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Lawyer: Chris Harrison's 'Bachelor' payout battle may open 'a can of worms' — or close it - Yahoo Finance

Lawyer: Chris Harrison's 'Bachelor' payout battle may open 'a can of worms' — or close it - Yahoo Finance

Lawyer: Chris Harrison's 'Bachelor' payout battle may open 'a can of worms' — or close it - Yahoo Finance
Jun 10, 2021 1 min, 46 secs

Chris Harrison is officially exiting "The Bachelor" franchise after nearly 20 years — and is reportedly seeking a golden parachute that may top eight figures.  .

Page Six reported that Harrison had been making $5 million per season before his impromptu hiatus in February — and that he he was seeking a whopping $25 million payout to exit the show. .

"It's probably questionable if [his comments] were enough to actually trigger the right to terminate in a way that was clear and obvious," Sullivan said.

An attempt to litigate "opens a can of worms that, once it's open, you can't close it and who knows what would be revealed during that time," Sullivan said.

A post shared by Chris Harrison (@chrisbharrison).

Sullivan said it is unlikely that Harrison will go on to reveal any behind-the-scenes secrets at this point, noting settlements like these typically include a confidentiality provision — which "is not an exception, but usually the rule.".

The season 17 premiere topped Monday's ratings, but was still the lowest premiere in the series' history — garnering just 3.59 million viewers and a 0.9 rating in the 18-49 demographic, according to early Nielsen Live+Same Day numbers. .

Chris Harrison said in a statement earlier Tuesday that he is "excited to start a new chapter".

Chris Harrison is onto a "new chapter" after inking a deal to step down as host of "The Bachelor" franchise.

On Monday’s episode of The Tonight Show, Jimmy Fallon roasted The Bachelor’s Chris Harrison, who has officially exited the reality franchise after 19 years as its host, as Deadline told you first.

Bitcoin busted out a quick 5% gain early Thursday on positive news from that continent before losing some steam

China's May factory gate prices rose at their fastest annual pace in over 12 years due to surging commodity prices, highlighting global inflation pressures at a time when policymakers are trying to revitalise COVID-hit growth

Stocks rose Thursday as traders digested a key print on inflation, which showed consumer prices rose faster than expected as demand surged during the recovery

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