Episode: Ep372: Katie Couric Talks About 'Going There'
Ep372: Katie Couric Talks About 'Going There'
1 - Katie Couric Talks About 'Going There'
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Published at: 10/29/2021
Author: The New York Times
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In her new memoir, âGoing There,â Katie Couric writes about her career as a host of âToday and the first woman to anchor the âCBS Evening Newsâ solo. She also, as the title suggests, writes about difficult personal subjects, including the deaths of her father and of her first husband. On this weekâs podcast, she says the most difficult part of the book to write was about her former âTodayâ colleague Matt Lauer and his downfall over allegations of sexual misconduct.
âMy feelings were so complicated, and they definitely evolved over time,â Couric says. âI felt like I was almost doing my own therapy sessions. I did original reporting â which sounds so pretentious â but I actually revisited some people who were affected by his behavior, and it was really, really helpful. And I talked to a lot of experts about this. I reached out to people who had written extensively about men in power. This was at the time it happened, because I was really trying to make sense of it in my head. I talked to gender studies people, I talked to lawyers who have represented victims. It was a real mission for me, and a lot of soul-searching honestly.â
John McWhorter visits the podcast to discuss his new book, âWoke Racism: How a New Religion Has Betrayed Black America.â
âI think that there is a certain kind of woke person who is caught in a frame of mind where the idea is that how you show that youâre a good person is by showing that you are woke â that youâre aware, for example, that racism exists, and itâs not just the N-word and people burning crosses on peopleâs lawns,â McWhorter says. âYou want to show that youâre aware of this. But itâs narrowed to the point where a certain kind of person thinks that showing oneâs awareness of that is the key, regardless of what you prescribeâs effects upon actual Black people. So although itâs the last thing these people would suspect about themselves, They do not think of Black people as more important than their own showing that they are not racist. That is a woke racist, as far as Iâm concerned.â
Also on this weekâs episode, Tina Jordan looks back at Book Review history as it celebrates its 125th anniversary; Alexandra Alter has news from the publishing world; and Dwight Garner and Jennifer Szalai talk about books theyâve recently reviewed. Pamela Paul is the host.
Here are the books discussed this week by The Timesâs critics:
âThe End of Biasâ by Jessica Nordell
âColorizationâ by Wil Haygood
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