Open in App
  • Local
  • U.S.
  • Election
  • Politics
  • Crime
  • Sports
  • Lifestyle
  • Education
  • Real Estate
  • Newsletter
  • BuzzFeed News

    After Opening Up About “Boy Meets World”'s Troubling “Pay Disparity,” Danielle Fishel Just Revealed Exactly How Much She Made Per Episode

    By Stephanie Soteriou,

    10 days ago

    https://img.particlenews.com/image.php?url=3qcscZ_0uU2hjV400

    Danielle Fishel was just 12 years old when she landed the iconic role of Topanga Lawrence in the ABC sitcom Boy Meets World , which ran between 1993 and 2000.

    https://img.particlenews.com/image.php?url=3qaotv_0uU2hjV400
    Abc Photo Archives / Disney General Entertainment Content via Getty Images

    While Topanga was originally only supposed to be in one Season 1 episode, the character ended up being such a big hit that she was brought back throughout the season before finally becoming a core cast member.

    https://img.particlenews.com/image.php?url=4alVJn_0uU2hjV400
    Abc Photo Archives / Disney General Entertainment Content via Getty Images

    In fact, any fan of the show would tell you that the name “Topanga” is synonymous with Boy Meets World , and she was quickly established as main character Cory Matthews’s love interest — with the two getting married in Season 7.

    https://img.particlenews.com/image.php?url=0qGHHu_0uU2hjV400
    Abc Photo Archives / Disney General Entertainment Content via Getty Images

    Danielle even ended up reprising her role in 2014 for the sequel series Girl Meets World , which is about Cory and Topanga’s daughter, and ran for three seasons.

    https://img.particlenews.com/image.php?url=0OS3w2_0uU2hjV400
    Ron Tom / Disney Channel via Getty Images

    In 2022, Danielle and her former Boy Meets World costars Will Friedle and Rider Strong launched a rewatch podcast, Pod Meets World , where they look back at their time on the show and share behind-the-scenes insight with fans.

    https://img.particlenews.com/image.php?url=1gNaG9_0uU2hjV400
    Tim Nwachukwu / Getty Images

    For context, Will played Cory’s older brother, Eric, in the show, and was 16 years old when he was cast. Rider was 13 years old in Season 1, and played Cory’s best friend, Shawn.

    https://img.particlenews.com/image.php?url=3xQPqQ_0uU2hjV400
    Abc Photo Archives / Disney General Entertainment Content via Getty Images

    In one of the podcast’s early episodes, Danielle revealed there was a huge pay disparity between her and her male costars, which led to her dad teaming up with her agent, Judy Savage, in a bid to boost her salary. This included forcing Danielle to boycott a table read, which she was incredibly reluctant to do.

    https://img.particlenews.com/image.php?url=1E8VMO_0uU2hjV400

    “I was considered a series regular in Season 2, but I still didn’t get to do every episode,” Danielle explained on the pod. “I was a series regular who was guaranteed 13 [episodes], and I think I ended up doing 19 out of 22 or something.”

    She then told listeners: “We’ve talked about it before privately, but if you guys knew the pay disparity, even after I became a series regular… The excuse was: ‘We didn’t know you were going to be on the show, we weren’t anticipating you,’ but by Season 2, you did know. By Season 2, I was accounted for.”

    “I get that in Season 1, I wasn’t part of the budget,” she added. “You weren’t anticipating having another series regular, but by Season 2… That excuse should go out the window, and then Season 3 rolled around, and they were using the same excuse.”

    “I had to threaten to not show up to a table read,” Danielle revealed. “My dad was not having it. My dad and Judy Savage were doing the negotiations with ABC, or Disney, and they said to me: ‘You have to not go,’ and I was sobbing: ‘I have to go, it’s my job, you’re going to lose this job for me.’”

    In fact, Danielle recalled being so concerned about losing her dream job that she warned her family that she would never speak to them again if she got fired due to the boycott. While it is evident that this wasn’t the case, Danielle did not go into detail about how the pay issue was resolved at this time.

