Savannah Guthrie returns to 'TODAY' amid search for her 84-year-old mother

“TODAY” co-anchor Savannah Guthrie is set to return to the flagship NBC morning show Monday, more than two months after her mother disappeared.

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Guthrie, who has co-anchored “TODAY” since 2012, stepped away from her role in early February afterNancy Guthrie, 84, went missing from her home near Tucson, Arizona. Authorities have described the case as a possible kidnapping or abduction.

Guthrie told an Easter church service on Sunday "I still believe," while speaking about how her Christian faith has been tested during the search for her mother.

In her first interview since the start of her family’s ordeal,Guthrie told Hoda Kotblast month that she believed returning to the “TODAY” anchor desk is “part of my purpose right now,” even though it was difficult to imagine going back to a workplace she associates with “joy and lightness.”

“I can’t come back and try to be something that I’m not. But I can’t not come back because it’s my family,” Guthrie said in the interview, which aired in March. “I don’t know if I can do it. I don’t know if I’ll belong anymore, but I would like to try.”

“TODAY” co-anchor Craig Melvin,announcing Guthrie’s returnon the March 27 broadcast of the show, said: “It’s where she belongs. It’s where we all want her to be. We cannot wait to welcome her back with open arms here in Studio 1A.”

Nancy Guthrie’s family reported her missing around noon Feb. 1 after she did not show up at a friend’s house for virtual church services, according to the Pima County Sheriff’s Office. She was last seen the previous night around 9:45 p.m. after having dinner at her daughter Annie Guthrie’s home, according to authorities.

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The investigation into her disappearance gripped the nation and put an intense spotlight on the quiet Catalina Foothills area of Tucson. Authorities have not identified a suspect or motive, though theFBI releasedchilling doorbell camera footage ofan armed and masked manoutside Nancy Guthrie’s home on the morning she was reported missing.

The bureau described him as a man of average build, 5 feet, 9 inches to 5 feet, 10 inches tall, wearing a black Ozark Trail Hiker Pack 25-liter backpack.

Guthrie and her siblings, Camron Guthrie and Annie Guthrie, have provided updates on the case via social media. In emotionally wrenching videos on Instagram, they have thanked members of the public for their prayers and made direct appeals to Nancy Guthrie’s possible abductor.

“Someone knows how to find our mom and bring her home,” Guthrie wrote in the caption toa Feb. 24 video post.

The family is offeringup to $1 millionfor information that leads to the 84-year-old’s recovery. The FBI is offering a reward ofup to $100,000for “information leading to the recovery of Nancy Guthrie and/or the arrest and conviction of anyone involved in her disappearance.”

Kotb, a “TODAY” contributor, substituted for Guthrie. In that period, Guthrie withdrew from NBC’s coverage of the Milan Cortina Winter Olympics; Mary Carillo stepped in to co-host the opening ceremony alongside NBC Sports’ Terry Gannon.

Guthrievisited the “TODAY” set March 5. In photos taken from outside the studio by a photographer for The Associated Press, Guthrie could be seen wiping tears and embracing her colleagues. The visit was not televised.

“I really wanted to come and see everybody. I just love this beautiful place that we call home, where we get to come and be every day,” Guthrie told Kotb, adding: “When times are hard, you want to be with your family.”

Savannah Guthrie returns to 'TODAY' amid search for her 84-year-old mother

“TODAY” co-anchor Savannah Guthrie is set to return to the flagship NBC morning show Monday, more than two months after her mother disa...
Tax cuts are the hot new idea for Democrats

WASHINGTON — Tax cuts are becoming the hottest new idea in Democratic politics from coast to coast, as candidates across the party spectrum seek to capitalize on cost-of-living struggles and win back working-class voters.

NBC Universal Sen. Cory Booker; Katie Porter. (Getty Images)

Sens.Cory Booker, D-N.J., andChris Van Hollen, D-Md., recently rolled out sweeping tax cut plans. Booker seeks to create a federal tax exemption for up to $75,000 in income for married couples. Van Hollen wants to set that figure at $92,000. Both have been floated as potential 2028 presidential candidates.

In California, progressive candidate for governor Katie Porter, a former Democratic congresswoman, isproposingto wipe out state income taxes for California families making up to $100,000 per year.

