Toronto Star

Political ‘black-ish’ episode gets belated home on Hulu

- LYNN ELBER

A politicall­y charged episode of “black-ish” from 2017 that was shelved by ABC has found a home on Hulu, a corporate sibling of the Disney-owned broadcast network.

“I cannot wait for everyone to finally see the episode for themselves,” series creator Kenya Barris posted Monday on social media.

Barris said he hopes the halfhour episode, titled “Please Baby Please,” fulfils its original intent: to inspire vital dialogue about “where we want our country to go moving forward and, most importantl­y, how we get there together.”

He asked producer Walt Disney Television to reconsider making the episode available and, in recognitio­n of “the importance of this moment, they listened and agreed,” he said.

The network and a representa­tive for Barris did not respond to requests for comment Monday.

The change of heart comes amid ongoing protests and calls for broad social change prompted by the death in May of George Floyd, a Black man, while in Minneapoli­s police custody.

When ABC decided to pull the episode from the 2017-18 season and put it on ice, the network lauded “black-ish” for its deft examinatio­n of “delicate social issues” in an entertaini­ng and educationa­l manner. But “creative difference­s” over the episode couldn’t be resolved, ABC said.

The Emmy-nominated series has tackled thorny social issues during its ABC run, which began in 2014. That a streaming platform was deemed suitable for “Please Baby Please” reflects the creative freedom producers can gain outside the traditiona­l confines of broadcasti­ng.

Barris remains executive producer of “black-ish” (and its spinoffs, ABC’s “mixed-ish” and Freeform’s “grown-ish”).

But he is making new shows, including the edgy family comedy “#BlackAF,” as part of a production deal with streamer Netflix.

“Please Baby Please” joins the “black-ish” library of past seasons on Hulu. The episode revolves around a sleepless night in the household of Dre and Rainbow Johnson (Anthony Anderson, Tracee Ellis Ross). To calm his infant son during a storm, Dre begins by reading a children’s book — the Spike Lee-Tonya Lewis Lee work of the episode’s title — then shares his own anxieties.

Through imagery and concerns expressed by other family members, the episode touches on issues besides racism, including mass shootings, climate change and gay rights.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada