Here's a roundup of Ellen DeGeneres' Thursday comments with Oprah Winfrey about exiting daytime TV, and her response to toxic workplace allegations on the ...
“If I’ve done anything in the past 19 years, I hope I’ve inspired you to be yourself — your true authentic self,” DeGeneres said. “When we started the show, I couldn’t say ‘gay.’ I was not allowed to say ‘gay.’ I say it at home a lot — you know, ‘What are we having for our gay breakfast?’ or ‘Pass the gay salt,’ or ‘Has anyone seen the gay remote?’ — but we couldn’t say ‘gay.’ I couldn’t say ‘we’ because that would imply that I was with someone. “When you’re a creative person, you constantly need to be challenged — and as great as this show is, and as fun as it is, it’s just not a challenge anymore,” she said May 2021. “God, I love her,” DeGeneres remarked, introducing the series’ very last musical act. Filmed on April 28, DeGeneres’ big sendoff featured the return of her first-ever guest, Jennifer Aniston, an interview with Billie Eilish (who made her daytime TV debut on Ellen in 2018) and a performance by P!NK, on hand to perform one of DeGeneres’ favorite songs. “You can see other talk shows now, and I may see another audience every once in a while.”
Ellen DeGeneres bid a tearful farewell to her daytime talk show on Thursday, saying that the show had "forever changed my life."
Noting that there was resistance to the show and that few gave it a chance of surviving, DeGeneres promised that she wouldn't be gone for long. Aniston gave her a welcome mat that read "Thanks for the memories." "Today is not the end of a relationship, it's more of a little break," she said.
Jennifer Aniston, Billie Eilish, and Pink stopped by for the final episode of 'Ellen' after nearly 20 years.
“I did a movie called The Break-Up. I just kind of leaned into the end.” Billie Eilish acknowledged the show was a regular presence in her household. “You started this show the year after I was born,” she said. “And if someone is brave enough to tell you who they are, be brave enough to support them, even if you don’t understand. “When we started the show, I couldn’t say ‘gay.’ I was not allowed to say ‘gay.’ I say it at home a lot—you know, ‘What are we having for our gay breakfast?’ or ‘Pass the gay salt,’ ‘Has anyone seen the gay remote?’—but we couldn’t say ‘gay.’ I couldn’t say ‘we,’ because that would imply that I was with someone. “You can see other talk shows now, and I may see another audience once in a while.” Not because it was a different kind of show, but because I was different,” DeGeneres said.
DeGeneres reflected on how much LGBTQ visibility has changed in Hollywood and beyond and invited guests Jennifer Aniston, Billie Ellish and P!nk to celebrate ...
“You really have made an indelible mark on this world, and you’ve made it OK for people to be who they are.” I would walk into the kitchen, and my mom would be watching you.” “You started this show the year after I was born. And now I say wife all the time,” she continued. “I walked out here 19 years ago, and I said this is the start of a relationship. Turning to the show’s origins, DeGeneres continued: “Twenty years ago, when we were trying to sell the show, no one thought that this would work.
Jennifer Aniston, Pink and Billie Eilish were the final guests on 'The Ellen DeGeneres Show,' which ended Thursday after 19 seasons.
I feel the love, and I send it back to you.” “I couldn’t say ‘we’ because that implied that I was with someone. “When we started the show, I couldn’t say ‘gay’ on the show,” DeGeneres said.
The final episode of Ellen DeGeneres' talk show has aired after almost two decades on-air.
I get impatient. I get frustrated. I get anxious. I get mad. “Sometimes I get sad. So I said, ‘OK, I’ll be in daytime every day, how about that?’”.
DeGeneres and guests Jennifer Aniston, Billie Eilish and Pink shared memories and affection as The Ellen DeGeneres Show concluded its Emmy-winning, 3,200-plus- ...
"If I've done anything in the past 19 years, I hope I've inspired you to be yourself, your true, authentic self. Aniston, who as the first guest on the show's first episode gave DeGeneres a "Welcome" doormat, arrived with another that read, "Thanks for the memories". The dancer-choreographer saluted DeGeneres as someone who inspires others because she has "the courage to step out and be your authentic self".
LEILA FADEL, HOST: Ellen DeGeneres's talk show will end its run today after 19 years and more than 3,000 episodes. NPR TV critic Eric Deggans says DeGeneres ...
