I
often post articles, blog posts, tumbler feeds that I find interesting to my
newsfeed to share them with my cyberfamily and generate discussion and debate. It
doesn’t always work, but, today, I had an interesting discussion about the lack
of color on my television set lately. It all started when I read this article [we'll take a break while you consider following the link, but in the end decide not to because you know it's about to be partially summarized] which
discusses the lack of minorities on the show “Girls” – a new HBO show set in
Brooklyn, New York. The article pretty much hit the nail on the head for me. I’m
tired of not seeing black, Latina, Asian, gay, lesbian, transgender, bicurious/sexual,
male, female, twentysomethings on my television set, dammit. And I don’t think
it’s too much to ask that someone put them there.
I'm not attempting to make this a
white v. non-white, gay v. straight issue.
What I'm really focused on is how few people in the television/film
industry make honest efforts to step beyond what they know and into new and
exciting communities. Take a step beyond the default white, male, straight
setting and experience some flavor so that you can write a new something that
you know. The sad part is, people in
those industries have the largest opportunity to do just that. They have the
opportunity to broaden the scope of the world in the characters they create and
the stories that they write - they just don't do it. James Cameron made millions of dollars off
the backs of blue people – BLUE PEOPLE – and you mean to tell me we can’t put a
Chinese woman on mainstream, American television? Of course we can, she just
needs to be crouching like a tiger or hiding like a dragon. Black women have to
be loud and sassy, fat and matronly, or thick and sexual. They can’t exist in a
role in which their skin color, and the stereotypes that come with it, are afterthoughts.
The people that create these fictional
universes, that create lives with a scratch of their pens or the swiftness of a
keystroke, have the best opportunity to include the faces of those identities that
we so rarely see. And when asked why their shows don’t include these people,
they too often say “well, I’d like to include them. We’ll have to examine if
there’s a place for that in the future.”
Do
I have to tell you that during the Civil Rights Movement, quite a few of its
detractors said they liked the idea of desegregation, of giving second class citizens
their rights as taxpayers in this great nation that is the United States, but
they thought the Movement was asking for too much, too soon. They wanted the movement to slow down, and
only change a little bit at a time.So, when I hear producers,
scriptwriters, show creators and the like telling me “we’ll have to examine
that in the future,” what I’m really hearing is the collective voices of all
those people saying, “yeah, we need it, but not. Right. Now.” To quote “The Great Debaters” “The time is always, is ALWAYS, right now.”
I can’t tell you how excited I am to
see Kerry Washington leading the cast on “Scandal.” And I can’t tell you how
much it saddens me that I don’t have another show to watch in which a minority
leads the cast. Still, minority actors in supporting roles definitely deserve their
respect – Sandra Oh and Chandra Wilson
on “Grey’s Anatomy,” Taye Diggs, Benjamin Bratt and, formerly, Audra McDonald
on “Private Practice.” (Notice, all three of those aforementioned shows are
created by a black woman – Shonda Rhimes). Gabourey Sidibe is holding it down
on “The Big C,” while Tamala Jones and Jon Huertas have appeared in nearly
every single episode of “Castle.” David Zayas and Lauren Velez on “Dexter.” (I
can’t think of any shows off the top of my head featuring LGBT characters). I
could go on, but the point here is that while so many people are saying “we’ll
look at it in the future,” there are those that are just doing it. Right now.
And the ethnic background of the characters I mentioned above rarely, if ever,
comes into play (with the exception of Sidibe on “C”). What does this mean,
Hollywood?
It means that inserting racial,
ethnic, gender and sexual diversity into a show does not make the show about
racial, ethnic, gender and sexual politics. It means that you don’t have to figure
out if there’s a place for us in your script, you just put us there. What it
means is that the next time you issue a casting call for the next great female
lead – just ask for women or men of a certain age, of a certain height, maybe
of a certain build. Step beyond the boundaries of your cookie-cutter nation and
add some flavor to your melting pot.
Just DO IT already.
A very thought-provoking article. And, as usual, I loved your blog. We finally sat down & watched SCANDAL & we love it. We DVR everything so we can skip througb the commercials. Does watching it that way hurt ratings or is the show being credited with us DVR watchers too?
ReplyDeleteAs far as I know, DVR recordings are counted after the fact, but they still count. I remember reading about the most recent season finale of "The Closer" and they talked about how high the shows ratings were before and after DVR viewership was tallied.
ReplyDeleteI'm just afraid that this show isn't going to be picked up because of the placement of a female in such a powerful role. The fact that it's not a man will lead some to not take it as seriously. The fact that it's a black woman? Psh. We can all just ignore the fact that Washington's role is based on an actual person!
In any case, it's an awesome show! I love it too!
Duh: Jesse Tyler Ferguson and Eric Stonestreet on Modern Family. Ferguson is actually gay, while Stonestreet is not.
ReplyDelete