The Commercial Appeal

Fans turn up heat for ABC’S canceled ‘Baker and the Beauty’

- Lynn Elber ASSOCIATED PRESS

LOS ANGELES – With cries for equality and justice ringing in the streets, a petition drive to rescue a canceled television series may seem inconseque­ntial.

But among the advocates for ABC’S “The Baker and the Beauty,” felled by its ratings after one season, are those who value it as an entertaini­ng and affirmative depiction of family life in general and a Latino family in particular – long a TV rarity and, they say, especially vital now.

“We have so many shows on TV and so little shows that are actually relatable and appeal to everyone,” said viewer Dana Pulsinelli. She launched the online effort to find the “dramady” a new home after she connected with other fans and kept hearing the same question: Why would “this amazing show, with this fantastic cast that touched on so many relatable subjects, be canceled in a time where diversity and inclusion is so important?”

It should be celebrated instead of “tossed away like it means nothing,” the New Jersey resident said in an email, lauding “The Baker and the Beauty” for celebratin­g both Cuban American culture and depicting a young character struggling with her sexuality amid family resistance.

The change.org petition, with 133,000 signatures and counting as of Monday, calls for a streaming or cable platform to give the series “the shot it deserves!” In their comments, fans lauded it as lightheart­ed fare that’s “muchneeded during these challengin­g times,” “witty and endearing,” and a welcome depiction of “hardworkin­g immigrants” that also “tenderly represents” LGBTQ youth.

The support has buoyed cast members Lisa Vidal, who plays matriarch Mari, and Nathalie Kelley, who stars as the title character, Noa, an Australian supermodel and entreprene­ur who finds unlikely love with Daniel, a Cuban American (Victor Rasuk) working in his family’s Miami bakery. Belissa Escobedo plays Daniel’s younger sister, who comes out as lesbian.

The series, whose nine episodes aired from April to June on ABC, was adapted from a Israeli TV hit of the same title that streamed on Netflix.

“This show is important because it represents, first and foremost, family. It represents a beautiful, healthy, functional family,” Vidal said. “But I also feel that it’s important because it’s a Latin family, because it speaks to the positive stereotype of being a Latin family. It speaks to the beautiful parts of who we are as a Latin community, loving and encouragin­g and hard-working and passionate. … It speaks to all those wonderful truths that are not actually perpetuate­d on TV and film enough.”

Produced by the Nbcunivers­al, Keshet and ABC studios with Dean Georgaris as executive producer, the series is also well-made, Kelley said.

“The writing is sophistica­ted, the characters are three-dimensiona­l. We packaged, with ABC’S help, this beautifull­y timed show that was delivered in such a nuanced, authentic way,” she said. “And we did grow our audience, which is why the ultimate decision to not give us a second chance of second season to continue to grow (the ratings) was disappoint­ing, because we really had checked all the boxes.”

The series showed small upticks in both total viewers and the advertiser­favored young adult audience from its first to last episodes.

While she doesn’t want to point fingers, Vidal said, it could have been better served with more vigorous promotion, a more suitable time slot for family viewing – 10 p.m. Monday wasn’t it, she contends – and the recognitio­n that an unusual program deserves more careful handling and time to prove itself.

Karey Burke, president of ABC Entertainm­ent, called dropping the show “a huge disappoint­ment.”

“It was an incredible cast and a very sweet show. And I was frustrated that we were not able to find it an audience. But that doesn’t mean we aren’t going to keep trying,” Burke said. “And it’s critical, frankly, from a business standpoint that we continue to evolve and reflect what our audience looks like.”

Fan lobbying helped the Latino-led reboot of “One Day at a Time” survive its cancellati­on, moving from Netflix to the Pop channel. As with that effort, “The Baker and the Beauty” has support from stars including Zoe Saldana, Gabrielle Union and Eva Longoria, who posted on social media: “Representa­tion matters on television!”

Showrunner Georgaris, whose credits include “Bluff City Law” and “The Meg,” said the romantic comedy’s fate is in the hands of the studios seeking a new deal to continue it.

“I think that actually there is a legitimate chance. And I think, truthfully, the public support and celebrity support, those things do make a difference at a time like this,” he said, given the expanding number of steaming services that offer the chance of a new home.

 ?? LAURA MAGRUDER/ABC ?? Carlos Gomez, left, and Lisa Vidal appear in a scene from “The Baker and the Beauty.” Fans have launched a petition drive to find the sitcom a new home after it was canceled by ABC.
LAURA MAGRUDER/ABC Carlos Gomez, left, and Lisa Vidal appear in a scene from “The Baker and the Beauty.” Fans have launched a petition drive to find the sitcom a new home after it was canceled by ABC.

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