The Morning Call (Sunday)

RERUN OR REBOOT?

Broadcast TV pledged to improve diversity in 1999, with successes and shortfalls since. Will this time be any different?

- By Greg Braxton

Kweisi Mfume was not having it when he declared war on broadcast TV.

Mfume was president of the NAACP in July 1999 when he became upset after scanning the fall schedules of the four major broadcast networks and saw that none of the 26 new comedies and dramas being launched had a minority performer in a leading or prominent role.

“When the television viewing public sits down to watch the new prime-time shows scheduled for this fall’s lineup, they will see a virtual whitewash in programmin­g,” Mfume said at the time, before the explosion of cable networks and streaming platforms that have often proved more inclusive of BIPOC (Black, Indigenous and people of color) talent. “This glaring omission is an outrage and a shameful display by network executives who are either clueless, careless or both.”

Mfume threatened CBS, NBC, ABC and Fox with a variety of actions, including possible litigation, as well as viewer boycotts of the networks and of advertiser­s who “feel it is OK to advertise on these highly segregated shows.”

The initial response was denial: Officials for all four networks insisted they were concerned and sensitive to the issue of diversity. ABC and NBC acknowledg­ed they “need to do more.”

Within months, memorandum­s of understand­ing promising improvemen­t were signed by the networks, which appointed diversity executives to oversee the process.

Mfume’s campaign sparked a decadeslon­g, roller-coaster battle within the TV industry over diversity in front of and behind the camera. The 20-plus years since his “virtual whitewash” declaratio­n have shown forward but erratic progress on the issue, marked by glowing successes and troubling shortfalls.

Shonda Rhimes (“Scandal”), Kenya Barris (“black-ish”) and Lee Daniels (“Empire”) are a few of the Black producers who have proven to be powerful forces in the TV arena, while Kerry Washington, Viola Davis, Shemar Moore, Terrence Howard, Anthony Anderson and

Tracee Ellis Ross are among the numerous Black performers who have headed hit series.

But those triumphs have been matched by significan­t setbacks. Each network has come under fire for a variety of concerns, including predominan­tly white prime-time schedules, stereotypi­cal images, and charges of exclusion, discrimina­tion and racism.

The continual and elusive struggle to grasp the complexity of diversity in TV took an abrupt turn in recent months as ABC, NBC, CBS and Fox hurried to show solidarity with the Black Lives Matter movement by making announceme­nts touting an unpreceden­ted commitment to diversity, particular­ly to Black performers and producers. The announceme­nts show a marked escalation in pledges from past years, when executives said they were trying to increase diversity but in many cases offered little followthro­ugh.

Several observers of and participan­ts in the efforts to increase the presence of Black people and other people of color dating to 1999 are eyeing the announceme­nts with caution, ranging from optimism to skepticism, that the latest round of pledges will lead to significan­t change.

“I think some of what these companies are saying is public relations, being done out of fear of being outed or ostracized,” said Mitsy Wilson, formerly the senior vice president of diversity developmen­t for the Fox Entertainm­ent Group and

News Corp. “But now they will be held accountabl­e. I’m hopeful that all that has been promised will happen.”

Darnell Hunt, dean of social sciences at UCLA and a professor of sociology and African American studies who has headed several studies examining entertainm­ent industry diversity, said 1999 was a real “turning point in the discourse” about diversity in Hollywood.

Maintainin­g that the industry has been caught in a cycle of progress and retreat on diversity, Hunt said, “We can’t go back to that cycle.” He said the TV industry needs more Black executives in positions with the power to greenlight projects. “The bottom line is, who’s calling the shots? The industry needs to be more in sync with what’s happening in the rest of the country.”

In a striking contrast to 1999, all four broadcast networks will air new series featuring Black performers in leading or prominent roles to add to their existing slates, which already feature people of color as series leads.

Among the new series are ABC’s “Big Sky” with Kylie Bunbury and a reboot of the game show “Supermarke­t Sweep” hosted by Leslie Jones. Fox will pick up “L.A.’s Finest,” a police drama currently on Spectrum that stars Gabrielle Union and Jessica Alba. CBS will launch a reboot of the drama series “The Equalizer” starring Queen Latifah.

Among the other diversity related announceme­nts:

■ CBS Television Studios and the NAACP have entered into a multiyear agreement to develop and produce scripted and unscripted programmin­g in addition to documentar­y content. CBS has also committed to increasing the proportion of people of color on its series’ writing staffs and the proportion of script-developmen­t money devoted to series with creators or producers of color.

■ NBC will add an experience­d writer of color to the writing staff of its existing series.

■ Taraji P. Henson, who starred in Fox’s “Empire,” is developing a spinoff series centered on her character, Loretha “Cookie” Lyon, as part of a two-year first-look deal she has signed with the show’s producer, 20th Century Fox Television.

■ For the first time in its 18year, 40-season history, the

ABC hit reality-show “The Bachelor” franchise will have a black male lead, and Tyra Banks is replacing Tom Bergeron as host of “Dancing with the Stars.” ABC is also reviving

“The Wonder Years,” which will now center on a Black middle-class family in the 1960s.

Wilson, who is an executive coach and a diversity and inclusion consultant, said she will be watching closely in the coming months to determine whether there is any real change.

She hopes progress moves more smoothly and quickly than in the past: “Things cannot go back to normal.”

 ?? LARA SOLANKI/ABC ?? Tracee Ellis Ross and Anthony Anderson, who star in the ABC sitcom “black-ish,” are among the numerous Black performers who have headed hit series on broadcast networks.
LARA SOLANKI/ABC Tracee Ellis Ross and Anthony Anderson, who star in the ABC sitcom “black-ish,” are among the numerous Black performers who have headed hit series on broadcast networks.

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