Arab Times

Ellen makes an on-air apology

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NEW YORK, Sept 22, (AP): Ellen DeGeneres used her opening monologue of the new season of her daytime talk show to address allegation­s of a toxic work environmen­t, apologizin­g for things “that never should have happened.”

“I know that I’m in a position of privilege and power and I realize that with that comes responsibi­lity, and I take responsibi­lity for what happens at my show,” she said in a video posted Monday.

DeGeneres smiled frequently but appeared strained during her remarks. She included several quips that lightened the tone but didn’t match the seriousnes­s of the allegation­s.

“The Ellen DeGeneres Show” started its 18th season in Los Angeles with the host on stage for the first time in months after taping from DeGeneres’s home during quarantine. There wasn’t a studio audience but a virtual one, with faces beamed in on monitors put in the audience seats.

“We have had a lot of conversati­ons over the last few weeks about the show, our workplace, and what we want for the future,” she said. “We have made the necessary changes and today we are starting a new chapter.”

Insensitiv­e

Three of the show’s producers exited over the summer amid allegation­s of a dysfunctio­nal workplace that harbored misbehavio­r, including sexual misconduct and racially insensitiv­e remarks. In her monologue, DeGeneres dryly joked that her summer was “super-terrific.”

The host also addressed the allegation­s that the off-camera DeGeneres is very different than her sunny on-air persona. “The truth is I am that person that you see on TV,” she said.

”I am also a lot of other things,” she said. “I get sad. I get mad. I get anxious. I get frustrated. I get impatient. And I am working on all of that.”

The comedian, noted that she’s played a straight woman on screen and considers herself “a pretty good actress,” but not good enough to “come out here every day for 17 years and fool you. This is me.”

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.

“I learned that things happened here that never should have happened. I take that very seriously, and I want to say I am so sorry to the people that were affected,” DeGeneres said in her monologue. She was joined later by guest Tiffany Haddish.

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.”

Also: LOS ANGELES:

Jennifer Aniston missed out on an Emmy but proved herself as an award-worthy first responder when a ceremony stunt got overheated.

In a bit during Sunday night’s Emmys, host Jimmy Kimmel sprayed an envelope holding a winner’s name with disinfecta­nt then, for good measure, dropped it in a wire wastebaske­t and set it on fire.

So far, so good, ceremony executive producer Reginald Hudlin said Monday. A test had been run beforehand, with a booster added to make the fire more visible, and things were going as planned when the scene was shot — including Aniston to the rescue.

“Jennifer comes with a fire extinguish­er. She puts the fire out. But the fire ain’t out,” he said with a laugh. She sprayed the wastebaske­t again, but as she and Kimmel bantered the fire flared again, bigger, and “we’re like ‘uh oh,’” Hudlin said.

But she “gets in there and and puts the fire out, for real,” he said, and the production team relished the unplanned moment. “We’re like, ‘That was great!’ We couldn’t script it better than that because it was truly out of control. We loved it.”

Hudlin recapped the moment during a post-Emmy webinar hosted by the law firm Fox Rothschild.

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