SHOTS FIRED, A PROVOCATIVE NEW FOX SERIES, TURNS RACIAL PROFILING ON ITS HEAD.
RACIAL PROFILING GETS TURNED ON ITS HEAD IN PROVOCATIVE FOX SERIES, SHOTS FIRED
For African American families, there comes a time when parents have to give their children The Talk — not about the birds and the bees, but about the dangers and responsibilities of being black in America. When their son was 12 years old, Reggie Rock Bythewood and Gina Prince- Bythewood, the creators of the new Fox series Shots Fired, had their version of The Talk when George Zimmerman was acquitted in the shooting of Trayvon Martin, an unarmed black teenager, under Florida’s controversial Stand Your Ground law.
“He was blown away when the verdict came in,” remembers Bythewood. “He was an idealistic kid who had studied Dr. King and the ‘ I Have a Dream’ speech, and thought that a lot of the racial biases that exist were a thing of the past. He grew up under an African American president. But I think his world view began to shift at that point, to where he thought maybe things weren’t as fair as he would’ve liked on racial lines.”
Bythewood recalls opening up his laptop and showing him a documentary on YouTube about Emmett Till, the 14- year- old who was lynched in 1955 Mississippi for his alleged flirtations with a white woman. From there, he says, “we began to have conversations about how the criminal justice system in this country has worked and how it has not worked.” They even wound up incorporating a short story about Till into the show.
Set in the fictional city of Gates Station, North Carolina, where communities are sharply divided along racial lines, Shots Fired could be described as a show that gives The Talk to the entire country, black and white. Unfolding over a complete, 10- episode arc, the story is packed with rippedf rom- t he- headlines allusions to cases of white police officers shooting unarmed blacks, but it also upends assumptions by asking viewers to think about how they would feel were the situation reversed.
The first episode opens with the aftermath of a racially explosive incident: Joshua Beck ( Mack Wilds, of The Wire), a black sheriff ’s deputy in a mostly white police department, has shot and killed a white college student in a routine traffic stop. In an effort to ease tensions and curb any perceptions of bias, the Justice Department sends in two black professionals to handle the scene: Preston Terry (Stephan James), a young, by- the- book special prosecutor, and Ashe Akino ( Sanaa Lathan), a seasoned investigator. The shooting draws the attention of the governor ( Helen Hunt), an opportunistic private- prison investor (Richard Dreyfuss) and the national media, but a second case, involving a black teenager gunned down by a white officer, has been quietly swept under the rug.
In Shots Fired, the relationship between the two deaths is the mystery; the disparity between them is the message. Though the cases balance each other out, the premise is risky, because there is not exactly an epidemic of black officers shooting unarmed white men. But as narrative strategy, the role reversal proves remarkably potent, adding a layer to the show’s themes of racial identity.
“We wanted to give people who don’t normally deal with police shootings of unarmed citizens [the chance to] empathize, because the victim looks like them,” PrinceBythewood says.
“We found it fascinating and troubling that, after and during the Zimmerman trial, Trayvon was being demonized and Zimmerman was suddenly the victim — that there were a large number of people sending donations to Zimmerman. That’s where the empathy was going.”
“We wanted to attack that headon,” she says, “but we also, in dealing with the two murders, we were also able to tackle the way that the community, the media, law enforcement and the justice system deals with cases based on race.”
With its provocative subject matter, Shots Fired sounds more suited for a cable outlet such as HBO or FX than a major network such as Fox, but for the show’s creators, the chance to speak to a broader audience was part of the appeal. The couple first met as writers on A Different World, a Cosby Show spinoff that often addressed big cultural issues in the middle of dispensing the laughs. In the pre- Seinfeld era, before half-hour comedies could be about nothing, they helped bring a show about something into American living rooms.
The two have mostly followed separated career paths since — Bythewood has numerous credits in film and television, including a four- year writing stint on New York Undercover and scripts for Get on the Bus and Notorious, while Prince- Bythewood wrote and directed the acclaimed romances Love & Basketball and Beyond the Lights. But Shots Fired returns them to their roots, writing smart, issue-oriented television for the masses.
“Much of my early work was in community theatre,” Bythewood says, “so we might do a play and there’d be 50 people in the audience, maybe 75, and you do something you hope is conscience-raising. The idea that we can do the same uncompromising subject matter on network TV was such a great opportunity, particularly because we didn’t feel we had to make everybody likable or do all those things you might assume have to be done on a network.”
When Shots Fired was conceived and shot, the results of the 2016 presidential election were still in question.
But now the change in government also stands to put Shots Fired under a different light.
“Under the Obama administration,” Bythewood says, “the Justice Department really looked at a lot of these police departments for racial bias and, in some cases, found that changes needed to be implemented. I’m very curious to see what this new Justice Department is going to do, but our narrative highlights the relevance of having a Civil Rights Division that will not just serve people in government, but actually serve the people they’re intended to serve.
“Ideally, Shots Fired will challenge people’s perspectives — everyday citizens, community leaders, law enforcement and others. Even our current government.”