Hoda to a Nightingale

hoda kotb
The choreography of Hoda’s exit also belied some unpalatable economic realities that the smoothie-sipping audience didn’t really need to hear about. Photo: Dimitrios Kambouris/Getty Images for The Webby Awards
Dylan Byers
September 28, 2024

On Thursday, Hoda Kotb, the widely beloved and perpetually ebullient Today show co-host, sat on the Studio 1A couch among her teary-eyed colleagues and revealed that she would be leaving the program early next year. In the subgenre of Today farewells, this was about as genuinely harmonious and well-composed an exit as the network suits could have expected—a far cry from the infamously awkward Ann Curry departure, obviously, to say nothing of the Matt Lauer cancellation that presaged Hoda’s own ascension to the chair. Tears and praise and declarations of love flowed unencumbered. Savannah Guthrie called Hoda “our sunshine,” Al Roker called her “our North Star.”