Ellen DeGeneres is returning to the studio.
DeGeneres, 62, will be back to work next week on the Warner Bros. lot. to film his daytime talk show, The Ellen DeGeneres Show, without an audience nearby.
According to Variety, the show, which is produced by WB’s Telepictures Productions, will be back in the studio on Monday with a team and team skeleton.

Ellen DeGeneres, 62, will be back at work next week on the Warner Bros. lot. to film his daytime talk show, The Ellen DeGeneres Show, without an audience nearby.
Telepictures Productions aims to limit the number of available employees to a minimum, with everyone receiving their normal salary after problems that the team had last year in the first months of the stoppage.
The producer held the talk show last week on a hiatus amid its recovery from the virus, in addition to an increase in Los Angeles County, according to Deadline.
The program, which was interrupted a week after its initial return on January 4, has been showing repetitions since December 10, after DeGeneres said the test was positive.
‘Hello everyone, I want everyone to know that I tested positive for Covid-19,’ said Ellen on social media. – Fortunately, I’m feeling good now. Anyone who has been in close contact with me has been notified and I am following all appropriate CDC guidelines. Please stay healthy and safe. Love, Ellen.

The program, which was discontinued a week after it returned on January 4, has been showing repetitions since December 10, after DeGeneres said he had tested positive

Ellen went back to work last fall implementing social distance protocols amid the spread of the virus
“Due to the increase in COVID-19 in Los Angeles County, and for the continued safety of our staff and staff, The Ellen DeGeneres Show will increase production in one week,” the company said, with Jan. 11 as the current date. to resume production at the show.
Ellen, who is married to Portia De Rossi, 47, returned to work last fall implementing social distance protocols amid the spread of the virus.
The Los Angeles Department of Public Health advised entertainment productions to cease in-person operations amid the local peak in the county.

The veteran TV personality program initially stopped production on December 10, after DeGeneres said he had tested positive on social media
‘While music, TV and film productions are allowed to operate, we ask that you strongly consider taking a break from work for a few weeks during this catastrophic rise in COVID cases. Identify and postpone high-risk activities and focus on low-risk work for now, if possible, ‘said the department, according to FilmLA.
As of Thursday, globally, 1,895,925 people have died amid more than 87,952,778 positive diagnoses worldwide, according to Johns Hopkins University. The total number of COVID-19 deaths in the USA was 364,735 people, with 21,543,310 positive diagnoses in total.
In Ellen, California’s home state, officials said 28,045 people died of the virus amid more than 2.5 million positive tests.