The Daily Courier

People of colour representa­tion in children’s animated TV increased

- By VICTORIA AHEARN

TORONTO — A new report suggests there’s been an increase in the portrayals of people of colour in children’s animated television content in Canada in recent years.

But Indigenous characters in the genre remain largely underrepre­sented, along with several other minority groups.

The “Examining Children’s Animated Television in Canada” report is from the Children’s Media Lab at Ryerson University’s faculty of communicat­ion and design.

The new report examined 121 main characters from 27 animated children’s shows that aired in Canada in 2018 and 2019.

The shows targeted children from preschool up to age 12, and were produced or co-produced in Canada.

The media lab contacted each Canadian broadcaste­r in order to retrieve a comprehens­ive list of all the TV shows that met the study’s criteria. Once the list was confirmed, each broadcaste­r provided the first two episodes of each show.

Shows that were part of the study included CBC’s “Molly of Denali,” YTV’s “Go Away, Unicorn!,” Teletoon’s “Bravest Warriors,” Treehouse’s “Esme and Roy,” TVO’s “Abby Hatcher” and Family Jr.’s “Chip and Potato.”

Researcher­s found 51% of the human characters were white, and 49% were people of colour.

That’s higher than in the 2019 report, which looked at animated and live action children’s shows and found 74% of the main characters were white.

But the new report says Middle Eastern, South Asian, and Indigenous characters were largely underrepre­sented (1%, 5%, and 6%, respective­ly).

And characters with obvious physical disabiliti­es or chronic illnesses were mostly absent, while those with neurodiver­sity were completely absent.

The findings also suggest a persistent gender gap, with the majority of main characters still male (63%).

In the study published in 2019, female representa­tion was also low, both onscreen and behind the screen.

That study also noted a virtual absence of main kids’ characters with disabiliti­es.

The Children’s Media Lab notes TV can influence young people’s views of themselves and shape what they imagine to be possible.

A lack of diversity onscreen is damaging, and addressing disparitie­s in representa­tion should be a priority for the industry, say the experts.

“Canadian children’s content producers are already recognized as major players globally,” Kim Wilson, co-director of the Children’s Media Lab, said in a news release.

“Research like this allows them to continue to think about equity and to challenge themselves to create content that addresses disparitie­s like gender bias, even in non-human characters like animals and monsters. This is something that content creators can easily act on.”

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