Drew Barrymore said she would pause production on her daytime talk show after facing tremendous backlash from writers, actors and fans over her decision to bring the show back amid the Hollywood strike.
“I have listened to everyone, and I am making the decision to pause the show’s premiere until the strike is over,” she said in a statement posted on Instagram. “I have no words to express my deepest apologies to anyone I have hurt and, of course, to our incredible team who works on the show and has made it what it is today.”
Barrymore announced on Sept. 10 that “The Drew Barrymore Show” would kick up production again amid the writers’ and actors’ strikes, which led to protests and picketing from the Writers Guild of America outside her New York studio last week.
Writers have been on strike for more than four months, campaigning for better pay and protections in the streaming era. The Screen Actors Guild started its own strike in July over similar issues, including better residual pay from streaming services. The “Drew Barrymore Show” employs three WGA writers, all of whom picketed outside the show’s taping last week.
“I truly hope for a resolution for the entire industry very soon,” Barrymore wrote on Instagram on Sunday. Representatives for Barrymore did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
CBS originally announced in early September that Barrymore’s show would return for a new season with a premiere date of Sept. 18. A CBS Media spokesperson said Sunday that the company stands with Barrymore.
“We support Drew’s decision to pause the show’s return and understand how complex and difficult this process has been for her,” the spokesperson said.
As taping was underway on Monday and Tuesday, those who attended said they were greeted by WGA protesters and picketers, who chanted phrases like “CBS! You are a mess!” and “We expect more from Drew Barry-more!” Some audience members were handed WGA support pins. According to multiple reports, two Barrymore fans wearing WGA pins were asked to leave the taping for security reasons.
“The Guild has, and will continue to, picket struck shows that are in production during the strike. Any writing on ‘The Drew Barrymore Show’ is in violation of WGA rules,” a post on the WGA East’s Instagram account said last week.
Her decision to resume production also prompted the National Book Awards to rescind its invitation to Barrymore to host the next ceremony. Writers on social media criticized Barrymore for moving ahead with the taping. In May, Barrymore declined to host the MTV Movie and TV Awards to support the strike.
A number of daytime talk shows have remained in production despite the strike, including “The View.” Similarly, “Jeopardy!” announced in August that it would return with recycled questions for its 40th season.
Last week, “The Jennifer Hudson Show” and “The Talk” announced they would return during the strike shortly after Barrymore made her decision. It’s unclear if those shows will pause production, too.
This is what the writers are asking for vs. studio revenue. You're just wrong.
Fair enough, I guess time will tell then. I'm just wondering if the Hollywood accounting that gets mentioned below also gets applied to their revenue, meaning that it's in fact much lower than what they're saying. But I guess that's corporate accounting in a nutshell.
Those numbers are not even close to accurate unless you think that the revenue of the Disney parks should pay for D+ writers, etc. Don't get me wrong, the writers strike has real value to the writers, but showing cherry picked numbers that aren't pertinent to the issue doesn't help.
Take it up with the WGA. It's their numbers. And I'm pretty sure Netflix doesn't have any parks.
I'm sure they're not biased at all /s
So you're saying Netflix does have theme parks? Or is the WGA lying about their revenue?
I'm saying that the writers comparing what they deserve to a whole company's revenue isn't applicable. Comparing Disney plus revenue is applicable, but they didn't do that. Likewise with others like Apple, Amazon (seriously???), Sony , etc (minus pure streaming companies like Netflix)
Why isn't their total revenue appropriate when talking about what they can pay employees? Can they not pay writers with what they make from theme parks? Is that off-limits?
Yeah I guess paying the people who do the work fairly is gonna probably put Netflix-land out of business. I hadn't thought of the plight of the poor defenceless multinational corporations until you pointed that out.