Savannah Guthrie is reportedly considering leaving her role as host of NBC's flagship program, the Today show, as the massive search for her mother, Nancy, enters its second week.
Nancy, 84, vanished on February 1 from her home in a rural neighborhood of Tucson, Arizona, prompting authorities to launch a kidnapping investigation that has since captivated the nation.
Savannah is perhaps one of the most recognized faces in network news, having first appeared on NBC in 2007.
Sources have told NewsNation that the exhaustive and traumatic search for Nancy has forced Savannah to reconsider her position in the public eye.
'This absolutely came out of the blue, and I think she's really concerned that it was because of her job,' NewsNation's Paula Froelich reported, citing sources.
Froelich added that Savannah was reportedly 'a mess' and was worried that past segments featuring her mother made Nancy vulnerable.
Law enforcement believes that Nancy was snatched from her home in the middle of the night. Her age and health status have complicated the search, leaving investigators in a race against time to find Nancy.
Authorities have combed her Tucson home, raided a nearby residence, and uncovered surveillance camera footage in a desperate attempt to uncover clues about Nancy's whereabouts.
Fresh hope for a break in the case came on Friday when Special Weapons and Tactics units were seen descending on a nearby home in Tucson in connection with the search.
However, the sheriff's office later announced that no arrests have been made after the raid.
Just about three months ago, Savannah returned to her hometown of Tucson for a nostalgic tour visiting the place that shaped her upbringing.
The special segment, which aired on NBC's Today Show in November, framed Tucson as the city where her 'soul is home', with a focus on family and community.
Her mother made a rare on-air appearance during the segment, as the pair toasted to the 'gentle' desert town she had lived in since the 1970s.
But following her disappearance, there is growing concern behind the scenes at NB that the feature might have inadvertently placed Nancy in danger, the Daily Mail previously learned.
Her disappearance has cast the November Homecoming special in a stark new light.
'There's a lot of soul searching at NBC about whether their segment made Nancy a target,' a Today Show source told the Daily Mail.
Nancy has three children - Savannah, Annie, and her son Camron
Investigators and news crews are seen outside Nancy's $1 million Tucson home after she vanished without a trace
The segment did not feature Nancy's home or disclose details about where she lived.
At the time, Savannah, 54, described the six-minute feature as a 'love letter to Tucson' - the desert city she moved to at age two from Australia and where her family put down roots.
Savannah was just 16 when her father, Charles Guthrie, suddenly died of a heart attack while on a mining job in Mexico.
Nancy was just 46 when Charles died, leaving her to raise their three children, Savannah, Annie, and Camron, on her own.