Cape Breton Post

Reckoning with racism

‘Gone with the Wind’, pulled; ‘Cops’ reality show dropped

- LISA RICHWINE

Oscar-winning Civil War epic “Gone with the Wind” was pulled from the HBO Max streaming service and reality TV show “Cops” was cancelled as America’s reckoning with systemic racism extended to its popular culture.

Less than 24 hours later, the DVD for “Gone with the Wind” jumped to the top of Amazon.com Inc’s list of bestsellin­g TV shows and movies.

Outrage and mass protests over racism following the death of African-American George Floyd in police custody have forced media companies to take a closer look at their programmin­g.

AT&T Inc’s Warner Media, which runs HBO Max, said it removed “Gone with the Wind.” The company acknowledg­ed the film is a product of its time but added that it “depicts some of the ethnic and racial prejudices that have, unfortunat­ely, been commonplac­e in American society.”

“We felt that to keep this title up without an explanatio­n and a denounceme­nt of those depictions would be irresponsi­ble,” an HBO Max spokespers­on said.

The 1939 film will return to HBO Max with “a discussion of its historical context” and a denounceme­nt of racist depictions, the spokespers­on added.

The movie, set on a Georgia plantation, won eight Academy Awards including best picture and set a milestone in Hollywood when supporting actress Hattie McDaniel, who played a black maid, became the first African American actor to win an Oscar.

The Paramount Network, a cable TV channel owned by Viacom CBS Inc, removed “Cops” from its schedule. The show debuted in 1989 on the Fox network and was considered a pioneer of reality television as it followed real-life police on the job. But it came under criticism as glorifying law enforcemen­t without any footage of police brutality.

Spike TV, now the Paramount Network, picked up “Cops” in 2013.

Civil rights group Color of Change applauded the decision to drop “Cops” and called on media companies to end other troubling portrayals of crime and policing.

“Cops led the way, pushing troubling implicatio­ns for generation­s of viewers,” the group said in a statement.

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