Katie Couric has finally shed that perky persona. It'll cost her. Her gossip-filled autobiography "Going There," published Tuesday, reads more like a never-ending vendetta than a memoir.
Almost every short chapter comes across like a rabbit punch aimed at the kidneys of one former acquaintance after another.
Tom Werner may have helped the Boston Red Sox return to their winning ways, but he was a loser of a boyfriend. Former CBS chairman Les Moonves is a close talker with bad breath. Prince Harry had a strong aroma of alcohol and cigarettes oozing from every pore.
Former CBS execs Jeff Fager and David Rhodes are "self-satisfied schmucks." The "60 Minutes" crew wouldn't give her a second of their time. Marissa Mayer was in over her head at Yahoo; even worse, she once arranged for a lunch meeting at a joint that specialized in soup.
Many of Couric's victims deserve the jabs. The former "Today" show and CBS news anchor paints a world full of masochist gatekeepers who get away with bad behavior — or at least they did during her rise to the top.
She meticulously documents her relationship with Matt Lauer and how it slowly unraveled after he was fired for inappropriate workplace behavior, reprinting their text exchanges that became more and more chilly.
Producer Jeff Zucker goes from being her staunchest ally to a smug know-it-all who helped doom their short-lived syndicated series, "Katie."
Even her late husband, Jay Monahan, doesn't escape criticism. While she spends much of the book drooling over her beloved (there's a little too much about their sex life) she questions his fascination with the Civil War and speculates that he had misguided affection for Robert E. Lee.