Can anyone save the Today show?

That's the multi-million dollar question facing NBC

Ryan Seacrest
(Image credit: Imeh Akpanudosen/Getty Images)

In recent months, NBC's Today show — long touted as "America's First Family" — has been exposed, for better or worse, as America's First Dysfunctional Family. And as rumors of teasing, tension, and backstabbing behind the scenes have surfaced, the show has ceded its 18-year run as America's number one morning show.

Matt Lauer is at the center of the drama. Once the darling of morning TV, loved for his ability to glide seamlessly between hard news interviews and lighthearted banter, he's now being painted as a bully. Since Ann Curry's teary on-air departure in June 2012, after only one year of co-hosting, rumors about Lauer's part in her ousting have bubbled up, culminating in headlines like "The real Today show is run by the unpopular bully Matt Lauer."

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Carmel Lobello is the business editor at TheWeek.com. Previously, she was an editor at DeathandTaxesMag.com.