Get all your news in one place.
100’s of premium titles.
One app.
Start reading
Daily Record
Daily Record
Entertainment
Emma Gritt & Nicola Roy

Ex-This Morning boss quit ITV show after just two months and claims there was a 'toxic' environment

A woman who worked on This Morning has claimed the show has a 'hostile' working environment that made her abandon the role just two months in.

Emily Maddick took on the role of Head of News back in 2019, but quit shortly after, saying she didn't get to meet Phillip Schofield or Holly Willoughby during her time in the job.

She also said the environment didn't sit right with her 'as a feminist', and wrote about her exit interview experience in a soul-baring article for Glamour magazine.

The Mirror reports that she wrote: "Did I experience a toxic atmosphere? Yes. Sexism? Yes. Bullying? Yes. Homophobia? Yes."

Emily, who has an impressive track record working at some of the UK's biggest news brands, adds that during her tenure she only crossed paths with the show's stars a handful of times.

She claimed: "Were King and Queen of ‘kindness’, the BFFs of bonhomie, Holly and Phil, as fun, friendly and fits-of-fizzy-giggles-funny as they appear on screen? No. On my first day I watched from the gallery and was startled by the difference between ‘on camera Holly and Phil’ and ‘off camera Holly and Phil’.

"As soon as cameras stopped rolling, for an ad break for example, the perma-smiles would immediately slip and Phillip would often have a face like thunder complaining about minute details that he felt were going wrong or segments he didn’t like. Holly would often just sit scrolling through her phone."

The Holly and Phil seen on-screen are different when the cameras are off, according to Emily (ITV)

For someone so senior, Emily found that this was as close as she was going to get to the presenters.

She claimed: "As Head of News, in charge of managing a team of up to 6 news producers who worked tirelessly around the clock to bring Ms Willoughby and Mr Schofield fodder for their cosy sofa chats every day, I was not allowed to communicate with either of them. Yes, really. And neither were the rest of my team."

Over the next two months, she claimed that she "never once spoke" to 61-year-old Schofield, despite him "appear to glare at me a couple of times", a reaction she believed stemmed from him learning she was close friends with a senior tabloid journalist.

She once held a door open for mum-of-three Holly and "complimented her sparkly skirt, to which she thanked me."

Emily claimed that Phil and Holly, who fronted the show from Monday to Thursday until Schofield quit the show two weeks ago, "were treated like gods, kept in a gilded cage, with their daily meetings with the editor held in their dressing rooms, away from the team."

Representatives for Holly Willoughby have been approached by the Mirror for comment.

In comparison, the journalist praised Eamonn Holmes, Ruth Langsford, Alison Hammond, Vanessa Feltz and Dr Ranj as being "super friendly, helpful and welcoming".

A rep for ITV said: “As a producer and broadcaster, ITV takes its responsibilities around Duty of Care and Speaking Up seriously and has robust and well-established processes in place."

Don't miss the latest news from around Scotland and beyond - Sign up to our newsletter here.

READ NEXT:

Sign up to read this article
Read news from 100’s of titles, curated specifically for you.
Already a member? Sign in here
Related Stories
Top stories on inkl right now
One subscription that gives you access to news from hundreds of sites
Already a member? Sign in here
Our Picks
Fourteen days free
Download the app
One app. One membership.
100+ trusted global sources.