Rapper Sean 'Diddy' Combs' (seen above in this 2005 file photo) music cable television channel is being accused of discriminating against older whites

Rapper Sean 'Diddy' Combs' music cable television channel is being accused of discriminating against older whites even though it tolerates younger black employees who turn up to work drunk and hung over, it was reported on Tuesday.

A group of producers for a syndicated radio show that is simulcast on Combs' Revolt TV is suing after they said they were fired because they are white and older, according to Page Six.

The suit was brought by Douglas Goodstein, Todd Baker, Richard Wilson, Michael Schiff, and Jason Preziosi, a team of producers who once worked on the television side of Howard Stern's radio show.

In January 2014, the producers were hired by Revolt TV to air The Breakfast Club, a drive-time morning radio show that airs locally in New York on Power 105.1 FM.

The show, which is hosted by DJ Envy, Angela Yee, and Charlamagne Tha God, can also also be heard nationally in over 50 markets.

The producers say they were singled out for mistreatment because they had difficulty understanding 'the culture.'

They said their boss, Revolt TV's Executive Vice President Val Boreland, 'was always rude, condescending and dismissive towards the Goodstein Production Team.'

'Ms. Boreland, however, treated the African-American staff in a much friendlier and respectful manner,' the producers alleged in their court filings.

In addition, Boreland and other executives at Revolt TV turned a blind eye to 'African-American employees who arrived to work intoxicated or hung over,' the suit says.

In January 2014, a team of white producers was hired by Revolt TV to air The Breakfast Club, a drive-time morning radio show. The show, which is hosted by DJ Envy (far right), Angela Yee (second from right), and Charlamagne Tha God (far left), is heard nationally in over 50 markets

The suit was brought by Douglas Goodstein (left), Todd Baker (center), Richard Wilson, Michael Schiff, and Jason Preziosi (right), a team of producers who once worked on the television side of Howard Stern's radio show

According to the lawsuit, one production assistant 'often came to work late, drunk and slept on the editing floor during work hours.'

Nonetheless, that production assistant was not punished.

A spokesperson for Mr. Combs and REVOLT TV told DailyMail.com, 'These claims are without merit and have previously been dismissed by the EEOC. Revolt Media and TV, LLC has always been committed to diversity in the workplace and is an equal opportunity employer.'

The plaintiffs claim that Boreland's brother, who serves as assistant director of the show, once said: 'Caucasians harbored racism against African-Americans.'

Baker, one of the producers who is suing, says that he was also referred to by Boreland's brother as 'old guy.'

The former producers said their boss, Revolt TV's Executive Vice President Val Boreland (above), 'was always rude, condescending and dismissive towards the Goodstein Production Team'

Baker is 53 years of age.

'The animosity Mr. Boreland had towards Caucasians was clear,' according to the suit.

When Baker voiced his displeasure over the fact that a number of the show's guests were late, he was told by a production manager that 'he just did not understand the 'culture' of the show's guests and on-air personalities.'

The production manager, Cherisse McKenzie, 'was clearly referring to African-American culture and/or African-American hip-hop culture, which she assumed Baker did not understand because he was Caucasian,' the suit alleges.

The producers were eventually fired in December 2014 and replaced with younger, inexperienced black employees, the lawsuit claims.