New York City Sues Jordan McGraw, Blocks Release of NYPD Reality‑Show Footage
New York City has sued producer Jordan McGraw and his company McGraw Media for breach of contract over an unfinished NYPD reality series, "Behind the Badge," and secured a temporary court order barring them from selling or releasing any of the footage. The three‑year production deal, signed in April 2025 under then‑Mayor Eric Adams, gave Dr. Phil McGraw’s team unusual behind‑the‑scenes access to crime scenes and police operations, but the city alleges that rough cuts were largely unedited footage dumps that improperly revealed sensitive tactics and the identities of undercover officers, crime victims, and witnesses, and at times portrayed the department negatively in ways the contract forbade. The Adams administration pulled the plug on the project hours before handing City Hall to Mayor Zohran Mamdani, and the new suit says McGraw has since disavowed his obligations and tried to seize editorial control, creating a risk of "immediate and irreparable harm" if the material is aired. McGraw’s lawyer calls the order an unconstitutional prior restraint, says no broadcast was imminent, and insists the company had been working with the city on requested edits and remains willing to do so; on Thursday the defense moved to shift the case from New York state court to federal court. The fight underscores a broader tension over how much editorial control governments can claim when they invite TV producers inside police agencies, and whether city concerns about reputation and operational security can justify gagging a finished or near‑finished program.
📌 Key Facts
- New York City filed a breach‑of‑contract lawsuit against Jordan McGraw and McGraw Media and obtained a temporary court order blocking dissemination of any "Behind the Badge" footage.
- The April 2025, three‑year contract gave producers access to NYPD operations; the city now alleges rough‑cut episodes included sensitive operations and the identities of undercover officers, victims and witnesses and sometimes portrayed the NYPD negatively in violation of the agreement.
- McGraw’s lawyers say publication was not imminent, call the order a presumptively unconstitutional prior restraint, and have moved to remove the case to federal court.
- The city terminated the project just before former Mayor Eric Adams left office for Zohran Mamdani, while Adams has publicly defended McGraw’s work and urged that the series eventually be seen.
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