The Telegram (St. John's)

TV viewers seek out ‘13th’, other stories about race

- LISA RICHWINE

LOS ANGELES — Television series, movies and documentar­ies about the experience of Black people in the United States have seen a surge in viewership as public demonstrat­ions have focused new attention on racial discrimina­tion, according to industry data.

The audience for filmmaker Ava Duvernay’s 2016 documentar­y “13th,” about mass incarcerat­ion that disproport­ionately affects Black people, jumped more than 47 times higher over the past three weeks, streaming service Netflix Inc. says. Millions of people watched, the company said, though it did not give a specific figure.

Duvernay welcomed the sudden spike in attention for “13th” and other movies, books and TV shows about race from people trying to better understand the reasons behind inequality.

“It’s rare. It’s a once-in-ageneratio­n mood that we’re in,” Duvernay said in an interview with Reuters Television. “I hope that people that might be engaging with this material now will look to work like this outside of these very tense cultural moments (and) just let it be a very steady stream of learning and enlightenm­ent.”

Streaming networks have highlighte­d programmin­g by Black creators in recent weeks as protests swelled over the killing of African American George Floyd in U.S. police custody. AT&T Inc’s HBO Max featured a slate of shows and movies under the heading “Celebratin­g Black Voices,” while Walt Disney Co.’s Hulu included a link to “Black Stories.”

“Dear White People,” a Netflix comedy about Black Ivy League college students, enjoyed a 331 per cent boost in demand in the United States over the past 30 days, according to Parrot Analytics, which measures downloads, social-media mentions and other data.

Duvernay’s Netflix series “When They See Us,” about five men wrongly accused of raping a jogger in Central Park in 1989, saw demand jump 83 per cent in that time.

On the Apple TV app, which featured sections called “Confrontin­g Systemic Racism” and “Black in America,” 2014 Oscar-winning drama “12 Years a Slave” climbed to No. 8 among top independen­t films for the week ending June 14.

That was just behind documentar­y “I Am Not Your Negro” and “Loving,” about an interracia­l couple who prompted a landmark antidiscri­mination ruling in 1967.

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