In Georgia, gubernatorial candidate Keisha Lance Bottoms, a former mayor of Atlanta and Biden administration official, iscampaigning on“eliminating state income taxes for teachers.”

The trend has sparked a “wonk revolt” uniting policy experts from the center to the left against the new trend, said Zach Moller, senior director of economic policy at the moderate Democratic group Third Way.

He said the divide is part of a “Democratic Cold War” between those who want to give tax breaks to certain groups and policy-minded figures who favor a broad revenue base.

The critics warn that Democrats cannot plausibly fund a European-style safety net if they continue to push for slashing revenues or shrinking the tax base.

“There’s only so much revenue you can get out of corporations and billionaires and the 1%,” Moller said. “It’s highly unlikely Democrats are going to get enough revenue from that group to do everything they want to do, whether it’s child care, paid leave, furthering the child tax credit, Medicare expansion.”

“Democrats are going to have a math problem at the end of the day if they go down this road,” he said, adding that it further jeopardizes any hope of lowering the national debt.

The pushback from the left is more intense. They warn that these Democrats are surrendering to a Reaganesque vision that treats taxes as a punishment and thereby endangers the liberal project, which relies on tax revenues to fund national priorities.

And some Democrats are rejecting the trend ahead of the next presidential primary, where it’s shaping up to become one of several major topics about the future of the party.

Rep. Ro Khanna, D-Calif., a progressive populist weighing a 2028 presidential run, is laying down a marker against the trend.

“Democrats need to offer a vision of the state that provides health care, education and child care and asks each of us to do our patriotic duty in rebuilding our communities and nation,” Khanna told NBC News. “We should argue from an FDR frame that believes in the role of the state to provide essential services to Americans, not the Reagan frame that believes government is the problem and taxes are evil.”

Tré Easton, a former Senate Democratic aide who now oversees policy for the Searchlight Institute, said the trend began whenDemocrats rushed to embracePresident Donald Trump’s popular pitch for“no taxes on tips”in the 2024 election.

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“That kind of took off. And I think this is Democrats trying to replicate that by offering stuff that’s meant to appeal to working-class voters, who we need to win back. And it just feels so gimmicky to me across the board,” Easton said.

He called the new trend “exceedingly problematic” and “myopic,” one that “undercuts what used to be Democrats’ main argument — that we’re all in this thing together, and so we should try and pay for this stuff together to make people’s lives better.”

“You’re never going to out-tax-cut the Republican Party. They will always win on that front. That is in their DNA,” Easton said. “And I think the broader point here is we shouldn’t be viewing taxes as punishment or a burden, right?”

Even in deep-blue Washington, D.C., mayoral candidate Kenyan McDuffie is seeking to tap into anti-tax sentiment, saying recently thatthe nation’s capital won’t become likeNew York City on his watch, accusing Mayor Zohran Mamdani of peddling “tax hikes dressed up as hope.”

Easton said, speaking broadly about the Democratic proposals: “When you start removing people from the tax base, what you’re doing is saying, actually, no, it’s not our collective responsibility to make society improve, to actually invest in our communities and each other. You’re saying that it’s just the responsibility of really, really superrich people and no one else.”

Asked about the criticisms, Van Hollen told NBC News his plan is “completely consistent with the liberal project.”

“People who are making a living wage, meaning they’re earning enough just to pay their bills and get by, should be able to keep more of their money. As I’ve said, this is an important pillar of a tax plan. It’s not the only part of a tax plan. We should also have a wealth tax,” he said, adding that hesupports the planby Sen. Bernie Sanders, I-Vt., to slap a 5% annual wealth tax on the estimated 938 billionaires in the U.S.

Booker defended his plan as a bid to make Democrats the party of “big ideas.”

“Donald Trump has put forward a lot of big ideas. He doesn’t follow through on them, but they resonated in his last election,” he said in a recent interview. “We need big economic ideas that people can immediately hear and put their mind around.”

AGallup tracking pollfound that the share of Americans who say the income taxes they pay are “unfair” rose to 50% in March, up from 35% in 2017.

Asked about the proposals by her Senate colleagues, Sen. Elizabeth Warren, D-Mass., said, “I’m focused right now on getting billionaires to pay their fair share. If billionaires were paying, we’d have plenty of money to invest in the things families need, to help bring down costs and make this whole economy work better for those in the middle.”

