Troubled Redbox Parent Chicken Soup For The Soul Entertainment Is Nearly A Week Late Paying Employees; Medical Benefits Also Cut

EXCLUSIVE: In the latest sign of trouble for Redbox parent Chicken Soup for the Soul Entertainment, the company’s employees say they have not been paid in nearly a week and their medical benefits have been suspended.

Eight current workers, all of whom wished to remain anonymous out of fear of retaliation, provided Deadline with a glimpse inside the struggling company, supporting their assertions with a raft of internal emails. A number of frustrated workers have also started to vent in Reddit forums and across social media.

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One senior executive said no updates about the status of pay have been provided since last Friday, when workers were warned that direct deposit would hit over the weekend or on Monday instead of the scheduled time on Friday. “We haven’t heard anything over the past couple of days,” the senior executive told Deadline. “Initially, they said checks would go out Tuesday at the latest. And now here we are.”

After several days without word from CEO Bill Rouhana, after initial publication of this article Wednesday evening, he emailed employees but not with any definitive news about the payroll or benefits. Acknowledging that the limbo state “has caused incredible frustration and anxiety,” he said he and members of the management team have been “working nonstop” to close a financing arrangement that will allow cash to resume flowing. They “hope” to fund the delinquent payroll by Monday, Rouhana said, promising an update by Friday, with benefits “expected” to be reinstated in two weeks.

Chicken Soup for the Soul Entertainment, which spun off from the self-help publishing brand in 2017 and became a publicly traded company, had 1,194 direct employees at the end of 2023. The company has grown steadily via a series of acquisitions, including those of streaming service Crackle, film outlets Screen Media and 1091 Pictures and TV-focused production entity Sonar Entertainment. Over the nearly two years since its riskiest M&A deal, the $375 million takeover of video kiosk operator Redbox, the company has hit the rocks amid mounting concerns about its debt load and ability to meet financial obligations.