The backlash was tough. DEGGANS: That's DeGeneres speaking at Tulane University's 2009 commencement about the coming out episode. I mean, why can't I just say the truth, I mean, be who I am? DeGeneres' show emphasized the phrase be kind to one another, saying it at the end of episodes, creating a line of merchandise with the slogan, featuring charity drives and giveaways, and developing a subscription box filled with items she selected called the Be Kind box. ELLEN DEGENERES: I learned that things happened here that never should have happened. Still, there is a dark cloud over the show's approaching end, namely allegations published by BuzzFeed in the summer of 2020, featuring former employees saying the show was a toxic workplace, culminating in the departure of three top executives and an on-air apology from DeGeneres herself.
As seen in "Hacks" and stand-up performances, the world is still very anti-gay, even after Ellen.
And she almost did, in the end, when she said, "If I've done anything in the past 19 years, I hope I've inspired you to be yourself, your true authentic self. And if someone is brave enough to tell you who they are, be brave enough to support them, even if you don't understand," DeGeneres said. Ricky Gervais agrees with her position on Hart in his new Netflix special "Super Nature," which he opens with an explanation that nobody should take him seriously before unleashing a river of jokes about "the new women . . . the ones with beards and cocks. Aniston encourages her to return to live stand-up – a broad and varied field that includes in some corners where transphobic jokes are all the rage. When DeGeneres points out that she says "wife" all the time, the camera simply panned over to show her glamorous spouse Portia de Rossi warmly smiling and nodding as the people around her applaud this accomplishment. But in 2020, after Buzzfeed News revealed multiple claims of a toxic workplace environment behind the scenes that included sexual misconduct and harassment, and alleged that the host turned a blind eye to their complaints, that front crumbled. Succeeding in daytime talk means appealing to the broadest audience possible, which DeGeneres commodified by making "be kind" her motto and the show's unstated compass. To people like Deborah, an entertainer who built her fortune on playing to the middle, Ellen DeGeneres and her talk show represent the solved problem of straight America's tolerant view of gayness. Sure couldn't say, 'wife,' and that's because it wasn't legal for gay people to get married, and now I say 'wife' all the time." Then picture DeGeneres, all grins and sneakers, dancing with her fellow executive producer (as of 2020) Stephen "tWitch" Boss at the top of every show. Jean Smart in "Hacks" (Karen Ballard/HBO Max)All great art translates some version of reality – and in this scene, Deborah exemplifies the frustrating relationship comedians purport to have with people pushing back against aspects of their act that they find objectionable. "Hacks" acknowledges Ellen DeGeneres' broad influence by having its star comic Deborah Vance (Jean Smart) open her show on a lesbian cruise by dancing awkwardly to Pharrell's "Happy." This is uncharacteristic of Deborah, and her writing partner and protégé Ava (Hannah Einbinder) knows it.
LOS ANGELES (AP) — Ellen DeGeneres brought her nearly two-decade daytime talk show to an end Thursday with a celebrity lovefest and a forceful assertion of ...
“By opening your heart and your mind you're going to be that much more compassionate, and compassion is what makes the world a better place." The talk show represented a second major TV act for DeGeneres. In 1997, she made an indelible mark when she came out as lesbian and brought her character on the ABC sitcom “Ellen” with her. DeGeneres' daytime reign hit a serious bump in 2020, when the show was alleged to be a toxic workplace and three producers exited amid the claims. DeGeneres noted the “Friends” star has been on the show a total of 20 times. She introduced a career retrospective video that also touted DeGeneres' philanthropic efforts, said to include more than $400 million in donations to charities and “deserving viewers.” “I love you," a beaming Eilish told DeGeneres during their chat.
The guest list for the final show included Billie Eilish, Pink and Jennifer Aniston, making her 20th appearance – a run that dates back to the syndicated ...
