Chicago Tribune (Sunday)

Showrunner talks inclusion

‘Mixed-ish’ boss Karin Gist focused on race and identity

- By Yvonne Villarreal

LOS ANGELES – “Mixed-ish,” which premiered this fall, is the second series spun off from ABC’s popular sitcom “black-ish” — joining Freeform’s coming-of-age comedy “grown-ish.” And if “Mixed-ish” showrunner Karin Gist has her way, the show will provoke conversati­on.

The ’80s-set prequel follows a teenage Rainbow Johnson — the character popularize­d by Tracee Ellis Ross in “black-ish,” played here by Arica Himmel — and the experience­s of her mixed-race family when they tansition from a commune to mainstream living. The show, like its predecesso­r, has delved into some complex material involving racial identity — the handling of which has garnered both praise and criticism.

“We are very, very clear that there is no version of making everyone happy, nor is that our intent,” Gist said on a recent afternoon. “We just want to make it feel right and honest for the show, and for our characters, and reflect the world as best we can.”

The freshman comedy, which was recently granted a full-season order, is the second series Gist has guided as showrunner. She previously headed Fox’s short-lived girl-group melodrama “Star.” Gist, a former family law attorney, shoved her foot in the Hollywood door after attending a taping of UPN’s “Girlfriend­s.” She had been developing her writing, even enrolling in a boot camp at Santa Monica’s Bergamot Station Arts Center. While leaving the taping, Gist introduced herself to one of the writers on the show, Bernadette Luckett, with the help of the audience warm-up comedian.

“(Bernadette) talked to me and gave me a list of books to read and gave me her number and tore it off that night’s script that she had in her hand,” Gist recalled. “I took it and put it in my Rolodex back at the law firm, and then I started writing.”

Gist wrote a “Will & Grace” spec script, and after Gist revised it with notes from Luckett, the script made its way to “Girlfriend­s” showrunner Mara Brock Akil. Gist was eventually hired in Season 5 and would go on to work on such shows as “One Tree Hill,” “House of Lies” and “Grey’s Anatomy.”

Sitting on the terrace of her Los Feliz home, Gist talked about tackling race and identity on a broadcast comedy, creating opportunit­ies for others and where things stand with the “Sister Act 3” script she has in developmen­t with Disney Plus. These are edited excerpts from the conversati­on.

We are trying to have a show about identity and inclusion. It’s about Rainbow and her African American mother and white father, so there’s conversati­ons about race around that. But at the end of the day, we want everyone to watch it who feels othered or marginaliz­ed and see a little girl struggling to find her voice and find her space and step out on faith, because I think that’s a universal story.

The goal is to have people come to the show and watch the stories and see themselves in that. The goal of the show is to be a place for everybody to connect.

People really responded to the hair episode and the “What is blackness?” episode, which came right after it. We got a lot of responses from our Halloween episode, where we were talking about tokenism. And even the Christmas episode we’ll get to talk a little bit about spirituali­ty and religion. What you believe and how you believe, and how you deal with family and holidays.

I think there is a trust level (with the network) because of what “black-ish” did. That it kind of trailblaze­d a way. We’re also still under the “-ish” brand, so we have that protective cover, so to speak. When we push the envelope or have conversati­ons about things that may be a little scary, it’s like, “Well, Mom did it,” you know? “They did it over there.”

That was a time when “black TV” was on and popping, but that wasn’t the first time. It had been like that a few years before and a few years before that. At that time, it felt very much like just a lot of us working and telling stories that were true to the experience. That was really important on “Girlfriend­s” — to make it about what would really happen with these women and really build on that friendship. I didn’t know what the TV business was like. I was sort of wondering, “Is it always going to be this way?” It seemed kind of a utopia. After that, the writers strike happened, and then comedy was dead — or so they said — and everybody moved on to drama.

What I learned personally from that show is just etiquette in the writers room. How important it is to collaborat­e on the show. There was a core of us who stayed on for pretty much the entire run of the show. We built that show. Mara had a really great vision for the show, but we all came together to put the voice of that show on the page. Even now, I can watch an episode of “Girlfriend­s” and remember who pitched a joke or where it came from.

I treated that job as school. It really was my high school and college of TV. I studied everything. I studied people. I studied the way Mara ran the show, what I would do the same or do differentl­y, the way people interacted, the way you speak to actors, how to do a rewrite, how to break down a story. I studied everything. That’s probably why it’s still really dear to me.

I want to be able to have the stuff that I work on or write be a part of the conversati­on. I think it’s important to have people walk away from something and think about the world, or at least I hope to have challenged the way they think or have a conversati­on with somebody else about it. That’s what was so amazing about “Star” for me, because it had the elements of these amazing women searching for their dream.

Having a diverse room is really important … especially on shows where the goal is to challenge or have a conversati­on about social things, then you need lots of different points of view.

 ?? BYRON COHEN/ABC ?? Mark-Paul Gosselaar, from left, Tika Sumpter, Arica Himmel and Gary Cole star on “Mixed-ish,” a spinoff of “black-ish.”
BYRON COHEN/ABC Mark-Paul Gosselaar, from left, Tika Sumpter, Arica Himmel and Gary Cole star on “Mixed-ish,” a spinoff of “black-ish.”

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