The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Minorities make acting gains but remain shut out of top TV jobs

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LOS ANGELES: Female and minority actors are almost fairly represente­d in US television series but remain shut out of key behind-the-camera roles including executive jobs, a major new study found Thursday.

The ‘Hollywood Diversity Report' from University of California Los Angeles found 35 per cent of lead roles went to minority actors on cable shows last year. Minorities represent around 40 per cent of the US population.

Women accounted for 45 per cent of lead roles on cable, climbing to 49 per cent on streaming.

But minorities accounted for just eight per cent of studio executive chair and CEO roles, and women just under one-third.

“There has been a lot of progress for women and people of color in front of the camera,” said Darnell Hunt, social sciences dean at UCLA and co-author of the report.

“Unfortunat­ely, there has not been the same level of progress behind the camera. Most notably in the executive suite, there has been very little change since we began compiling data five years ago. That's very telling, particular­ly in light of our current racial reckoning.”

The report comes in a year during which anti-racism Black Lives Matter protests sparked by the police killings of George Floyd and Breonna Taylor have exposed the nation's racial divisions.

Shows including ‘Watchmen,' a dark comic-book satire tackling prejudice that won 11 Emmys last month, have intensifie­d that debate as well as creating more roles for black and minority actors.

Of the more than 100 acting nomination­s in the Emmys' series, limited series and television movie categories, more than a third of them went to black actors – a new record.

Among them were Billy Porter (‘Pose'), Sterling K. Brown (‘This Is Us' and ‘The Marvelous Mrs Maisel'), Issa Rae (‘Insecure') and Regina King (‘Watchmen').

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