
Mela Murphy, CBS News's keeper of Couric's coif, pitched a full-fledged fit last week when she learned that she would be flying coach—coach!—on Couric's much-ballyhooed first international foray as anchor to cover President Bush's summit with Iraqi Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki in Amman, Jordan. Because the trip was hastily arranged, only one business-class seat could be procured—for Couric, naturally—while the remaining 10 or so staffers, including CBS Evening News executive producer Rome Hartman, were slated to fly like normal people.
Thing is, Katie Couric's stylist is not a normal person. "Murphy went to the foreign desk," which was responsible for booking the trip, a television insider says, "and screamed at people about how outrageous and incompetent this was. She threatened that heads were going to roll."
The absurdity of the boss's hairdresser threatening the jobs of actual news staffers did not go unnoticed by the powers that be at CBS. "It exposed a deeper schism at CBS," says the insider, "between Couric's camp and the news people. What it clearly signals is that if she felt that entitled, something is out of whack. Management has promised that they're going to do something about it."
Murphy's histrionics were for naught. When the flight took off, only Couric and Hartman, who had managed to switch seats at the last minute with another passenger, were getting the hot towel and ice-cream sundae treatment in business class.
A CBS News spokeswoman declined to address Murphy's outburst, saying only that, "since CBS News booked the flight very close to the date of travel, and seat availability was at an absolute minimum, most of the group ended up flying coach." Murphy did not return messages left late Thursday.