For most of its 19 seasons the Ellen DeGeneres Show is where A-listers that were game for pranks and fun new products looking for placement would find a home. In her 2018 Netflix comedy special, Relatable, DeGeneres showed she still has her standup chops, as well as good inroads with the streaming giant. She also showed her edgier side, that’s been mostly off our screens since the 80s, with jokes about her cosseting wealth and frustration at having to dance for fans. But none of that stopped her from bringing Winfrey, Michelle Obama and Kim Kardashian out as guests in her final few months. But then two years later she resurfaced with the Warner Bros-produced Ellen DeGeneres Show, a daytime chatshowthat launched at a time when Sharon Osborn and Rita Rudner were vying to become the next Winfrey. DeGeneres, an out gay woman, hardly looked the favorite. In 1998, a year after DeGeneres came out, Ellen was cancelled – a decision, she said, that caught her blindsided. In 2007, a former writer’s assistant accused her of treating writers on the Ellen Show “ like shit,” a theme that would revisit her in the end. The episode was celebrated in the LBGTQ+ community, but was also the focus of immense backlash. It was a risky move that took the brilliant comedian, whose soaring career stalled after she came out as gay, and remade her as the undisputed queen of daytime TV. But the show was dogged by scandal in recent seasons, as former employees accused her of presiding over a toxic workplace. In 1997, at the height of her pre-daytime popularity, DeGeneres came out as a lesbian to Time magazine and on the Oprah Winfrey Show; then on DeGeneres’s own sitcom, her character came out – to a therapist played by Winfrey, and to a love interest played by Laura Dern. And the jokes were often at her expense. It also saw DeGeneres’s brother, Vance, and her wife, Portia de Rossi, well with emotion as the audience gave the 64-year-old host one last standing ovation.
How Upfronts 2022 Became Covid Superspreader Event ... Late-night hosts are brought in by networks to provide comic relief at their upfront presentations. But ...
Some of the fund-raising discussions valued the company at between $750 million and $1 billion, they said. 10 days later, Covid cases are sweeping through the ranks of those who attended the marathon of events in New York last week. Late-night hosts are brought in by networks to provide comic relief at their upfront presentations.
LOS ANGELES (AP) - Ellen DeGeneres brought her nearly two-decade daytime talk show to an end Thursday with a celebrity lovefest and a forceful assertion of ...
“By opening your heart and your mind you're going to be that much more compassionate, and compassion is what makes the world a better place." The talk show represented a second major TV act for DeGeneres. In 1997, she made an indelible mark when she came out as lesbian and brought her character on the ABC sitcom “Ellen” with her. DeGeneres' daytime reign hit a serious bump in 2020, when the show was alleged to be a toxic workplace and three producers exited amid the claims. DeGeneres noted the “Friends” star has been on the show a total of 20 times. She introduced a career retrospective video that also touted DeGeneres' philanthropic efforts, said to include more than $400 million in donations to charities and “deserving viewers.” “I love you," a beaming Eilish told DeGeneres during their chat.
The host had apologized after reports of misconduct at the “Ellen” workplace, but it wasn't enough to undo a ratings crash. She makes her exit from daytime ...
Further costs must go to hundreds of employees, sound stages (“Ellen” occupied three of on the Warner Bros. lot) and flying in celebrity guests. After a few years, the identity of “Ellen” was firmly in place. “The economics to produce north of 150 hours of television a year, with 34 weeks of originals and 170 episodes a year, is really expensive,” Mr. Decker, the executive, said. About a decade ago, moving beyond the jokes and dancing, Ms. DeGeneres adopted “Be Kind” as a motto, and it soon morphed into its own endeavor. “She felt if she was in control, the audience would come to her — and that is exactly what happened. “Being known as the Be Kind Lady is a tricky position to be in,” she told viewers in the wake of the reports. “Sharon Osbourne was flying high at that point, and Ellen was coming out of a cancellation, and people didn’t want her to talk about being gay,” David Decker, an executive vice president at Warner Bros., said. It lasted more than 100 episodes — the benchmark for a network success — and made television history when Ms. DeGeneres, as well as the character Ellen, came out of the closet in 1997. “It was a pandemic problem,” said Mike Darnell, the president of Warner Bros.’ unscripted division, which oversaw the show. She was the first female comic to be summoned by the longtime king of late night during a debut appearance. Not long afterward, the ratings for “The Ellen DeGeneres Show,” also known as “Ellen,” cratered. On Thursday, at the start of the 3,339th and final episode of her talk show, she recalled what she had been through and how much times had changed.
The farewell episode of Ellen aired on Thursday, 26 May, with a final lineup of celebrity guests, interviews and musical performances.
“I’ve said it before, but I’ll say it again: If I’ve done anything in the past 19 years, I hope I’ve inspired you to be yourself. Speaking to The Hollywood Reporter during the final week of filming, DeGeneres said it all depends on timing. Oh, and then I did a movie called The Break-up, I just kind of leaned into the end.” “I was not allowed to say ‘gay’. I said it at home a lot. Sure couldn’t say ‘wife’ and that’s because it wasn’t legal for gay people to get married. She took responsibility for what happened at her show and apologised to those affected.
The 'Arrested Development' star heaped praise on her wife as she hosted her last-ever episode of her long-running chat show. Portia, 49, shared a slideshow of ...