there and I’d been covering national politics for some time as well as doing what I was doing out there and I knew the Nixon crowd because most of them came from California. >> Tom Brokhaw is 86 years  old. He anchored NBC for over 50 years and reported on key events like the fall of the Berlin Wall, the Challenger disaster,  and September 11th. Now he watches as Savannah Guthrie, who shares the same network, faces a difficult time in her life. Tom Brokhaw and Savannah Guthrie have a deeper

connection than just working for NBC. What Brokhaw has publicly said about Guthrie shows us something  important about her situation. It reveals insights not just about Savannah, but also about being a journalist, a daughter, and a human  being under pressure. This story goes beyond a missing grandmother. It involves legacy, courage,  and the responsibility that comes with the roles they hold. I want to be clear from the start,  this channel focuses on honesty. Tom Brokhaw has not given a

formal interview about Nancy Guthri’s case. He is keeping a lower profile now and lives on his ranch in Montana. However,  his past comments about NBC, The Today Show, and handling tough situations  give us a sense of what he thinks when he sees Savannah on the news looking for her 84year-old mother. By understanding Brokaw’s life, legacy,  and his connection to NBC, we can see a tribute to Savannah and what true journalism looks like under stress. the chair he left and the

woman who filled it. To understand why Tom Brokaw’s  perspective on Savannah Guthrie is significant, it’s important to recognize what the studio won a chair truly represents.  Tom Brokaw became co-host of the Today Show in 1976 alongside Jane Paulie. And for 5 years, he was  the face of NBC’s morning programming. However, Brokaw did more than just read scripts.  He was also covering presidential primary elections and breaking news stories while building one of the most

esteemed  careers in American broadcast journalism. He left the Today Show in 1981  when NBC appointed him to anchor nightly news. What he left behind was remarkable, a blueprint for what a serious journalist could represent in a morning  show. He exemplified the idea that a morning television host could be more than a celebrity or performer. He was a journalist who happened to appear on TV in the morning. Fast forward to TW to to 2012 when Savannah Guthrie, a lawyer, White House correspondent, and 

chief legal analyst, stepped into the co-anchor role on that same show. She didn’t just fill  the position, she transformed it. Guthrie graduated Magnaum Laad from Georgetown  Law and achieved first place on the Arizona Bar Exam. She spent three years covering the White House, interviewing presidents, and breaking legal news across all NBC  platforms before taking on one of the most watched chairs in American television. Brokaw, who has spoken fondly about the evolution of

NBC’s  talent over the years, would see in Guthrie the embodiment of what he aimed to model. The idea that morning television  doesn’t have to be lightweight. The person holding the microphone at 7:00 a.m. can be just as rigorous, serious,  and prepared as anyone delivering the news at 6:30 p.m. Savannah Guthrie is in many ways the heir to a standard of excellence that Brokaw helped establish.  And this connection is particularly evident in her recent work. What Brokhaw has said about journalists

 under personal fire. Tom Brokhaw understands what it means to confront the unthinkable while under  the scrutiny of cameras. In 2013, he was diagnosed with multiple myyoma, a form of blood cancer.  He publicly announced his diagnosis in 2014, shortly after President Barack Obama  bestowed upon him the Presidential Medal of Freedom. When discussing his illness, he chose not to succumb  to self-pity. Instead, he reflected on perspective and how the act of bearing witness, fundamental to

journalism, has taught him about resilience. Brokhaw has stated in  various interviews and writings that reporting on the suffering of others, whether through war, natural disasters, or  tragedy, establishes a different relationship with pain for a journalist. It fosters an understanding that  suffering is universal and that crises do not discriminate. Even those who tell others stories may eventually become the  subjects of their own stories. Savannah Guthri’s words since her mother

Nancy disappeared from their Tucson,  Arizona home on the night of January 31st, 2026  reflect the same understanding. Standing before the cameras, not as a journalist,  but as a terrified daughter, she has expressed feelings of desperation, stating, “Swarma, we are at an hour of desperation.” She described her mother as a kind, faithful,  loyal, fiercely loving woman of goodness and light. Looking directly into the camera, the  very tool of her profession,

