Skip to main content
Hamburger Menu Close

Advertisement

CNA Lifestyle

TV host Ellen DeGeneres will address workplace scandal when talk show returns

Kerry Washington, Alec Baldwin, Chris Rock and Orlando Bloom are some of the guests lined up for The Ellen DeGeneres Show, which will return later this month.

TV host Ellen DeGeneres will address workplace scandal when talk show returns

Ellen DeGeneres poses in the press room at the 77th annual Golden Globe Awards on Jan. 5, 2020, in Beverly Hills, Calif. (AP Photo/Chris Pizzello, File)

Ellen DeGeneres says she'll be ready to talk when her daytime show returns this month after a staff shake-up prompted by allegations of a toxic workplace.

"I can't wait to get back to work and back to our studio. And, yes, we're gonna talk about it," DeGeneres said in a statement announcing the show's Sep 21 start of its 18th season.

Tiffany Haddish will join DeGeneres for the kick-off episode, with The Ellen DeGeneres Show to be taped at Warner Bros minus an in-studio audience, which is commonplace during the pandemic.

READ: Three producers leave Ellen DeGeneres TV show after internal investigation

The first month's list of high-profile guests reads like a rebuttal to questions about how DeGeneres and her show are perceived in the industry amid the controversy that cut against the host's kindly image.

Kerry Washington, Alec Baldwin and Chrissy Teigen are set for the first week, with Chris Rock, Amy Schumer, Adam Sandler and Orlando Bloom appearing later in September, the show said.

READ: Ellen DeGeneres’ wife Portia de Rossi says talk show host is ‘doing great’ amid scandal

Stephen "tWitch" Boss, a longtime guest DJ on the show and among those who have publicly supported DeGeneres, will guest host some fall episodes.

Last month, three of the show's producers exited amid allegations of a dysfunctional workplace that harboured misbehaviour including sexual misconduct and racially insensitive remarks.

An internal company investigation of work conditions was prompted by a BuzzFeed News report in July based on 36 interviews with ex-staffers, who complained about or said they witnessed improper and unfair treatment. The people making the claims were not identified.

READ: ‘I stand by Ellen’: Talk show host Ellen DeGeneres’ wife Portia de Rossi defends her

When DeGeneres told staffers of the changes in a video conference call, she reportedly said she found claims about the show's environment to be "heartbreaking."

The comedian and host had sent a memo to her staff after the BuzzFeed report, recalling her early promise of ensuring a workplace where "everyone would be treated with respect." Something changed, she said, "and for that, I am sorry."

In a July statement, Warner Bros said parent company WarnerMedia's investigation revealed what it called "some flaws in the show's daily management."

Although not all of the allegations were corroborated, the studio said it was "disappointed that the primary findings of the investigation indicated some deficiencies related to the show's day-to-day management."

No details were specified at the time, and Warner Bros had no further comment last month beyond confirming the producers' departures.

(Source: CNA/AP)

Source: CNA/ap

Advertisement

RECOMMENDED

Advertisement