Vanessa Williamson, a senior fellow at the Urban-Brookings Tax Policy Center and the author of “Read My Lips: Why Americans Are Proud To Pay Taxes,” sighed deeply when asked about the tax cut trend.

“The decision of prominent Democrats to make tax cuts their focus is ill-conceived for a number of reasons,” she said. “I think some Democrats appear to be mistakenly under the impression that we live in a nation ofGrover Norquists. We don’t. We never have.”

She said Democrats have historically succeeded politically when their leaders, like Franklin Delano Roosevelt and Lyndon Johnson, were candid about the importance of taxation in pursuit of popular projects like the New Deal and the Great Society.

“It is a remarkably condescending attitude to take with the American people,” Williamson said. “How are you going to go to the American people and say, ‘Government is worthwhile,’ but then say, ‘Don’t worry, you don’t have to pay for it?’ That the democratic system is a good one, but not so good that it’s worth investing your own money in?”

Tax cuts are the hot new idea for Democrats

WASHINGTON — Tax cuts are becoming the hottest new idea in Democratic politics from coast to coast, as candidates across the party spec...
Sky Ferreira Accuses Charli XCX of Stealing Her Unreleased Demo Songs for Wuthering Heights Album

Sky Ferreira publicly implied that her unreleased demos were used — without proper credit — on Charli XCX's Wuthering Heights soundtrack album.

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  • Specific tracks called into question include "Eyes of the World," the intro to "Chains of Love," and "Altars," which fans claim may be rooted in Ferreira's original work dating as far back as 2015.

  • Ferreira insists she has dated proof of her contributions, but says it isn't worth the fight — a pointed nod to how the music industry tends to handle artists in her position.

Sky Ferreira— the elusive, perpetually delayed album-having "Everything Is Embarrassing" singer — has spent the past few weeks implying that her fingerprints are a lot more prominent onCharli XCX'sWuthering Heightsalbum than anyone realized. And she's not being subtle about it.

It started back in February, whenWuthering Heightsdropped and a meme circulated about Charli dragging Ferreira back into the studio to make the album. Ferreira's response in the comments was blunt: "To record my old songs." No explanation. No elaboration. Just six words and a handful of asterisks that sent the internet into a full spiral.

That comment simmered for weeks. Then, earlier this month, a fan account named Leon on X decided to question Ferreira's sources of income — which, in retrospect, was a bold choice. Ferreira found the post and clapped back: "I toured for years. I work. I hate to break it to you, but your favorite artist records my old songs. I hope that answers your question."

Screenshot via X

Still no names. But everyone understood who she was talking about.

Leon then posted a since-deleted screenshot of a text exchange with an alleged "industry insider," who claimed that "Eyes of the World" — the track on which Ferreira is officially credited as a guest feature — and the intro to "Chains of Love" were both taken from her demo "Ancient Idols," a track dating to around 2018 that had been intended for her long-suffering, still-unreleased second album,Masochism. The insider also alleged that "Altars" was based on a Ferreira demo from 2015.

Ferreira didn't confirm those specifics — but she didn't exactly deny them either.She responded to Leon: "Your industry 'insider' is wrong. Close but wrong." Then, in a follow-up, she added: "I'm not going to get into it but it was definitely more than an intro. I have proof of everything with dates. It isn't worth the trouble bc I know how the world works."

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"Close but wrong" and "more than an intro" is a very specific kind of not-denying something.

Sky Ferreira at the Los Angeles premiere for “Baby Driver” at the Ace Hotel Downtown. Los Angeles, USA 14 June 2017Picture: Paul Smith/Featureflash/SilverHub 0208 004 5359 sales@silverhubmedia.com

Ferreira has been careful not to directly accuse Charli XCX of theft by name, framing the issue instead as part of a broader pattern within the music industry — one where creative ownership gets muddied and original authors don't always get their due. But the implication is loud enough that no one is missing it.

The through line in all of this appears to be producer Justin Raisen. Ferreira's frequent collaborator also worked on theWuthering Heightssoundtrack with Charli, and fans have been quick to speculate that music Ferreira created with Raisen — work she reportedly couldn't release while stuck in her deal with Capitol Records — may have eventually made its way to Charli's project.

