Dave Chappelle
Left: “Chappelle’s Show”
Reason: Wanted to Spend More Time With Family and Stand-up
Est. Salary Loss: Millions
To call “Chappelle’s Show” a massive success is a little bit of an understatement. It was fresh, it was funny, and it pushed the right boundaries to get people talking. However, after only two seasons Chappelle walked away, despite raking in millions per year.
He was working twenty-hour days, and he realized it was taking too much away from his family and his true love, his stand-up career. He also didn’t like that anybody who saw him started yelling the show’s many ribald catchphrases at him. Instead of taking a fifty-million dollar contract, he walked away.
Wil Wheaton
Left: “Star Trek: The Next Generation”
Reason: To Pursue More Opportunities
Est. Salary Loss: Unknown
Wil Wheaton, the worst actor on “Star Trek: The Next Generation,” played Wesley Crusher, the worst character on “Star Trek: The Next Generation,” and yes, we're including Tasha Yar.
He left the show in 1991 to try and pursue more acting opportunities, after years of the cast treating him poorly for being a child, and the audiences treating him poorly for being Wesley. He wasn't happy about the way he left the show, and neither were fans — they would have preferred he leave much sooner.
Suzanne Somers
Left: “Three's Company”
Reason: Contract Disputes
Est. Salary Lost: $120,000 per episode
Contract disputes would be putting it lightly. Somers became a household name but was dismayed to discover that co-star John Ritter was making quite a bit more than her per episode – thirty thousand dollars more. That was even during the eighties. She not only demanded a pay raise but wanted a percentage of the profits, too.
The producers not only denied her request but reduced her screen time per episode to sixty seconds, which was filmed separately from Ritter and Joyce DeWitt. The feud that started then divided the cast and became a very public one as Somers fought the producers.
Brian Dunkleman
Left: “American Idol”
Reason: Wanted to Pursue Stand-up and Acting
Est. Salary Loss: $15 million per year
The estimated salary loss you see above is based on what Brian Dunkleman's co-host, Ryan Seacrest, is making every year at the legacy reality TV show. Dunkleman was only a host for “American Idol” for a single year before leaving to try acting and comedy.
It was a bad decision on his part since “American Idol” went on to make it bigger than anybody thought possible, while Dunkleman didn't. Right now he's making less than a thousand a week, and regrets not sticking with the show, especially, according to him, when he opens his bank statements.
Michael Learned
Left: “The Waltons”
Reason: The Role Wasn't Challenging Enough
Est. Salary Loss: Unknown
After playing the matriarch of the titular family in the hit show “The Waltons,” Michael Learned decided her time was up. She felt the role wasn't challenging her enough as an actress, despite winning three Emmy Awards and four Golden Globes for her performance.
In 2017 she said she regretted leaving the show, but she couldn't stand sitting around and asking if John wanted more coffee any longer. Her character disappeared from the show, but she was able to return a few times for four made-for-TV reunion movies.