TLDR
As the search for Savannah Guthrie’s mother, Nancy, enters a seventh week, the Today star is leaning on faith, sharing a hopeful message and a family’s plea for help while investigators continue their work in Arizona.
Faith in the Longest Wait
For Savannah Guthrie, faith has always been part of her public story. Now it has become the language of her deepest private fear. According to TMZ, the anchor shared an image of Christ’s ascension on social media, paired with the simple words, “I believe, I believe.”

The post arrived as the search for her mother reached week seven, transforming what began as a missing person alert into a long, unresolved vigil. Fans who usually see Savannah reading headlines on “Today” instead saw a daughter reaching for something steady as her family waits for news that has not come.
The image and caption did not mention details of the case. They did something quieter. They told the world that the family is choosing belief in the middle of uncertainty, even as each day stretches farther from the moment Nancy was last seen.
Family Statement, Public Spotlight
Behind that short caption stands a long, aching family statement. Savannah, her siblings Annie and Camron Guthrie, and their spouses released a joint message after Tucson station KVOA aired its special “Bring Her Home: The Disappearance of Nancy Guthrie.” The spotlight was local, but the emotion was universal.
“We miss our mom with every breath and we cannot be in peace until she is home,” the family wrote, as quoted by TMZ. “We cannot grieve; we can only ache and wonder. Our focus is solely on finding her and bringing her home.”
They went further, describing Nancy as having a “beautiful and courageous life” and writing that they want to celebrate that life, but cannot do so “until she is brought to a final place of rest.” It was a rare, unvarnished look at a family suspended between hope and the need for closure.
According to People, Nancy Guthrie was reported missing in Tucson after spending time with Annie and her husband, Tommaso Cioni. Local authorities and FBI agents have been working together on the case. TMZ reports that investigators have reviewed doorbell camera footage of a possible suspect and looked into alleged ransom notes, though those leads have not produced answers.
A Search Without Answers
Savannah has not turned her personal heartbreak into a media event. There are no on-air monologues, no rolling updates from the “Today” couch. Instead, she and her siblings have used carefully worded statements to keep the focus where they say they want it, on finding Nancy and honoring the woman she is to them.
For viewers who watched Savannah navigate royal funerals, historic elections, and breaking news, this chapter feels different. The polished broadcaster is now a daughter, sister, and mother, trying to balance visibility with privacy, using her platform not for spectacle but for a sustained plea to the Tucson community that might hold the missing piece.
The case now sits at a painful crossroads. Weeks have passed, leads have cooled, and the family is still asking neighbors, viewers, and anyone who crosses their path to stay alert. In that context, “I believe, I believe” reads as both a prayer and a promise that Nancy’s story will not quietly fade from view.
Whatever investigators uncover next, the legacy of this moment for Savannah Guthrie will live beyond a single headline. It is the image of a television star holding on to faith, refusing to let her mother’s name disappear, and inviting the public to remember that behind every missing person case is a family still waiting at the door.
How do you think public figures like Savannah Guthrie should balance privacy and visibility when their families are living through a crisis like this?