Heartbreaking Video of Nancy Guthrie Inside Her Bedroom Released: The Clue the Kidnapper Meticulously Collected to Plan the Abduction. Savannah Was Once Proud of This Footage of Her Mom, But Is Now DEVASTATED That It Indirectly Caused Her Mother to Never Return
The disappearance of Nancy Guthrie has taken a disturbing turn as chilling footage of the bedroom she was most likely abducted from has resurfaced. As the desperate search for Savannah Guthrie’s missing mother approaches its sixth full week, this archival clip has cast a dark shadow over the investigation, suggesting that the very platform that made Savannah a household name may have inadvertently provided a roadmap for a predator.
The video, which originally aired on the “Today” show in 2013, was recently unearthed by Megyn Kelly and shared to YouTube this past Wednesday. In the segment, Nancy Guthrie, then 71, is seen in a lighthearted and domestic setting, teaching her famous daughter and Savannah’s “Today” colleagues the proper way to make a bed every morning. At the time, it was a charming human-interest piece, but in the wake of her kidnapping, every frame of the footage now feels like a security breach.
Filmed inside the master bedroom of her $1 million Tucson, Arizona home, the segment began with Nancy explaining her philosophy on household discipline. “Well, I think everybody needs to know how to make a bed,” Nancy said in the clip, which was recorded around 3 a.m. local time to align with the show’s live broadcast. Standing in the private sanctuary where she would eventually be targeted, she added, “So, when the time came to teach [Savannah and her siblings] how to make a bed, this is what I tried to teach you.”
The atmosphere of the 2013 clip was jovial. Nancy joked that all three of her children—Savannah, Annie, and Camron—had initially considered bed-making to be a “really worthless skill.” Despite the ribbing, she meticulously walked Savannah and co-hosts Al Roker and Natalie Morales through her daily routine. The camera panned across the room, capturing the layout, the furniture placement, and the specific aesthetics of the space.
As the segment concluded, Savannah shared a tender moment with her mother that now resonates with tragic irony. “I’ll teach you a skill! It’s called napping, when you’re up at these hours,” Savannah joked before Nancy signed off. Her final words in the clip were a simple, “Love you, Mom.”
However, the forensic value of this footage has become a focal point for critics and investigators alike. Megyn Kelly, 55, noted that the suspected kidnappers could have easily used this high-definition look at the interior of the home to plan the abduction of the now 84-year-old woman. “So what’s interesting about that clip is you can see where she slept every night,” Kelly explained during her commentary. “And you can see exactly what this abductor must have walked into.”

Kelly raised a valid point regarding the consistency of a senior citizen’s home environment, suggesting that the layout seen by millions on television likely remained the same over the last decade. “I mean, does anybody’s mother dramatically overhaul their bedroom when they’re in their 80s, 70s? I mean, that was, what, 13 years ago?” she asked.
Furthermore, the “Megyn Kelly Today” host suggested that the alleged ransom notes received early in the investigation might have been fabricated using details gleaned from this very “Today” segment. “We had an alleged kidnapper note early on in the Nancy Guthrie scandal, claiming they knew exactly where she kept her Apple Watch,” Kelly explained. “And they had described something inside Nancy’s bedroom. Did those people behind that note see this segment?”
The timeline of the disappearance remains a grim reminder of the efficiency of the crime. Nancy was last seen on the night of January 31 and was officially reported missing from her Tucson residence on February 1. The investigation took an even more technical turn when neighbors reported a suspicious internet outage shortly before Nancy vanished—a move likely intended to disable home security systems. Investigators have since released photos and videos of an unidentified individual breaking into the home on the night of the disappearance, but no arrests have been made.
In the weeks since, Savannah Guthrie, 54, has taken a leave of absence from her post at NBC. She and her siblings have posted a series of heartbreaking videos to social media, pleading for their mother’s safety. In her most recent video, shared on February 24, the tone shifted from desperate hope to somber resignation. Savannah stated that the family has begun to accept the possibility that Nancy may “already be gone.” Despite this, they have offered a $1 million reward for a “miracle” return.
Pima County Sheriff Chris Nanos, who is spearheading the case, told NBC News on Thursday that the threat may not be over. He and his team believe that Nancy’s abductor is a calculated individual who “might strike again.” While Savannah made a brief, emotional return to the “Today” set on March 5 to be consoled by her colleague Hoda Kotb, she remains focused on the search in Arizona.
The resurfaced footage serves as a “blueprint” of a life now interrupted. What was once a lighthearted lesson in motherhood has become a haunting piece of evidence in a case that has left a family shattered and a community on edge. As the search continues, the image of Nancy Guthrie in her bedroom, teaching the world how to make a bed, remains a poignant and chilling reminder of the vulnerability of those in the public eye.