Vanity Fair Exposes ‘Call Her Daddy’ Host Alex Cooper’s Toxic Workplace

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More than 40 sources told Vanity Fair that “Call Her Daddy” host Alex Cooper fostered a toxic workplace behind closed doors — and that her husband, Matt Kaplan, was the primary source of abuse.

The bombshell report published June 12 claims most of the sources are current or former employees of Unwell, Cooper’s media network, and are primarily women in their 20s.

Kaplan, the company’s co-CEO, was described as the “puppeteer” in the explosive piece — with Cooper standing by and watching.

The allegations include yelling that brought producers to tears, inappropriate sexual questioning, and abusive language. One source told Vanity Fair, “Matt creates the most toxic work environment that I’ve ever seen.”

“I’ve seen producers cry.”

Another former employee said Kaplan would ask employees, “Who did you have sex with this weekend?” and “What did you do this weekend? Who did you fuck?” according to the report.

Alex Cooper at Spotify Beach in Cannes
CANNES, FRANCE – JUNE 20: Call Her Daddy Host, Creator and Executive Producer, Alex Cooper participating in The Art of The Interview session at Spotify Beach on June 20, 2023 in Cannes, France. (Photo by Antony Jones/Getty Images for Spotify)

Sources claimed Kaplan used words like “stupid” and “retarded” when referring to employees and threatened their careers. One witness said Cooper was present when Kaplan screamed “the nastiest things” at people — but failed to intervene or defend her staff.

A representative for Cooper and Kaplan called the allegations “false and outrageous.”

The report surfaced months after Cooper ousted influencer Alix Earle from Unwell in February 2025, publicly declaring, “We do not stand for mean girls at this company.”

Sources told Vanity Fair that statement rang hollow. One said, “what I found is, behind the scenes, there’s this man, her husband, running around wreaking havoc and making people cry, cower [in] fear.”

Cooper’s public image as a feminist champion stood in sharp contrast to the accounts from inside Unwell, where employees described a culture where she allowed Kaplan to dominate and abuse staff without stepping in.

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