Posted on 04/17/2020 6:59:24 AM PDT by yardboyd
Crew members from Ellen DeGeneres long-running daytime talk show are distressed and outraged over their treatment from top producers amid the coronavirus pandemic, numerous insiders affiliated with the series told Variety.
The core stage crew for The Ellen DeGeneres Show, consisting of more than 30 employees, received no written communication about the status of their working hours, pay, or inquiries about their mental and physical health from producers for over a month, said two sources, both of whom spoke on the condition of anonymity. Higher-ups in production would occasionally answer phone calls but reveal little, added one of the sources. The crew was further incensed by the shows recent hire of an outside, non-union tech company to help DeGeneres tape remotely from her home in California.
When production executives finally did weigh in, nearly all crew members were told last week to brace for a 60% reduction in pay, even as the show continues to air, according to sources close to the matter.
Only four core crew members currently work on the remote version of the broadcast, added insiders, who find this treatment to be totally inconsistent with DeGeneres daily message to her audiences: be kind.
A spokesperson for Warner Bros. Television, which distributes the show, told Variety, Our executive producers and Telepictures are committed to taking care of our staff and crew and have made decisions first and foremost with them in mind. The studio reiterated the crew has been paid consistently, though at reduced hours.
For more than two weeks, from late March through April 9, crew members from lighting to camera operators to grips were left in the dark about if and how much they would be paid. Phone calls to crew members from a production coordinator at Telepictures, the Warner Bros. unit that produces Ellen, were sporadic and often lacking any information before and after the 14-day blackout.
The lack of transparency continued as DeGeneres expanded her output from hosting four shows a week to five, shot over two days, said individuals with knowledge of the schedule. Radio silence from producers created anxiety among crew members who feared they would be furloughed and, in that case, would need to explore unemployment benefits.
A Warner Bros. spokesperson acknowledged that communication could have been better, but cited complications due to the chaos caused by COVID-19.
On April 2, the majority of the crew members were shocked to discover that DeGeneres had a remote set erected at her residence where she was taping, a fact they learned via social media posts from colleagues in other departments, insiders said.
Under normal circumstances, Ellen tapes four days a week. Studio episodes of the show were last shot the week of March 9. The crew was last paid in full for the week of March 16, when the Warner Bros. lot was shut down as a precaution to prevent the spread of coronavirus, according to the studio. The following week of March 23 was a planned spring break hiatus.
When returning from break, the crew was paid the week of March 30th despite having no firm plans for production to resume, the spokesperson said. Pay reduced to 8 hours from 10 hours per work day for the week of the 30th, insiders said.
As of April 10, crew was told to expect a reduced compensation of two, 8-hour work days per week. In the hours following Varietys Wednesday request for comment on the reduced pay and lack of communication, word began circulating among crew that they would be restored to their full four-day work weeks. An individual close to Warner Bros. disputed that timeline, saying the crew is paid in arrears and the final hour count had not yet been finalized.
Adding insult to injury, sources said that while most of the crew was left out of work with reduced pay, the remote production has hired Key Code Media, a Burbank-based audiovisual house, to help produce technical elements of the show while crew members with the same skills sit idle. Each of DeGeneres crew is affiliated with the International Alliance of Theatrical Stage Employees union.
One local IATSE rep spoke with Ellen producers about the crews concerns the week of April 7, sources said, and reported back that their understanding was that union members would continue to be paid. The union rep advised the crew to watch closely, one person familiar with the exchange said. An IATSE spokesperson did not immediately comment on the matter. The studio said the third-party hire was cleared with union reps.
Due to social distancing requirements, technical changes in the way the show is produced had to be made to comply with city ordinances and public health protocols, said a WB spokesperson, adding that no crew member lost a job in the hiring of Key Code.
On her April 7 return to the air, DeGeneres told viewers she wanted to start doing my new show as soon as possible. The host specifically said it was for my staff and crew. I love them, I miss them, the best thing I can do to support them is to keep the show on the air.
