The Ellen DeGeneres Show is cancelled by Australia’s Channel Nine

BREAKING NEWS: The Ellen DeGeneres Show is cancelled by Channel Nine amid accusations of a ‘toxic’ workplace

Channel Nine has stopped airing The Ellen DeGeneres Show effective as of Monday.

The network is instead airing reruns of Desperate Housewives – which previously screened on Seven – during Ellen’s usual time slot between 12pm and 1pm.

‘We are resting Ellen repeats on Nine and have replaced [it] with Desperate Housewives,’ a Nine spokesperson told Daily Mail Australia.

TV’s queen of mean gets boned: Channel Nine has stopped airing The Ellen DeGeneres Show effective as of Monday. Pictured: Ellen DeGeneres on September 20, 2014 in West Hollywood

While The Ellen DeGeneres Show is off screens in Australia for the time being, it may return if Nine manages to reach an agreement with Warner Bros.

Industry website TV Blackbox reports that Nine is ‘in talks’ with the American media giant regarding syndication rights for the new season, which begins next month.

The U.S. talk show, which has aired on Nine since 2013, is currently the subject of an internal investigation by WarnerMedia after multiple staffers alleged that bullying, racism and sexual harassment were rampant behind the scenes.

Confirmed: 'We are resting Ellen repeats on Nine and have replaced [it] with Desperate Housewives,' a Nine spokesperson told Daily Mail Australia

Confirmed: ‘We are resting Ellen repeats on Nine and have replaced [it] with Desperate Housewives,’ a Nine spokesperson told Daily Mail Australia 

Earlier this month, a Nine representative confirmed the network had declined to air new episodes from the current season, which Ellen is recording in self-isolation from her $27million mansion in California, because they were best-of episodes.

‘In the end, they were running best-of iso compiles which we weren’t contracted to acquire,’ the spokesperson added.

Instead, the broadcaster elected to screen reruns from before the coronavirus pandemic forced production to move from the studio to Ellen’s home.

Replaced: The network is instead airing reruns of Desperate Housewives - which previously screened on Seven - during Ellen's usual time slot between 12pm and 1pm

Replaced: The network is instead airing reruns of Desperate Housewives – which previously screened on Seven – during Ellen’s usual time slot between 12pm and 1pm

However, these repeats have now stopped airing altogether, with soap opera Desperate Housewives – starring Teri Hatcher, Felicity Huffman and Eva Longoria – filling the midday time slot instead.

Nine had actually stopped airing Ellen’s self-isolation broadcasts back in April, and replaced them with the American sitcom Kevin Can Wait.

But the network resumed airing repeats of The Ellen DeGeneres Show a week later.

It remains to be seen if Nine relents once again by pulling Desperate Housewives from the schedule and reinstating Ellen.

While Ellen won’t be airing on Nine, it hasn’t been pulled from Australian television altogether because it also screens locally on FOX Arena.

It comes after multiple staffers stepped forward to accuse the 62-year-old host and her senior executives of perpetuating a ‘toxic work environment’.

The program’s parent company, WarnerMedia, has launched an investigation after a handful of employees went public with their grievances.

Last month, one current and ten former employees accused the three executive producers of The Ellen DeGeneres Show, Ed Glavin, Mary Connelly and Andy Lassner, of ‘bullying’.

When approached for comment on these allegations, a Nine spokesperson said on August 10: ‘We are awaiting the findings of the internal inquiry.’

On July 30, Ellen attempted to do some internal damage control by issuing an apology email to current staffers, in which she appeared to deflect all blame and noted that she was ‘disappointed’ to learn the show was not ‘a place of happiness’.

The email was immediately met with backlash, with many expressing disappointment over Ellen shifting the blame to her executive producers.