salary-related stories
Posted Nov 7th 2009 4:04PM by Allison Waldman
Filed under: Industry, OpEd, Daytime, Reality-Free

Sometimes it's true that all's well that ends well. And sometimes to reach that happy ending, arms are twisted, feelings are hurt, and bad blood is spilled. In the case of
The Young and the Restless and actor
Eric Braeden, there was a good deal of acrimony on both sides. The fact that Braeden is back in the fold now and he will continue as Victor Newman for the foreseeable future, doesn't obscure the fact that it was a nasty situation.
Continue reading How The Young and the Restless got Eric Braeden back
Posted Jan 9th 2009 12:06PM by Allison Waldman
Filed under: How I Met Your Mother, Reality-Free

You think the recession hasn't hit the TV industry yet? Here's some proof it has:
the stars of How I Met Your Mother received pay raises...but not the kind of big money you've heard about in years gone by. The ensemble of five, Josh Radnor, Jason Segel, Cobie Smulders, Neil Patrick Harris and Alyson Hannigan renegotiated with the producers (20th Century Fox TV) to boost their salaries to $90,000-$120,000 per episode. That's still a lot of money in today's economic strife, but compared to
Two and a Half Men's Charlie Sheen's $825,000 per ep, it's downright modest.
Continue reading How I Met Your Mother's pay raise
Posted Aug 15th 2008 10:23AM by Brad Trechak
Filed under: Lost, Celebrities, Reality-Free

We mentioned that Matthew Fox (along with Evangeline Lilly) was
in negotiations for a higher salary. Well,
it looks like he got it. Fox will now be earning about $225,000 per episode of
Lost, as opposed to the approximately $150,000 per episode he was making before.
I guess Jack Shepard will be with us through the rest of the season (and likely the rest of the series). If the character were more disposable, it's likely he would have gone the way of other now-dead
Lost characters such as Charlie.
Continue reading More money for Matthew Fox
Posted Mar 29th 2007 8:21AM by Adam Finley
Filed under: Cable, Game Show, Pickups and Renewals
Picture This Television, the production team behind Kathy Griffin: My Life on the D List and Celebrity Poker Showdown is creating a new game show for Bravo called Paycheck. The game show pits seven contestants against one another to try and figure out how much money they each make. The players must guess with the aid of questions, clues, and just plain, well, guessing. The person who guesses the correct salaries of all the players wins $25,000.
The whole "try to guess something about someone" idea sounds awfully close to Identity, and that game show isn't exactly the most compelling one on TV right now. Still, Celebrity Poker Showdown isn't a bad show, so maybe the folks behind this one have a way to make it more exciting than it sounds. Bravo has placed an order for the game show pilot.
Posted Apr 11th 2006 10:33AM by Anna Johns
Filed under: Other Drama Shows, ABC, Talent, Desperate Housewives

Teri Hatcher reportedly got tough with Buena Vista
Television, the company that produces
Desperate Housewives. She demanded a cut from all the merchandise that
is sold with the
Desperate Housewives moniker and she got her way. According to
various
sources, the deal puts her among the highest paid
actresses on television (a DH publicist contacted us to deny she's the "highest paid" actress on television,
as we originally reported). She currently rakes in $315,000 per episode of
DH and will make an extra $1
million for one week of work to pimp
DH merchandise such as a new video game, a board game, and new
ringtones.
Who do you think deserves to be the highest paid actress on television?
Posted Jan 23rd 2006 10:14AM by Anna Johns
Filed under: Other Drama Shows, ABC, Lost

Pay raises. The original cast members were each offered more money in exchange for adding another year to their
contracts, which means another year living in Hawaii. Oh, I bet that decision was real tough. The raise bumps the
actors up to about $80,000 per episode, which is a raise of anywhere from $20,000 to $40,000 per episode for some
actors. The actors agreeing to another year are Evangeline Lilly (Kate), Josh Holloway (Sawyer), Naveen Andrews
(Sayid), Dominic Monaghan (Charlie), Terry O'Quinn (Locke), Jorge Garcia (Hurley), Daniel Dae Kim (Jin), Yunjin Kim
(Sun), and Harold Perrineau (Michael). Matthew Fox also signed for another year, but his contract was even sweeter with
a reported $250,000 bonus. The only person missing from that list is Emilie de Ravin, who plays Claire. Not sure what
that means. The raises put the core
Lost characters on the same pay scale as all four
Desperate
Housewives.
Posted Jan 18th 2006 10:08AM by Anna Johns
Filed under: Arrested Development, Desperate Housewives, The O.C., The Simpsons, Will & Grace

On television, they live in McMansions and get a big, fat tax break for being in that upper-income bracket. In the
real world, they probably drive Subarus and are stressed out about paying for college. An article on a job website
explores the real-life salaries of some of our favorite characters, including the improbable bank account of
Sex
and the City's Carrie Bradshaw (I never said the article was brand new). It seems, as a sex columnist in NYC,
Carrie probably would've earned $57,000. In Manhattan? That's poverty!
Other characters and their real-life
salaries:
Continue reading News flash: TV Characters' salaries unrealistic
Posted Jan 12th 2006 10:36AM by Anna Johns
Filed under: Industry

An article in the LA Times details just how much cash the two head honchos at Disney are raking in these days.
Be prepared: you may turn green with envy. Or, just at the thought of all that money. Chief Executive Robert Iger got a
33% raise when he took over in October, bringing his annual income to $2 million. Wait. There's much, much more. If
Disney does well, he will get to enjoy a $7.25 million bonus (whose bonus is nearly four times their annual salary???).
He also received 500,000 shares of restricted stock. Restricted? I guess that means he can't sink it into Pixar, eh?
Michael Eisner, on the other hand, earned $1 million in regular salary, plus a $9.1 million bonus. That's nowhere near
the income he got in 1998 when he exercised some stock options that had been accumulating for years, and made $576
million. Eisner retired on September 30th but he will continue to received bonuses in the sum of $7.5 million through
September of 2007. But don't worry about Michael Eisner. He'll be okay. He has a
job at CNBC.
Posted Jun 20th 2005 2:16PM by Adam Finley
Filed under: TV Royalty, Industry
This post would have been more fitting for Father's Day, so you'll have to excuse me for not being more vigilant. At any rate, George Jefferson has been chosen as the top-earning black father of all time (in 2005 dollars) according to a survey done by Salary.com. The survey was not race specific, but it's interesting to note that Sherman Helmsley's cranky dry cleaning business owner was the only black father to make it into the top ten (he ranked fifth). The list also included Bill Cosby's Heathcliff Huxtable (The Cosby Show); James Avery's Philip Banks (Fresh Prince of Bel-Air); and Reginald VelJohnson's Carl Winslow (Family Matters). Redd Foxx's Fred Sanford also made the list, albeit toward the bottom. I'm listing him anyway because his theme song gets stuck in my head a lot.