    Gregg Deguire / FilmMagic

    But the topic came up again when Judy joined the gang for an interview on Monday’s episode of Pod Meets World . During the conversation, the now-retired agent recalled how difficult it was to boost Danielle’s pay, and it was revealed that she never reached the same level as her costars.

    https://img.particlenews.com/image.php?url=2vriOP_0uU2hjV400

    “You represented Rider, who obviously had a lot more experience than I did, but you knew what they were paying Rider and so you had a number in mind that you were trying to get me to,” Danielle began.

    “And I remember I really had a hard time because somebody had put you on the show at a really low number,” Judy — who wasn’t Danielle’s agent when she was cast in the show — recalled. “I had a very hard time getting them to increase it.”

    Abc Photo Archives / Disney General Entertainment Content via Getty Images

    “You had to double my salary,” Danielle confirmed. “Between, I think, Seasons 4 and 5, I went from making $7,500 an episode to making $15,000 an episode.”

    https://img.particlenews.com/image.php?url=0TneMn_0uU2hjV400

    “It came right down to the wire,” the star went on. “I was very nervous I was going to lose my job. I didn’t want to lose the job, I was willing to do it for whatever, you know? I was like: ‘Whatever, I don’t get to see this money anyway! It’s going into an account! Please just don’t lose this job for me!’ And I remember crying on the phone to you and my dad, saying: ‘I’m going to trust you, but just please don’t lose this job for me.’ And you saying: ‘I’m not going to.’”

    Judy admitted that having the support of Danielle’s dad made all of the difference, and Danielle remembered him telling her that she “cannot allow them to walk all over” her.

    “They acted as though making $7,500 by Season 4 was some gift,” Danielle added of the show’s producers. “But you knew what everyone else was making, and you knew that’s not fair, not equitable. And still, never, in the full seven seasons, we never did get me to a place where I was matched to what anyone else made.”

    Abc Photo Archives / Disney General Entertainment Content via Getty Images

    “I always made less than everyone else on the show,” Danielle reiterated. “And they said it’s because of where I started; I had started at a low threshold, I was never going to get up from there. But you did your darnedest, and it was incredible to watch.”

    https://img.particlenews.com/image.php?url=1QtHFC_0uU2hjV400
    Abc Photo Archives / Disney General Entertainment Content via Getty Images

    Meanwhile, Will revealed that going into the sixth or seventh season of Boy Meets World , he and Rider banded together to negotiate their new salaries.

    https://img.particlenews.com/image.php?url=1t769y_0uU2hjV400

    “You and I went favored nations and kind of just went: ‘Hey, if we band together, then what are they going to do? Fire us both?’” Will recalled. “And we looked at each other and went: ‘Well then, they’ll fire us both.’ We were both kind of like: ‘OK!’”

    “But there’s a power in that,” Will added. “There’s a power in you and I kind of holding hands and going: ‘Alright, see what happens,’ and it worked!”

    Judy then explained that Danielle couldn’t join them for this tactic because she had started at such a lower rate to them.

    Ron Galella / Ron Galella Collection via Getty Images

    Elsewhere in the podcast, Judy reflected on how much actor’s salaries have increased during her years in the business, and said that child actor Luke Edwards, who starred in a whole host of ‘90s movies, got up to $100,000 per movie “really fast.”

    https://img.particlenews.com/image.php?url=3mf46P_0uU2hjV400
    Ron Galella / Ron Galella Collection via Getty Images

    She then confirmed that her first client to get a million for just one movie was a High School Musical star.

    https://img.particlenews.com/image.php?url=2julvv_0uU2hjV400

    She said: “They hired all these people, and it was such a big hit — they paid them all, like, $35,000 for the first one, and then for the second one, I think we got $500,000. On the third one, we got it up to a million dollars, and I couldn’t believe it. I thought: ‘Oh my god, I have struck gold.’”

    Judy also revealed that while working with Shailene Woodley , she secured one million for one movie, and three million for another.

    David Livingston / Getty Images

    More on this

    Expand All
    Comments / 0
    Add a Comment
    YOU MAY ALSO LIKE
    Most Popular newsMost Popular
    Total Apex Sports & Entertainment4 days ago
    Total Apex Sports & Entertainment3 days ago

    Comments / 0