. She has a hot loaded husband, a huge career, close-knit fam and more money than God. And her publicist is playing the press like a violin with this book.
Lol, ok. She has exposed herself as the ding-dong that she really is.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I used to work at NBC in the early 2000s. Katie was one of the good ones. There were plenty of ice queens. I'll let you guess which ones those are. Including some who began in DC. Ahem.
I'm amazed that people are reaming her for being honest. This is what goes on at network news. People are competitive. If she were a man, she wouldn't be getting this backlash for competing with colleagues. But because she's a woman, she's being called a b*** and a narcissist. I applaud her for actually being open and unvarnished about how people jockey for power in this industry, and making herself vulnerable.
I asked myself this, if she were a man would I feel differently if he dished about a former colleague's bad breath, lack of humor, rigidity, the time they came on to him, all the personal former colleague content she seems to have written. My answer was I think I would still find it appalling...I would think he was an arrogant di#k. If it was just her writing about the industry and processes, etc. Her experiences fine...she got into personality attacks, who people were in her opinion, or people's vulnerable moments, like she's writing for tmz or or something. These were her colleagues. That was my main issue. Yea it is obviously an ugly industry, no doubt. So I guess if that was the goal, to share that, she certainly achieved it.
Anonymous wrote:I used to work at NBC in the early 2000s. Katie was one of the good ones. There were plenty of ice queens. I'll let you guess which ones those are. Including some who began in DC. Ahem.
I'm amazed that people are reaming her for being honest. This is what goes on at network news. People are competitive. If she were a man, she wouldn't be getting this backlash for competing with colleagues. But because she's a woman, she's being called a b*** and a narcissist. I applaud her for actually being open and unvarnished about how people jockey for power in this industry, and making herself vulnerable.