After years in the shadows, cast out by the #MeToo reckoning that toppled his empire, Matt Lauer is plotting a phoenix-like rise from the ashes – one that could send shockwaves through the glittering corridors of Hollywood and beyond. The former Today show kingpin, fired in November 2017 amid a torrent of sexual misconduct allegations from multiple women, has largely vanished from public view. But whispers from insiders reveal a man seething with unresolved fury, eyeing a media comeback laced with revelations that might just rewrite the industry’s darkest chapters. Is this a calculated act of vengeance against those he believes stabbed him in the back, or a cynical ploy to cash in on his notoriety? As of December 2025, the speculation is electric, and the stakes couldn’t be higher.

Lauer’s downfall was swift and brutal. Once the golden boy of morning television, co-anchoring Today for two decades and pulling in ratings that made NBC billions, his world imploded when a colleague accused him of assaulting her in his office – an allegation he vehemently denied, though he admitted to “embarrassing and ashamed” behavior in a statement. More women followed, detailing a pattern of harassment: explicit messages, unwanted advances, and a toxic power dynamic that allegedly spanned years. NBC’s swift termination memo cited “reason to believe this may not have been an isolated incident,” igniting a firestorm that forced the network to overhaul its workplace culture. Co-hosts Savannah Guthrie and Hoda Kotb, tearfully announcing his exit live on air, symbolized the raw pain of betrayal in a sisterhood shattered.

Fast-forward eight years, and Lauer, now 67, cuts a far cry from his polished prime. Spotted in the Hamptons looking unrecognizable – grayer, heavier, more reclusive – he’s rebuilt a quieter life with girlfriend Shamin Abas, a marketing executive he’s dated since 2019. Sources paint him as a devoted father to his three grown children from his marriage to ex-wife Annette Roque, which crumbled post-scandal. Yet beneath the domestic calm simmers resentment. “He’s still angry,” one insider confided, pointing fingers at “people he thought were his friends” who turned on him during the frenzy. No longer shrouded in shame, Lauer is “clamoring for a comeback,” reportedly networking with industry contacts and even floating a digital pivot where he could “set his own course.”

Matt Lauer Doesn't Socialize with Friends Much These Days: Source

The real intrigue? The “shocking details” he might unleash. Rumors swirl of a potential tell-all – perhaps a podcast or book – spilling untold stories from Today’s green room to A-list afterparties. Imagine Lauer naming names: the executives who knew and stayed silent, the stars who partied alongside him at infamous bashes, or the systemic rot that enabled predators like him (and others, from Harvey Weinstein to Jeffrey Epstein’s orbit). He’s already been linked to unlikely allies in scandal survivors T.J. Holmes and Amy Robach, the GMA duo ousted over their affair, hinting at a “pariahs unite” media venture. Don Lemon, another fallen anchor, publicly championed Lauer’s return in early 2025, insisting “the public misses him” and ratings would soar – a nod to the era’s shifting tides, where “cancellation” feels increasingly reversible in a Trump-fueled cultural backlash.

But is this redemption or reckoning? Critics decry it as tone-deaf, a slap to survivors still healing from the #MeToo fallout. Public reaction on social media is savage: “Shady thing” doesn’t begin to cover the backlash to comeback chatter. Lauer knows the odds – slim, as one source put it – but he’s betting on a miracle, perhaps even eyeing Today’s vacant throne post-Hoda Kotb’s exit. Whatever form it takes, Lauer’s reemergence isn’t just a personal Hail Mary; it’s a litmus test for Hollywood’s forgiveness economy. Will the industry, still scarred by its own monsters, welcome back a man who embodies its sins? Or will his revelations – if they drop – burn it all down? The clock is ticking, and Tinseltown is holding its breath.