Benzinga Buzz: Drew Barrymore Buckles, Opts Not To Return — Plus: Method Man, Disney & Barbie

Zinger Key Points
  • Peruse our listicle with links to the latest coverage on Drew Barrymore, Disney and Mattel.
  • Also in this week's column, Method Man, Dylan Mulvaney and Ashton Kutcher.

Each week, Benzinga Buzz compiles the latest entertainment news into a cohesive column for your consideration. Read on for the latest updates — both useful and irreverent.

On Sunday, Drew Barrymore announced that she would not move forward with new episodes of her daytime talk show until the WGA and SAG-AFTRA strikes were resolved.

The decision came after Barrymore's planned return was met with criticism, even though other daytime hosts and shows — "The View," "The Jennifer Hudson Show," "The Talk," "Sherri" and "Karamo" — are set to return.

"Tamron Hall" and "Live With Kelly and Ryan" — neither one governed by the WGA — have also been airing new episodes.

But for some reason, the bubbly Barrymore ended up being a focal point of ire.

Bill Maher, in true cantankerous form, refused to cave. Expect the "Real Time" host to eviscerate the "outraged virtue signalers" when his show returns on Sept. 22.

Many Twitter/X users praised Barrymore's pivot with messages like this:

Other charming and, I'm sure, well-adjusted individuals continued to call Barrymore vulgar expletives for some reason. Meanwhile, the silent majority of TV watchers are left wondering: Do talk shows need writers? Can't they just nix the monologue and comedy bits for a while and just, you know, talk?

As Variety thoroughly explains, syndicated daytime talk shows, like Barrymore's, are contractually obligated to provide new episodes to local stations. Unlike network shows (i.e., Jimmy Kimmel and Jimmy Fallon), Barrymore and others must deliver a set number of episodes to over 200 local stations each season. Failure to do so could result in a contract breach and the loss of the show.

Despite the ongoing strikes, local stations and advertisers expect original content from these shows, which are crucial for syndication's survival in this era of on-demand streaming.

Barrymore's lose-lose situation illustrates just how murky talk show rules can be. While contracts, viewer expectations and labor rights are taken into account, so is the livelihood of a tremendous staff outside the writers. And there are tons of various stakeholders, including sales teams, station partners and advertisers.

By not returning to the studio just yet, however, Barrymore likely saves herself a lot of office drama when the strike ultimately ends and writers return. Because now there won't be any side-eye stares: "Which one of you came back while we were still picketing?"

When Major League Baseball umpires went on strike in 1999, new umpires were hired. Eventually the newbies and the veterans ended up working together, and it was awkward, Michael H. LeRoy, a professor of labor and employment relations, told CBS News.

"For the next 25 years, those umpires would not talk to each other if they were assigned to work games together," LeRoy said. "Twenty-five years of shunning. People do not forget it."

Recommended Reading

  • Billionaire Ken Griffin says he had changes made to the movie "Dumb Money." Screenwriters say, "Yeah, sure you did."
  • More backlash. This time toward Ashton Kutcher over his controversial letter defending former co-star and convicted rapist Danny Masterson.
  • Method Man launches TICAL Cannabis in New York.
  • Barbie sales were up 25% in July and August; here's what it could mean for Mattel MAT.
  • Who needs Bud Light BUD? Dylan Mulvaney hopes to star in another "epic" Super Bowl ad.
  • Early discussions about a potential sale of ABC and its TV stations from Walt Disney DIS to Nexstar Media Group Inc NXST have begun.
  • For the last edition of Benzinga Buzz, click here.

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