Phil McGraw announced Tuesday he’s wrapping up the 21-year daytime TV run of Dr. Phil in the spring.
The talk and advice show will stop airing after the end of the current season, according to CBS Media Ventures, the content creator associated with the CBS network under the conglomerate Paramount Global.
McGraw, 72, plans to announce a “prime-time partnership” that will launch in 2024, CBS Media Ventures said in a statement.
“This has been an incredible chapter of my life and career,” McGraw said in the statement, “but while I’m moving on from daytime, there is so much more I wish to do.”
The transition keeps him in the CBS family.
“While his show may be ending after 21 years, I’m happy to say our relationship is not,” Steve LoCascio, the president of CBS Media Ventures, said in the statement.
The company plans to continue offering reruns of the show, which may include new intros, for the season after its last airing.
“We plan to be in the ‘Dr. Phil’ business with the library for years to come and welcome opportunities to work together in the future,” LoCascio said.
McGraw was once a licensed psychologist in Texas before he moved to California to launch Dr. Phil. McGraw’s advice went on to help create an industry that later welcomed another TV doctor, Mehmet Oz, to the airwaves.
He started his entertainment career as America’s life coach on Oprah Winfrey’s show in the 1990s.
Before his TV debut, McGraw met Winfrey in 1996 when she hired him to help and counsel her in a defamation case with the beef industry. “It was there that she learned about his straight-forward approach to life coaching,” according to Oprah’s site. (NBC)