Savannah communicated in the only way she knew how,  by reaching out to anyone who might be listening. Brokaw, who once referred to journalism as the sacred act  of making the abstract human, would recognize this immediately. Savannah Guthrie was not performing. She was reporting on the most significant  story of her life, pouring everything she had into it, the NBC family and what loyalty  really looks like. Tom Brokhaw has often talked about the NBC family with real emotion. He means it in a

genuine way, not a corporate or PR mi. This feeling comes from years of working together,  traveling the world, and caring for one another. When Tom’s close friend Tim Russard passed away suddenly  in June 2008, Tom returned to the NBC anchor desk to deliver the news to the country. He sat there visibly heartbroken  and spoke not because he had to, but because it was the right thing to do. That’s what family does. Recently, when Nancy Guthrie went missing, Hod a cop, who

left the Today Show in  January 2025, came back to help. She anchored the show while her friend Savannah Guthrie was in Arizona searching for her mother. The Today crew filled the studio with yellow roses. They wore yellow ribbons and Dylan Dryer led a prayer. When Savannah finally returned to New York and walked into Studio 1A for the first  time in over a month, she found her colleagues waiting for her. They formed a circle holding hands, praying and supporting her. She told them, “I wanted you to know that I’m

still  standing and I still have hope and I’m still me.” The NBC family showed up for  Savannah completely and unconditionally. This support during a very difficult time would mean a  lot to Tom Brokhaw, who spent 55 years helping to build this institution. Seeing the Today  Show come together for Savannah during such a tough time would matter deeply to him. The Greatest Generation and What Nancy Guthrie represents.  Tom Brokhall wrote one of the best-selling non-fiction books in

American history, The Greatest Generation, published in 1998. This book honors the men and women who grew up during the Great  Depression in World War II. Brokhaw described these people as shaped by hardship and becoming extraordinary, defined by what they endured  instead of what they wanted. Nancy Guthrie was born in 1941, making her a member of that generation.  She raised three children, mostly on her own, after her husband Charles  died when their daughter Savannah was

just 16. Nancy was a single mother who raised a broadcast journalist, a law school  graduate, and a co-anchor of one of the most popular morning shows in American TV history. She attended  church regularly, baked and supported her family. According to her family, she was the kind of  woman Brokoff celebrated throughout his career. Savannah’s siblings described their mother as a kind,  faithful, loyal, fiercely loving woman of goodness and light. They highlighted her deep  faith, her need for

heart medication, and her complete dedication to her family and community. This is a  story of the greatest generation when an 84year-old woman like Nancy who was vulnerable  and faithful is taken in the night by someone who seemed to plan the attack carefully using a Wi-Fi jammer, wearing a mask and carrying a weapon. The contrast  between her goodness and this violence is shocking. Brokaw built his legacy  on honoring this generation. The fact that Nancy Guthrie, the woman he

wrote about, is at the center of a national crisis would deeply move him. the weight of the world and how Savannah has carried it. A moment can define a journalist and a person forever. It is the moment when everything they know and everything they’ve trained for  is put to the test. For Savannah Guthrie, that moment came on  February 1st, 2026 when her mother missed her virtual church service and  was found missing from her home in the Catalina foothills of Tucson, Arizona. Within  days, Savannah

began making public video statements. She spoke outdoors with her siblings, looking directly into the camera, addressing whoever had taken their mother. She remained calm and strong. Even though she was clearly heartbroken, Savannah  used her platform and her voice to achieve one goal, bringing her mother home. In the first nine days, she released four videos. Each video had a different tone and audience shaped by FBI advisers who guided her  words. She said things like, “We received your message and we understand.