More upsetting for many crew members is a lack of personal outreach from show leadership to check on longtime employees amid the public health crisis, said sources. The stage crew operates separately from DeGeneres senior producers, writers and assistants, who occupy her offices in Building 19 on the Burbank Warner lot. Many of the key crew, however, have been with DeGeneres since the taping of the talk shows pilot, which rolled 17 years ago.
Confounded, the Ellen crew sought information from colleagues on similar shows, many of whom had opposite experiences from theirs, said sources.
Jimmy Kimmel Live! stagehands were paid from host Kimmels own pocket during initial COVID-19 shutdowns, two insiders familiar with that set told Variety, and since returning to the air network ABC is paying their full rates. Last Week Tonight with John Oliver, Full Frontal with Samantha Bee, and Showtimes Desus & Mero have also all had transparent communication and are paying full rates, sources said. Spokespersons for those individual shows declined to comment on the matter.
Ellen is in a different category in TV terms as a daytime franchise in first-run syndication, meaning it is sold by Warner Bros. to TV stations on a market-by-market basis.
The creative, delivery, economics, hours, taping times, staff structures, etc. are completely different for a daily talk show, said Warner Bros. DeGeneres is one of the highest-paid stars on television, earning more than $50 million per year from her Telepictures deal. Her total net worth is a reported $330 million.
Constitution does it say we must be union members. However, we do have the right to work. Stop hating other people, and do your jobs or go find another one.
Not sure why anyone would be surprised by this. Ellen Degeneres has a reputation for being a really mean and nasty person in Hollywood. Shes especially mean to her own crew on a regular basis, so no surprising she would just ditch them and not think twice about them during the shutdown. Dont let her marketing department fool you!
Ellen just returned from Amsterdam where she participated in the annual Hans Brinker Day Stick A Finger In A Dike Day event. She, joining thousands of others, stuck a finger in a dyke.
Wah, wah, wah! Ellen is pissed! Who cares? Shes got the $$$. Let her back the shows payroll by having fewer Rainbow Orgies. Im sure her limp-wristed posse could pool their resources to beef up donations, like germs pool in a lesbos hot tub.
Same here.
I miss actually producing and the rest of the video job.
The politics, prima donnas, jerks, control freaks, and some of the worst liars in management, not so much.
Rich progressives never want to spend their OWN money on their insane programs.
But they expect you to do it.
Boo Hoo Girl, your reaction?
No work, no pay. Should not be a big surprise. Besides workers are disposible and they should consider who they are working for. Did they really think an immoral pervert could be trusted?
Love it. Nothing better than watching liberal elites fight each other.
Gee, someone really curious might ask how a show that “required” 30 well-paid union members before can now be produced with only 4 ...
Big Union featherbedding, anyone??
So it looks like the pain is beginning to percolate up to the anointed?
Thank you, Boo Hoo Girl. As usual your analysis is spot-on. Next up on Hannity.....
My reaction is to be sympathetic to the heart and soul workers. While Ellen Degenerates makes hundreds of millions, she sticks the shiv into her workers’ backs.
She wouldn’t even miss the scratch they would be paid for this short period of time. At least Jimmy Kimmel is truly nice enough to understand how utterly horrid that would be to do to his staff.
Like Willard, the Movie, not the politician.
However now that this has been made public, Ellens actions or inaction will be very telling ...
It what most elites think of there workers..
What is the secret to posting more than three hundred words????????
Leftist are ALWAYS promoting Money for Nothing. Those wanting Socialism here should have to live in a Socialist country before destroying this one. They need to know what Socialism is REALLY LIKE.
My advice to them is to vote Republican, stop supporting unions, and go ask Oprah if she is hiring.
I miss the day when an actor portrayed a fag, his career was over. Today, we applaud them while they parade their perversion in the streets and on tv.
Why would an actor be fired for doing his job? Isn’t that what acting is, pretending to be someone else? I seriously doubt Bruno Ganz, who played Hitler in “The Downfall”, actually supports Hitler.
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