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On Wednesday, Dr. Phil McGraw’s media company based in Texas declared bankruptcy and simultaneously initiated a breach of contract lawsuit against its business ally, Trinity Broadcasting Group, a company known for Christian programming.
The entity, Merit Street Media, established in 2023 and subsequently launching Merit TV in 2024, represents a collaboration between McGraw’s Peteski Productions and Trinity Broadcasting.
According to the lawsuit, McGraw committed to supplying Merit Street with fresh episodes of his “Dr. Phil Show,” along with primetime specials and other content, while Trinity Broadcasting was responsible for providing distribution and production services, a failure which is cited as the cause of the bankruptcy.
Merit Street accused Trinity Broadcasting of reneging on its obligations and abusing “its position as the controlling shareholder of Merit Street to improperly and unilaterally burden Merit Street with unsustainable debt, doing so either without notice or in direct violation of promises not to do so.”
“This lawsuit arises out of a sad but oft told story: one side lived up to its commitments but the other, the Defendant [Trinity], did not. Moreover, these failures by [Trinity] were neither unintended nor inadvertent. They were a conscious, intentional pattern of choices made with full awareness that the consequence of which was to sabotage and seal the fate of a new but already nationally acclaimed network,” the complaint, filed in conjunction with the Chapter 11 bankruptcy filing in U.S. Bankruptcy Court for the Northern District of Texas, stated.
“This fresh voice on the national stage is inexorably going dark, going off the air because TBN has refused to honor its commitment to transfer its must carry rights and thereby provide national distribution for the network—Merit Street,” the complaint continued. “And this conduct stretches beyond mere breach of contract and extends to breach of fiduciary duty and breach of the duty of good faith and fair dealing—the full extent to which may require a forensic accounting audit.”
Trinity “formed Merit Street as a joint venture and contractually committed to provide valuable services to the joint venture,” according to the complaint.
“But [Trinity] then reneged on its obligations and abused its position as the controlling shareholder of Merit Street to improperly and unilaterally burden Merit Street with unsustainable debt, doing so either without notice or in direct violation of promises not to do so,” the complaint stated, noting that it owes over $100 million to third parties and that Trinity, referred to as “TBN” in court documents, should be responsible.
“The most egregious impact is TBN’s conscious and knowing choice to cause Merit Street to lose its national distribution by withholding distribution payments despite repeatedly acknowledging those distribution payments were 100% TBN’s sole responsibility. Simply put, as a result of TBN’s conduct, Merit Street has nowhere to send its broadcast signal and nowhere to air its programming no matter how great it may be,” the complaint stated.
Merit Street bills itself as an organization that “provides clarity and solutions on the issues and topics that matter most to Americans,” including “traditional family content,” news, sports, music, true crime and more.
The bankruptcy filing lists both estimated assets and liabilities in the $100-$500 million range. Merit Street is seeking damages, legal costs, and “further relief as the Court may deem just and proper.”
Trinity Broadcasting did not immediately respond to a request for comment by Fox News Digital.