Ferreira has been candid in past interviewsabout her decade-long battle with Capitol Records, noting that the label "waited until the 10-year anniversary ofNight Time, My Timeto drop me via an automated message that got forwarded to me." So the idea that her unreleased work could've ended up in someone else's hands isn't exactly a stretch.

Charli XCX at the World premiere of ‘Wuthering Heights’ held at TCL Chinese Theatre in Hollywood, USA on January 28, 2026. — Photo by PopularImages/depositphotos.com

The irony of all this? Charli has, on more than one occasion, declared her deep admiration for Ferreira — once saying that while she was "the biggest Rihanna stan ever," Ferreira was "the only exception" because "she's one of a kind."

For now, Charli XCX has not commented on Ferreira's claims. Given that this all played out across Instagram comments and since-deleted tweets, it's a very 2026 kind of drama — chaotic, partially redacted, and deeply unresolved.

Ferreira says she has proof of everything with dates. Whether she ever decides it's worth the trouble remains to be seen.

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Sky Ferreira Accuses Charli XCX of Stealing Her Unreleased Demo Songs for Wuthering Heights Album

Sky Ferreira publicly implied that her unreleased demos were used — without proper credit — on Charli XCX's Wuthering...
Lisa Kudrow Says Phoebe from

Lisa Kudrow said her Friends character Phoebe Buffay "wasn't stupid" in a recent interview

People Lisa Kudrow; Lisa Kudrow in 'Friends.'Credit: Griffin Nagel/Peacock/Getty; Reisig & Taylor/NBCU Photo Bank/NBCUniversal/Getty

NEED TO KNOW

  • "At first, Phoebe was very, very far from me. It took a lot of work to justify the things she would say and do," the actress said

  • Friends aired for 10 seasons on NBC from 1994 to 2004

Lisa Kudrowis setting the record straight on her iconicFriendscharacter.

The actress, 62, said Phoebe Buffay from the hit sitcom "wasn't stupid" while speaking with actressLily Tomlinfor anInterview Magazinearticle published on ​​Monday, March 30.

"At the time, it was like, 'She's such a ditz. How is it that you only play ditzes?' And I thought, Is she a ditz? To me, she wasn't," Kudrow recalled of the public response to her character.

Lisa Kudrow on 'Friends.'Credit: David Hume Kennerly/Getty Images

When asked who called Phoebe a ditz, she replied, "Everybody. In 1994, it was like, 'I love her. She's such a ditz.' And it's like, yeah, okay, that was what a ditz was to us. Someone who wasn't toeing the line."

TheComebackstar emphasized, however, that her character "wasn't stupid."

Still, Kudrow said it took some time for her to personally connect with her character, but it eventually happened over the show's lengthy run.

"At first, Phoebe was very, very far from me. It took a lot of work to justify the things she would say and do. Not in an irritating way—it was fun. Over the course of 10 years, a little bit of her came into me. I lightened up a little more and read some books on spirituality and things, just to try to understand her," she said.

The NBC sitcom about six friends living in New York City aired from 1994 to 2004. It also starredJennifer Aniston,Courteney Cox,David Schwimmer,Matt LeBlancand the lateMatthew Perry.

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Phoebe was a musician who juggled a variety of jobs throughout the series. Kudrow won an Emmy Award for Outstanding Supporting Actress in a Comedy Series for her portrayal of the quirky character in 1998.

The actressrevisited her time on the beloved showwhile speaking withToday.comin 2024.

"We loved each other," she said of her costars. "Going to work every day was heaven. It was too good to be true, but it really was."

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Lisa Kudrow attends the premiere of Netflix's 'No Good Deed' at TUDUM Theater on Dec. 4, 2024.Credit: Axelle/Bauer-Griffin/FilmMagic

Kudrow also said starring on the show and having such early success opened the door for her later works.

"Because I was onFriends, I got to create my own shows that didn't have to be as big asFriends, so I could do something likeThe ComebackorWeb Therapy, and that was really fulfilling," she said at the time.

The Comebackpremieredits third and final seasonon March 22, two decades after its first installment in 2005.

