Brooke Nevils, a former NBC producer, accused Matt Lauer of raping her in a Sochi hotel room during the 2014 Olympics. She described non-consensual anal penetration that left her bleeding for days—details Lauer denies, insisting the encounter was consensual.
Nevils filed a complaint in 2017. NBC fired Lauer immediately from Today, where he earned $25 million annually. The network settled with Nevils for a seven-figure sum and placed her on medical leave. Her name surfaced publicly in Ronan Farrow’s 2019 book Catch and Kill.
After her identity emerged, Nevils spiraled into “compulsive, paranoid” thoughts, shame over breaking NBC rules, and fears of ruining her life. Doctors diagnosed PTSD; she checked into a psych ward for 10 days of evaluation and long-term exposure therapy, calling it her “rock bottom.”
In her memoir, Nevils addresses Lauer’s 2019 open letter, which claimed she altered her story for money. She labels it “victim blaming” and recounts their “chaotic” post-assault relationship plus media frenzy after his firing. Now married with two kids, she studies rape survivor psychology.