Highlights

  • Dan Schneider filed a lawsuit against the creators of the Quiet On Set docuseries, claiming defamation and seeking unspecified damages.
  • Schneider's lawsuit alleges the series falsely implied that he physically abused children, which he vehemently denies.
  • Schneider expressed regret for past behavior, but adamantly denies being an abuser in the lawsuit.

On May 1st, embattled former Nickelodeon producer Dan Schneider filed a lawsuit against the creators of the shocking five-part documentary series Quiet On Set: The Dark Side of Kids TV.

Dan Schneider's lawsuit is the latest development with respect to the aftermath of Quiet On Set, which began airing on March 17th:

USA Today obtained a copy of the suit, which was filed in Los Angeles Superior Court.

Here's what we know so far.

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Quiet On Set And Dan Schneider

On March 17th and 18th, four of the five episodes which comprise Quiet On Set: The Dark Side of Kids TV began airing.

Quiet On Set (as it is often abbreviated) was produced by Investigation Discovery, or ID, concurrently released for streaming on HBO/Max and Discovery+.

A fifth and final episode aired on April 7th, concluding the documentary series. Fallout from Quiet On Set's release and content was immediate.

On March 18th, Entertainment Weekly published an extensive review, examining the docuseries piece by piece.

In a section about Schneider specifically, the outlet focused in part on Schneider's "close relationship" with former Nickelodeon star Amanda Bynes, reporting:

"Multiple cast and crew members in the doc also referenced [Dan] Schneider’s close relationship with [Amanda] Bynes, who was 13 when The Amanda Show debuted.

"'I definitely saw Amanda being very close physically with Dan,' editor Karyn Finley Thompson stated, [further] alleging[:]

"'There were many times that I saw Amanda sitting behind him hugging him, or like giving him a neck massage or whatever. Dan and Amanda had a close relationship, and I didn’t think anything different than that.'"

EW also carried a statement attributed to a spokesperson for Schneider, in response to the allegations made in Quiet On Set:

"Dan expected and asked a lot from his teams. They worked long hours and consistently made successful shows. In the challenges of production, Dan could get frustrated at times, and he understands why some employees found that intimidating or stressful.

"In a career spanning 30+ years, Dan worked with thousands of people, many of whom still tell him how much they enjoyed and appreciated working on his shows. But he also knows some people did not have a positive experience, and he is truly sorry for that."

In November 2022, TheRichest published a profile on Dan Schneider, which briefly delved into his 2018 split from Nickelodeon (as well as contemporaneous accusations of improper behavior):

"Despite creating numerous shows, his relationship with Nickelodeon ended when Schneider was embroiled in a dispute [with] his co-workers in 2018. The famed producer was paid the remaining $7 million on his contract after he left the network.

"The New York Times reported in 2021 that an internal inquiry conducted by Nickelodeon's parent company, Viacom CBS, [indicated] that Schneider had verbally abused his coworkers ...

"Insider said in August 2022 that the producer's screenplays had sexually explicit scenes that made it difficult for writers, actors, and crew members to feel comfortable working on his shows."

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On March 19th, the New York Times published an article, "Dan Schneider Says He Is Sorry for the Pain He Caused His TV Staff," about Schneider's initial reaction to the claims in the series.

Noting that Schneider "declined" an interview with the paper, the Times covered an "apology video" shared via YouTube, and reported:

"Schneider declined to be interviewed for the series, which first aired Sunday [March 17th] and Monday [March 18th]. But it had the effect of drawing him out of relative obscurity to address the many complaints about the shows, and the treatment of the people who worked on them.

"Schneider has rarely been in the public eye since separating from Nickelodeon in 2018, after an investigation by ViacomCBS, the parent company of Nickelodeon, which found that many people he worked with viewed him as verbally abusive."

On March 20th, BuzzFeed published a similar article about Schneider's apology video, and recapped allegations against the former Nickelodeon head honcho:

"Dan had also been accused of sexual misconduct in the 2018 investigation, though no evidence of this was found at the time.

"By 2022, Business Insider ran a separate investigation into Dan following claims made by former child stars like Jennette McCurdy, Alexa Nikolas, and Daniella Monet about their alleged experiences on the sets of his shows."

Schneider's "apology video" was uploaded on March 19th, by the former iCarly star known as BooG!E:

In short, before filing the suit, Schneider appeared to be publicly contrite regarding some of the allegations — and a spokesperson expressed remorse for behavior described vaguely as "intimidating or stressful" to child actors.

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Dan Schneider's Lawsuit

On May 2nd, two popular Reddit threads (shared to r/television and r/entertainment) addressed and discussed Dan Schneider's lawsuit.

USA Today's May 1st article (linked above) indicated that Schneider sued the producers for "defamation," and the outlet quoted the complaint.

According to the paper, Schneider's lawsuit framed Quiet On Set as a "hit job," and asserted that it "destroyed [his] reputation":

"According to a copy of the lawsuit filed in Los Angeles Superior Court and obtained by USA TODAY [on] Wednesday [May 1st], Schneider, 58, alleges Quiet on Set's portrayal of him 'is a hit job' that implied Schneider 'sexually abused the children who worked on his television shows.'

"'While it is indisputable that two bona fide child sexual abusers worked on Nickelodeon shows, it is likewise indisputable that Schneider had no knowledge of their abuse, was not complicit in the abuse, condemned the abuse once it was discovered and, critically, was not a child sexual abuser himself,' the complaint states."

"Defendants have destroyed Schneider’s reputation and legacy through the false statements and implications that Schneider is exactly that.'"

The New York Times also quoted Schneider's lawsuit in their reporting:

"'[Dan] Schneider will be the first to admit that some of what they said is true,' the lawsuit, filed in Los Angeles Superior Court, said of the filmmakers.

"'At times, he was blind to the pain that some of his behavior caused certain colleagues, subordinates and cast members. He will regret and atone for this behavior the rest of his life."

"'But one thing he is not — and the one thing that will forever mar his reputation and career both past and present — is a child sexual abuser.'"

The Times indicated Schneider again declined an interview, adding that the suit's "listed defendants ... include Warner Bros. Discovery, which owns Max, where the series was streamed; Maxine Productions and Sony Pictures Television, which produced it; and Mary Robertson and Emma Schwartz, who directed the series."

USA Today carried a statement attributed to Dan Schneider himself, which alluded to the arrest of former Nickelodeon dialogue coach Brian Peck; Peck was arrested in the early 2000s on charges related to child abuse.

Schneider asserted that he had "no choice" but to sue, saying in part:

After seeing 'Quiet on Set 'and its [trailer], and the reactions to [both], I sadly have no choice but to take legal action against the people behind it.

In their successful attempt to mislead viewers and increase ratings, they went beyond reporting the truth and falsely implied that I was involved in or facilitated horrific crimes for which actual child predators have been prosecuted and convicted ...

Dan Schneider's lawsuit seeks unspecified damages to be determined in a civil trial, per the Associated Press.

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