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Just 4.8 Percent Of TV Writers Are Black, Study Finds

Just 4.8 Percent Of TV Writers Are Black, Study Finds

The presence of black writers in the room directly affects how television shows handle racial subjects, including the criminal justice system, a new study has found.

Racial justice organization Color of Change commissioned Darnell Hunt, University of California, Los Angeles dean of social sciences and professor of sociology and African American studies, to write Race in the Writers’ Room: How Hollywood Whitewashes the Stories That Shape America.

The report examined 234 broadcast, cable and streaming scripted series from the 2016-17 season and found that two-thirds of the shows had no black writers in their rooms. In all, black writers accounted for just 4.8 percent of the 3,817 staffed scribes.

From The Hollywood Reporter. Story by Rebecca Sun.

Those writers were predominantly staffed on shows led by black showrunners, who represented just 5.1 percent of the pool. Two-thirds of those series had five or more black writers in their rooms, although all had multiple white writers as well. By contrast, 69.1 percent of white-led writers rooms had no black writers at all.

No Hulu series employed a black writer, while every show on AMC, Showtime and TBS had zero or just one black writer, as did 23 of 25 CBS series and 14 of 15 CW series. According to the report, having just one black writer in the room is seldom enough to affect change. Hunt interviewed five such writers, who said they felt alienated or unsupported in the workplace.

“I don’t think it’s appropriate or healthy for a nonwhite person to discuss race in normal writers’ rooms because you’re just too outnumbered, and people get too defensive,” said one black writer. Added another: “The worst thing in the world is making your boss feel like a racist… and most of these people are liberals.”

The report also criticized network diversity writing programs, which subsidize staff positions for underrepresented writers on each of their shows in hopes of incentivizing showrunners to diversify their rooms and give emerging talent their big break.

In his foreword to the report, Color of Change executive director Rashad Robinson wrote, “Presently, however, there are no incentives within the industry — and not nearly enough leverage outside of it — to change the storytelling practices that lead to so much harm. It all comes down to changing the conditions that presently sustain those practices, i.e., the balance of power in writers’ rooms.”

Chenita Craig

Read more at The Hollywood Reporter.