Daily Press

Diversity study finds TV looks more like US, viewers approve

- By Lynn Elber

Television fare that reflects the nation’s increasing racial and ethnic diversity is finding favor with industry gatekeeper­s and viewers, according to a study of the 2019-20 TV season that was recently released.

Despite the pandemic that stymied Hollywood production, there were varying measures of growth in the hiring of people of color — and women — in on- and off-camera jobs, researcher­s at the University of California, Los Angeles, said in the report.

In return, audience enthusiasm for shows such as creator-star Issa Rae’s “Insecure” and the miniseries “Watchmen” with Emmy-winning actor Regina King proved that inclusion pays business as well as social dividends, said Darnell Hunt, dean of the school’s social sciences division.

The report’s biggest takeaway is “the mounting evidence for how important diversity is to today’s audience,” said Hunt, who co-wrote the annual report with Ana-Christina Ramon, a UCLA social sciences research director.

Across streaming, cable and broadcast platforms, viewership among adults age 18 to 49 peaked in many cases when a show had a “majority-minority cast,” Hunt said.

That conforms to the changing United States. In 2010, whites represente­d 63.7% of the population. In 2020, that census figure was just under 58%, the lowest on record.

“People basically want to see the TV shows that look like America, that have characters they can relate to and have experience­s that resonate with them,” Hunt said.

That builds on and reinforces previous findings for TV, he said. It also reflects the counterpar­t UCLA film study released

earlier this year.

For all households including whites, for example, median ratings were highest for scripted broadcast shows in which people of color were between 31% and 40% of the credited writers, the study found.

For white, Latino and Asian American homes, median ratings peaked for scripted cable shows whose casts were from 41% to 50% people of color, while Black household ratings were highest for shows with “majority-minority casts,” the report said.

People of color fell short of parity in lead acting roles on all platforms. But for the first time in the report’s history, overall cast diversity on scripted broadcast TV was slightly higher than in the general U.S. population ( just under 43% ethnic and racial groups).

While actors of color also came close to “proportion­ate representa­tion” in cable and streaming, most of the gains could be attributed to the increasing share of Black and multiracia­l roles, researcher­s found.

Asian Americans — the

country’s fastest-growing group — and Latinos remain underrepre­sented, while Native Americans are “virtually invisible,” the report said.

The study examined a total of 461 scripted shows across all platforms to determine the employment inroads made by women and people of color as actors, writers, directors and series creators.

Generally, there was an increase in racial diversity in nearly all the job categories, with representa­tion among women improving in roughly half of them.

Compared to the previous UCLA report, more people of color were credited writers across all of TV, with the percentage on broadcast episodes increasing from 23.4% to 26.4%; on cable, from 25.8% to 28.6%; on streaming, from 22.8% to 24.2%.

According to the study, “most of these gains can be attributed to women of color” — for instance, Robin Thede and her

HBO series “A Black Lady Sketch Show.” In contrast, men of color increased among broadcast credited writers but “treaded water in cable and digital.”

 ?? CHRIS PIZZELLO/INVISION 2019 ?? Issa Rae, left, creator of “Insecure,” and Robin Thede, creator of“A Black Lady Sketch Show.”
CHRIS PIZZELLO/INVISION 2019 Issa Rae, left, creator of “Insecure,” and Robin Thede, creator of“A Black Lady Sketch Show.”

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