Tag Archives: Jeff Garlin

Jeff Garlin fired from ‘The Goldbergs’ amid misconduct controversy

Jeff Garlin is abruptly departing the hit sitcom “The Goldbergs” following a series of misconduct allegations and a network investigation into the actor’s allegedly “abusive” behavior on set.

The bombshell exit comes several weeks after the comedian, 59, publicly revealed that he had not been fired from the long-running ABC sitcom.

Wendi McLendon-Covey, Sean Giambrone and Jeff Garlin in a Thanksgiving episode of “The Goldbergs.”
ABC/Courtesy Everett Collection

According to sources close to the show, it was a mutual decision for Garlin not to return to the series, Deadline reported. Meanwhile, the comedian’s termination is effective immediately — and he will not complete his work on the remainder of “The Goldbergs’” ninth season.

“Curb Your Enthusiasm” star Garlin, who played curmudgeonly Goldberg patriarch Murray Christian Goldberg, admitted to Vanity Fair that he’d been the subject of an HR department probe over the last three years due to his on-set conduct.

“He is extremely verbally and emotionally abusive,” an anonymous “Goldbergs” employee told Deadline.

Jeff Garlin (top row from left), Wendi McLendon-Covey, George Segal, (bottom): Sean Giambrone, Hayley Orrantia and Troy Gentile in “The Goldbergs.”
ABC/Courtesy Everett Collection

However, the “Arrested Development” alum dismissed his antics as silly, misunderstood gags that rubbed some cast and crew members the wrong way.

“It’s always the same thing,” lamented Garlin. “It’s about me and my silliness on set. They don’t think it’s appropriate. I do. That’s where we’re at.”

He added that he didn’t know how to “respond” to the accusations “because as a comedian, if somebody is offended by what I say I, all I can say is, I’m sorry. Okay?”

Nonetheless, the “Mad About You” actor, who was reportedly nearly sacked in 2019 due to inappropriate language during production, has admitted to liberally using the word “vagina” on set, Deadline reported. Other frequent complaints involved his frequently discussing “balls,” using demeaning language, and referring to longtime female colleagues by offensive nicknames.

It remains unclear if Garlin’s firing will affect his tenure on HBO’s “Curb Your Enthusiasm.”
ABC/Courtesy Everett Collection

Some said they also felt uncomfortable with the actor’s penchant for handing out hugs — a habit that Garlin admitted to.

“It’s quick hugs, but I didn’t realize that anyone was feeling—so if you want to write that story, that’s a true story,” he said. “It puts the onus on them to say something, and I would gladly respect anyone who said, ‘Please don’t hug me. I don’t feel comfortable.’”

Showrunners for “The Goldbergs” have yet to reveal if the show will be renewed for a tenth season in light of Garlin’s termination.

It’s also yet unclear if the funnyman’s firing will impact his tenure on HBO’s “Curb Your Enthusiasm,” where he serves as both a main cast member and executive producer.

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Jeff Garlin addresses accusations of inappropriate behavior on The Goldbergs

Jeff Garlin
Photo: David Livingston (Getty Images)

Jeff Garlin broke standard PR protocol this week, granting an interview to Vanity Fair’s Maureen Ryan that directly addressed allegations of inappropriate behavior on the set of his ABC sitcom The Goldbergs. The resulting conversation is a fascinating read: a blend of candidness, defensiveness, and repeated attempts by the Curb Your Enthusiasm star to categorize behavior that other people have said made them feel uncomfortable as simply him being “silly” on the show’s set.

Garlin begins the interview by clarifying that he has not been fired from The Goldbergs, something Ryan was apparently having a difficult time getting a straight answer on from Sony, which produces the show. He then goes on to admit that he’s been investigated by HR on the series every year for the last three years of the show, all for behavior he refers to as, yes, “silliness,” which is a word you’re going to read a lot in this interview.

For what we can only assume are a variety of mostly legal-related reasons, Garlin never describes exactly what he means by “silly” behavior—beyond giving one example of saying “Oh, my vagina” in front of cast or crew. From context clues, it mostly seems to mean making a lot of jokes of various levels of inappropriateness that makes people on the set uncomfortable, who then go to HR because directly confronting the series lead about his jokes (or, apparently, frequent hugs) can be disastrous for their careers. Here he is when asked about what he’s been investigated by HR over:

I’m not going to go over it because I don’t want to, but basically a lot of things that I disagree with—that are silly. If I said something silly and offensive, and I’m working at an insurance company, I think it’s a different situation. If I, as the star of the show, demanded a gun range and on set, and I was firing guns every day and I was a little bit loose—to me, that’s an unsafe work atmosphere. If I threatened people, that’s an unsafe work atmosphere. None of that goes on ever with me. That’s not who I am. I am sorry to tell you that there really is no big story. Unless you want to do a story about political correctness.

For what it’s worth, Garlin seems receptive to some of the points Ryan makes with her questions—even as he notes that she has an “agenda”—most notably the repeated reminder that behavior that might seem harmless from his point of view as the lead on the series might seem more discomfort-inducing or harmful when viewed from those in positions of lesser power.

Here he is, for instance, when asked who decides what the difference between “silly” and harmful behavior might be:

I completely concur with you. It is a big bowl of “who determines?” It’s definitely gray, but we have to see it from the big picture, in terms of, that’s how I’m funny on camera. I’ve only had a negative experience with my behavior on The Goldbergs. I’ve never had it before or since—I’ve worked for Disney, I’ve worked for every studio in town.

It is, as we said, a very strange interview, as Ryan attempts to drill down with the actor and stand-up on the relevant issues, and Garlin varies between openly addressing them, assuring readers that he means no harm to anyone, and repeatedly characterizing the problems people have expressed with him as being blown out of proportion. He also makes it clear that he’s pretty done with The Goldbergs in any case; he makes it clear that he’s upset with how he’s been asked to curtail his behaviors on the show’s set, and expresses his belief that it’s unlikely that the long-running sitcom will be picked up for another season.

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