Los Angeles Times

End of ‘Ellen’ a ref lection of biz

Streaming and other alternativ­es continue to batter the flagging syndicatio­n industry.

- By Stephen Battaglio

The demise of Ellen DeGeneres’ show is latest sign of how TV syndicatio­n has been hit by streaming.

The announceme­nt that Ellen DeGeneres will wrap up her long-running daytime talk show in 2022 is another step toward the end of television as viewers once knew it.

Telepictur­es, the WarnerMedi­a unit that distribute­s “Ellen” to TV stations across the country, has no plans to offer a successor to the program, which has been a staple of daytime lineups since 2003.

The last time Telepictur­es prepared for a possible DeGeneres departure several years ago, the company was out gauging interest in a replacemen­t program with Drew Barrymore as host. (DeGeneres ended up signing a new deal and Barrymore now has a syndicated show with ViacomCBS.)

Several TV executives familiar with the matter said Telepictur­es has no plans to hold onto its “Ellen” time periods with a new show this time around, even though it was well-known inside the company that DeGeneres intended to leave at the end of her three-year contract.

A WarnerMedi­a representa­tive had no comment on the matter.

The demise of “Ellen” is the latest sign of how TV syndicatio­n — the distributi­on of first-run and off-network broadcast programs to individual TV stations — has suffered from audience losses due to streaming and other alternativ­es. The segment was once the most lucrative in the TV business.

Telepictur­es was founded in 1979, selling children’s programmin­g and retainment peats of old network shows to TV stations. Warner Bros. took control after it acquired the company’s then-parent, Lorimar, in the mid-1980s.

Industry insiders were not surprised by Wednesday’s announceme­nt. Many employees who provided sales and marketing support to TV stations that carried “Ellen” were cut in the last round of staff reductions implemente­d under Warner Media parent AT&T, where the company’s streaming service HBO Max is a priority.

“A lot of the people we used to deal with at Telepictur­es all the time were let go,” said one TV station executive who spoke on the condition of anonymity because he still does business with the company. “They are now a streaming company and that’s what they’re focused on and that’s why [they’re] not out shopping something.”

In addition to “Ellen,” Telepictur­es distribute­s daytime talk show “The Real,” courtroom shows “Judge Mathis” and “The People’s Court” and enter news shows “Extra” and “TMZ.”

The division, based out of the Warner lot in Burbank, also produces reality programs such as ABC’s “The Bachelor” and DeGeneres’ game show “Game of Games” for NBC, and sells repeats of Warner Bros. sitcoms and dramas to TV stations and cable networks.

Nielsen data shows “Ellen” averaging 1.4 million viewers in the 2020-21 season, down 44% from the previous year. The controvers­y over the alleged mistreatme­nt of employees behind the scenes and the limitation­s imposed by the pandemic likely hastened the ratings decline.

Once “Ellen” is gone, NBCUnivers­al’s “The Kelly Clarkson Show” will be the only celebrity-driven talk show in daytime. Clarkson’s program has been renewed through 2023.

Without a compelling alternativ­e, many stations that carry “Ellen” are likely to replace it with an hour of local news, which for many outlets is cheaper than the license fee to carry the show.

 ?? Valerie Macon Getty Images ??
Valerie Macon Getty Images
 ?? CBS ?? ELLEN DEGENERES plans to end her long-running talk show, recently hit by controvers­y, in 2022.
CBS ELLEN DEGENERES plans to end her long-running talk show, recently hit by controvers­y, in 2022.

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