It’s been a long time since Greg Mortenson was a public figure who was routinely seen or heard in public—April 2011, to be precise—but that changes starting tomorrow, when Mortenson will appear on “,” during a pre-recorded talk with Tom Brokaw that airs at 7:40 A.M. in all time zones.
Mortenson’s re-emergence has not generated anything approaching the pre-game hype that accompanied Lance Armstrong when he submitted to a grilling by Oprah Winfrey in January 2013, but this conversation bears watching nontheless. A great deal has happened since the spring of 2011, when Mortenson and his charitable group, the Central Asia Institute, were hit by a twin-tipped rocket: , alleging everything from literary fabrications to fiduciary malpractice, and a report on “60 Minutes” that hammered home the same damning messages in primetime.
After giving interviews to ϳԹ and a Montana newspaper, Mortenson went away, silent and deep. Over the next few years, he and CAI were hit with a class-action lawsuit by disgruntled purchasers of his two memoirs (a case that two judges have thrown out), were investigated and severely disciplined by the State Attorney General of Montana, and lived through a dark tragedy—the suicide of Mortenson’s co-author on Three Cups of Tea, David Oliver Relin.
In short, there’s a lot to talk about. For a quick refresher course on ϳԹ‘s extensive coverage of the Mortenson case, see the following round-up.
More Greg Mortenson Coverage
- In the wake of the Byliner and 60 Minutes investigations, Montana’s attorney general investigates Mortenson.
- The co-author of Three Cups of Tea commits suicide.
- Mortenson revises his story while responding to allegations that he fabricated large portions of his bestselling book.
- Mortenson responds to allegations of financial mismanagement.