We beg you to return our mother.” She added, “We will pay.” She believed her mother was still alive. Then a month later, as hope was fading,  she spoke even more sadly. She said her mother may already begun, but they still needed to know where she  was. “We need her to come home,” she said. Any journalist watching this, including Tom Brokhoff, knows the courage it takes to face the camera as a daughter  instead of as a reporter. That moment earns deep respect. Later, Savannah went

back into Studio  1A to see her colleagues, not to go on air. She told them, “I still believe, and as my  mom would say, where else would I go?” That kind of quiet strength under extreme pressure is rare. It is exactly what Brokaw has often said is the most important quality in journalists and people he admires. The investigation,  what we know and why it matters. Let’s discuss the details of the investigation as understanding what happened is key to why this case is so

 significant. Nancy Guthrie, who is 84 years old, was taken from her home early on February 1st. The blood stains found at the scene were confirmed to be hers. Surveillance footage from the FBI showed a masked  man about 5’9 in to 5′ 10 in tall tampering with her doorbell  camera blocking its view with a plant and entering her home. The man carried a black 25 L Ozark Trail brand  backpack sold only at Walmart. He seemed to have a marking, possibly a tattoo  on his right

wrist. FBI profilers described his actions as driven by fantasy. Retired special agent Raymond Carr said the suspect likely researched restraints  and surveillance and practiced the route to NY’s home beforehand. Retired profiler Jim Clemente  noted that the suspect underestimated the doorbell camera, leading to critical mistakes that likely left DNA  behind. A walkie-talkie seen in the footage suggests that he had at least one accomplice.  Multiple ransom notes demanding as much as $6 million in

cryptocurrency were sent to the media and NY’s family. Later, a 42-year-old man from California  was charged with sending a fake ransom message. As of early March 2026,  the FBI, now leading a task force, has processed tens of thousands of tips, analyzed hundreds of thousands of vehicle records, reviewed thousands of hours of surveillance  footage, and found DNA at the home that does not belong to Nancy or her close family. Retired  FBI special agent Jennifer Coffender called the case

redhot, meaning it is very active and not forgotten. Pima County Sheriff Chris Nanos publicly  stated that he believes Nancy Guthrie is still alive. The family’s combined reward offers  now exceed $1.2 million, including a personal offer of $1 million from Savannah  and her siblings, $100,000 from the FBI, and additional funds from Arizona’s 88 crime organization. What legacy  looks like. Brokaw Guthrie and the torch. Tom Brokhaw has long understood something

 important about journalism. It is not just a job or a career. It is a calling. Journalists who truly embrace this calling  carry the responsibility of telling stories and witnessing events in their hearts and minds. Brok started at the  Today Show in 1976 and became the anchor of Nightly News in 1981. He reported live from the Berlin Wall  in 1989 and sat at the anchor desk on September 11th, 2001. After being diagnosed with cancer in  2013, he retired in 2021 after 55 years  at NBC,

making him the only person to have hosted all three major NBC news programs. Throughout his  career, Brohaw emphasized that the story is not about the journalist. It is about the people and families who experience events  firsthand. Savannah Guthrie understands this deeply. She learned it in law school, in the White House briefing room, and behind the anchor desk. Since her mother disappeared, she has lived this truth.  She has not just acted as a grieving daughter. She is one. She uses

her platform to  bring attention to her mother’s case, shining a light on what might have faded away. Brokaw noted in his book about  the greatest generation that their strength was not the absence of fear, but their decision  to act despite it. They kept moving forward, carrying their burdens and  refusing to give in to what they could not control. On March 5th, 2026,  Savannah Guthrie returned to Studio 1A. She looked at her colleagues who had held the fort while she was away and

said, “I’m still standing.” This reflects  her legacy. At 86, Tom Brohaw would recognize the cost of this struggle  and understand its value. If this story resonated with you, please like and share  this video. Nancy Guthri’s case needs more attention every day. Subscribe for updates on this investigation as  we cover important stories with the depth they deserve. Leave a comment below to share your thoughts on how Savannah Guthrie is handling  her

situation and what it means to keep going when it’s tough. I’ll see you in the next