"Dr. Phil" is the No. 1 rated syndicated talk show on television, with its advice-guru host raking in a reported $70 million a year. Yet insiders tell TheWrap the production is enmeshed in turmoil behind-the-scenes with rampant layoffs, benefit cuts and staff unrest.
The reason for the layoffs and cost-cutting is unclear, since the show continues to thrive in its number one slot for the genre, with this season's premiere week scoring an average 4.3 million total viewers (3.1 household rating and 1.6 in key women 25-54 demo).
Since the staff returned to production in August for season 14, there have been waves of layoffs. Days after employees settled in from their summer hiatus, executives carried out the first wave of cuts by axing the entire transcription department.
"It was heartless to cut those people after we returned from hiatus," an individual with knowledge of the situation told TheWrap. "They could have notified them while we were on break and given them time over the summer to look for other jobs. Instead they let them go right after we got back."
The transcription department cuts particularly rankled producers who must now transcribe their own interviews on top of already working 60 plus hours a week.
"It's brutal," the individual explained.
Another insider told TheWrap that the show has also laid off its highly-compensated head of public relations.