The fallout from the allegations of toxicity and bad behavior on The Ellen DeGeneres Show continues as news comes out that the talk show has gotten rid of three of its senior producers as part of its efforts to change the atmosphere on the show.

Variety reports that the show has let go of executive producers Kevin Leman and Ed Glavin as well as co-executive producer Jonathan Norman. Staying on as executive producers are Derek Westervelt, Andy Lassner, and Mary Connelly.

Leman, Glavin, and Norman were the three names brought to light in the Buzzfeed report that detailed the alleged misconduct that happened on the show. Some of the misconduct that supposedly happened on the show include incidents of racism, sexual harassment, as well as preventing workers from going on leave for funerals or to take care of their mental health.

Radio.com points out that the three producers were already suspended when the Buzzfeed report came out, so news of their dismissal was not a surprise to industry watchers.

According to Variety, the news was broken to staffers at The Ellen DeGeneres Show during a staff meeting where DeGeneres herself talked to them in a videoconference call. The host was described to have been emotional during the call and said that she was heartbroken that the atmosphere on the show had become so toxic.

DeGeneres also acknowledged that the show management may have forgotten to treat the staffers as basic human beings due to efforts to keep the show going as smoothly as possible. The host also vowed to stick to agreed-upon production timetables, as it seems shifting timetables without notice had resulted in staffers and guests being alienated.

The meeting also involved Connely and Lassner sharing the results of the internal investigation conducted by WarnerMedia regarding the allegations brought up by the Buzzfeed report. While the investigation says they have not found “systemic” racism on the show, it did highlight that The Ellen DeGeneres Show needs to do more with regards to inclusion and diversity.

Before this meeting, DeGeneres had earlier addressed the situation by writing a letter to the staff claiming responsibility for the toxicity on the show, saying that she should have been on top of everything since the show bears her name.

Executive producers Connely, Lassner, and Glavin also addressed the allegations, claiming responsibility the same way DeGeneres did and vowing to improve on the day-to-day management of the show moving forward.

Aside from DeGeneres and her show producers, there have also been a number of showrunners and directors that have been accused of abusive behavior. MacGyver star Lucas Till accused ex-showrunner Peter Lenkov of bullying, verbal abuse, and body-shaming.

Meanwhile, Justice League actor Ray Fisher accused his director Joss Whedon of on-set behavior that he described as gross, abusive, and unprofessional.