Ridiculousness, the long-running MTV clip show, is coming to an end.
Deadline reports that the show has been canceled after 14 years and 1,700 episodes amid MTV’s parent company, Paramount, merging with Skydance, resulting in thousands of company-wide layoffs.
Created and hosted by Rob Dyrdek, the network’s staple comedy series premiered August 29, 2011. The most recent episode aired just last night. Alongside Steelo Brim and Lauren “Lolo” Wood, Dyrdek would feature (and mock) some of the internet’s most viral videos, which often included failed stunt attempts.
The company plans to refresh its programming amid the merger, looking to give MTV a facelift going forward, according to Deadline.
The cancellation comes on the heels of a new Bloomberg report that the network was paying Dyrdek $32 million per year for his work on the show.
Documents obtained by the publication revealed that MTV pays the former skateboarder-turned-entrepreneur $32.5 million annually as part of a 336 episode-per-year deal. That includes bonuses, a $21,000-per-episode executive producer fee, and an on-camera fee that starts at $61,000 but could climb to six figures.
Bloomberg also reported that Dyrdek’s salary could have climbed to over $45 million per year if the show had been picked up for 2028 and 2029.
Now, MTV will not be producing any new episodes, though the show will continue to air through 2026, according to Deadline.
Previous seasons of Ridiculousness will also air on the network, with some available to stream on Paramount+.
Fans reacted to news of the show’s cancellation, with many sharing their thoughts on X.
“Sad day, great show coming from a great era. Was our modern day Americas funniest home video show,” one fan wrote while another agreed: “Its Over dude the World is ending.”
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“This is something that should not be happening. This is a glitch in the matrix type of thing. MTV without Ridiculousness? I don’t think so,” another wrote.
Other viewers argued, “It was time,” while some failed to realize new episodes were still being produced.
Ridiculousness is the latest casualty of the Paramount-Skydance merger. About 11 percent of the company’s reported 18,600 full- and part-time employees are rumored to be cut, not including its 3,500 project-based staff.
“We do not want to be a company that has layoffs every quarter. So, it’s going to be painful,” said Paramount president Jeff Shell after the merger.
Paramount fused with movie and TV producer Skydance in August after paying President Donald Trump $16 million to settle a lawsuit its own lawyers had called “meritless,” in what some critics described as “bribery” to secure regulatory approval.
The merger brought CBS News, Paramount Pictures, MTV, and the Paramount+ steaming network under the control of David Ellison, son of the pro-Trump tech billionaire (and Earth’s second-richest person) Larry Ellison.
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