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Lisa Kudrow Says Phoebe from “Friends ”‘Wasn’t Stupid’ Despite Everyone Labeling the Character ‘Such a Ditz’

Lisa Kudrow said her Friends character Phoebe Buffay "wasn't stupid" in a recent interview NEED ...
Gabrielle Union's Father Dies at 81 After Dementia Diagnosis: 'Nothing Prepares You for the Painfully Slow Disappearing'

Gabrielle Union's dad, Sylvester Union Jr., has died at age 81

People Gabrielle Union and her dad, Sylvester, in 2004; the Unions in 2025Credit: Stephen Shugerman/Getty; Gabrielle Union/Instagram

NEED TO KNOW

  • He was placed in memory care in 2023, years after being diagnosed with dementia

  • "No matter how much you think you know about dementia, nothing prepares you for the painfully slow disappearing of your loved one," Gabrielle wrote in an Instagram tribute

Gabrielle Union's dad, Sylvester "Cully" Union Jr., has died. He was 81.

Sylvester died on Friday, April 3, according to the actress in a heartfeltInstagram tribute. Her father wasplaced in memory care in 2023, years after he was diagnosed with dementia.

"No matter how much you think you know about dementia, nothing prepares you for the painfully slow disappearing of your loved one," Gabrielle, 53, wrote. "First it's repeating words or forgetting little things here or there, then BOOM, he can't swallow or walk."

"The them that you know gets smaller and smaller," she continued. "You hold out hope for sustained eye contact or a smile; even a hand squeeze can make you feel like they could come back to you 'normal' at any second. It's brutal and it's what he experienced, but it wasn't who he was."

TheBring It OnandRiff Raffstar remembered her dad as someone "surrounded by love and support from his ever-growing village."

From right: Gabrielle Union; her dad, Sylvester Union Jr.; her husband, Dwyane Wade, and one of their kids in 2025Credit: Gabrielle Union/Instagram

"I swear he never met a stranger, just friends he hadn't met yet. A lifelong, die-hard Nebraska fan, he taught me the values of teamwork, a fierce work ethic, and that you are only as strong as your weakest link, so tend to them first," she wrote.

Gabrielle also said Sylvester "was a perfectly imperfect man and father," adding that he "acknowledged his imperfections, apologized, and made amends for as long as it took for the hurts to heal."

"No one was ever left behind or unseen," she wrote.

TheForbidden Fruitsstar recalled her dad being the "life of every party," writing, "He loved music, traveling the world, and spending time with extended family and friends."

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"I am grateful for all who stepped up in his final years to care, nurture, and love on him. My family and I are eternally grateful for the medical and memory care staff who ensured he had the best care. My sisters who stepped up are heroes, and I love you both beyond words," the actress said.

"It's bewildering to feel relief that the pain has ended, but profound heartbreak at the finality of his time. I know I'm not the first or last Daddy's girl to go through this, and I'm sending love and healing to anyone suffering the loss of a parent. I know his love is eternal and will find me in every realm," Gabrielle concluded.

Gabrielle Union and her dad, Sylvester Union Jr., in October 2025Credit: Gabrielle Union/Instagram

The Instagram post featured a compilation video that included clips of Sylvester singing into a microphone during a meal and at a football game, as well as an array of family pictures.

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Gabrielle Union's dad, Sylvester Union Jr., singingCredit: Gabrielle Union/Instagram

ActressAja Naomi Kingexpressed her condolences in the comments section, writing, "Sending you so much love," while comedianRobin Thedewrote, "May he dance in heaven always!"

JournalistKelley Carterwrote, "Your dad was always so incredibly kind. Sending you and your sisters all of my love. Here for you always."

In October, Gabrielle shared an Instagram carousel of photosin honor of her dad's 81st birthday, writing, "It's my Dad's 81st birthday and I don't think I've ever been more grateful to be his daughter."

The photos showed family members — including her husband,Dwyane Wade, and her sister,Tracy Union— gathered around her father as he rested in a chair underneath a Nebraska Cornhuskers blanket.

Gabrille previously shared that her dad's medical care has influenced her career choices, explaining, "You know, nursing homes, what's covered by insurance, what's not, home health aids — like that all adds up and having to really be cognizant of an additional output, I have to go where the money goes."

Read the original article onPeople

Gabrielle Union’s Father Dies at 81 After Dementia Diagnosis: ‘Nothing Prepares You for the Painfully Slow Disappearing’

Gabrielle Union's dad, Sylvester Union Jr., has died at age 81 NEED TO KNOW He was placed in memory care i...

 

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