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‘Good to be home’: US journalist Savannah Guthrie back on air after mother’s abduction

By Thomson Reuters Apr 6, 2026 | 7:05 AM

NEW YORK, April 6 (Reuters) – U.S. television journalist Savannah Guthrie returned to her job as co-anchor of NBC’s “Today” show on ​Monday, more than two months after ‌her 84-year-old mother vanished from her Arizona home in an unresolved kidnapping.

At 7 a.m. in the show’s Manhattan studio, Guthrie launched into the headlines – the U.S. ‌war ​on Iran, the Artemis II ⁠astronauts’ traveling to the ⁠far side of the moon – before briefly acknowledging her absence.

“We are so glad you started your week with us, and it ​is good be home,” Guthrie said.

“Yes, it is good to have you back at ⁠home,” her co-anchor Craig Melvin ⁠replied, patting Guthrie’s hand.

“Well, here ​we go, ready or not, let’s do the ​news,” Guthrie said.

She was last at the anchor’s ‌desk in January, shortly before her mother, Nancy Guthrie, was taken from her home near Tucson. An armed man wearing a ski ⁠mask was recorded tampering with her doorbell camera before the disappearance.

Savannah Guthrie and her siblings later recorded ⁠emotional pleas ‌for their mother’s return, offering ⁠a $1 million reward, but she has ​yet ‌to be found.

In a video she ​recorded in ⁠February, Guthrie said her family was “blowing on the embers of hope” that Nancy Guthrie was still alive, but acknowledged that “she may already be gone.”

(Reporting by Jonathan Allen in New YorkEditing by ​Ros Russell)