Current:Home > reviewsAva DuVernay shows, 'Gentefied,' 'P-Valley' amongst most diverse on TV, USC reports -ProfitClass
Ava DuVernay shows, 'Gentefied,' 'P-Valley' amongst most diverse on TV, USC reports
View
Date:2025-04-27 06:44:49
NEW YORK — The hundreds of television series on U.S. broadcast, cable and streaming platforms, and the executive producers creating them, are the subject of a new list — one that scores them for the diversity and inclusion of the people working both on screen and behind the scenes.
The Inclusion List for episodic programming, being released Thursday by the University of Southern California’s Annenberg Inclusion Initiative and the Adobe Foundation, ranks the 100 highest-scoring broadcast and cable series that aired in the 2021-2022 television season and the 100 top streaming platform series between 2021 and 2023, as well as listing the executive producers who scored the highest across all their shows in that time period.
It’s a way to celebrate those producers and shows that are making the efforts to make the television industry more welcoming as well as highlight that much work still needs to be done, said Stacy L. Smith, founder of the Annenberg Inclusion Initiative, which has also released reports about inclusion in the film industry.
“It’s important to say, here are the shows, because it tells the rest of the world, there’s no excuses. It can be done,” Smith told The Associated Press.
The top scorers for broadcast and cable series included shows “Queen Sugar,” about a set of Black siblings in Louisiana, and “The Baby,” about a childfree woman who ends up with a mysterious baby. Streaming platform top performers included offerings like “Raising Dion,” about a Black mother and son, and “Gentified,” about Mexican American cousins.
Those included on the producer list included Greg Berlanti, Sarah Schecter, Ava DuVernay, Reese Witherspoon, Mindy Kaling, and Charles King.
To compile the rankings, the Inclusion Initiative came up with a scoring system. On screen, the series regular cast were scored for representation of gender, race and ethnicity, age, disability and LGBTQ+. Behind the scenes, 10 positions including director, writer, producer, casting director and costume director were scored for gender, and race and ethnicity. The total highest possible score was 15. “Queen Sugar,” for example, had a score of 12.8 and “Raising Dion” had a score of 13.3.
A number of shows that ranked on the list are no longer on air, but that’s not the point of the effort, Smith said, pointing out that a show’s reception by an audience can be attributed to many other factors like marketing and time slot, etc. The point is looking at who’s getting to be part of the industry, getting to add to their resumes and make their connections and have an impact on what does get made for audiences to see.
“This is the start of career sustainability,” Smith said, adding. “People worked. They got paid. Now they can do it again.”
Alan Luna, a casting director based in Los Angeles, has seen that in action, like when an actor gets a series regular role on a show, even one that only lasts a season. It lends a credibility when trying out for following roles, he said.
“When you’re a series regular on a show, you’re able to get into every room. If you have one series regular credit, they can’t say no to you,” he said. “Like, this guy has done it. Yeah, maybe it didn’t work, but he’s done it. Maybe it was a one-season show, but he did it already. And that’s really life changing.”
And he sees it in the work that he does. The 29-year-old Mexican American knows that his background and life experiences impacts how he tries to approach his casting work, in trying “to introduce talent that I know wouldn’t be normally introduced in that setting.”
It has a ripple effect, said actor Jurnee Smollett, referencing the range of women taking on roles behind the cameras. “I think the more women of all kinds that we see behind the camera, the more we’ll see change reflected in front of the camera.”
Keeping track of the inclusion in the industry is even more important now after the labor strikes in the entertainment industry last year, Smith said, which disrupted life for many.
“That’s why a list like this is so important,” she said. “On the heels of the strike these companies need to be thinking about it, it can’t just be business as usual.”
'Sesame Street':How creators designed the show to celebrate Black communities
While inclusion and diversity is something that has been talked about in all forms of popular culture, there’s something particular about the power of television that makes who’s behind the scenes and on the screens creating the content for audiences to consume vitally important, said David Stamps, professor of public relations and media psychology at Bentley University in Massachusetts.
Its ubiquity in American homes can have much more of an impact that movies or books, he said, and that makes “TV much more rich and much more accessible, which means it’s positioned to do more as far as cross-cultural contact.”
Contributing: Krysta Fauria, The Associated Press
Previous:Black representation grows on TV - but diversity behind the scenes lags, UCLA report finds
veryGood! (176)
Related
- Cincinnati Bengals quarterback Joe Burrow owns a $3 million Batmobile Tumbler
- Polish opposition groups say Donald Tusk is their candidate for prime minister
- Washington state senator Jeff Wilson arrested in Hong Kong for gun possession and granted bail
- Go inside the real-life 'Halloweentown' as Orgeon town celebrates movie's 25th anniversary
- Immigration issues sorted, Guatemala runner Luis Grijalva can now focus solely on sports
- Michelle Obama to narrate audio edition of ‘Where the Wild Things Are’
- Rebecca Loos Claims She Caught David Beckham in Bed With a Model Amid Their Alleged Affair
- Man United pays respects to the late Bobby Charlton with pre-match tributes at Old Trafford
- Why we love Bear Pond Books, a ski town bookstore with a French bulldog 'Staff Pup'
- Gazan refugees stranded in West Bank amid deadly raids, rising settler violence
Ranking
- Intel's stock did something it hasn't done since 2022
- Montana man investigated in disappearance of 14-year-old is arrested on child sex abuse charges
- Netflix's 'Get Gotti' revisits notorious mob boss' celebrity, takedown of 'Teflon Don'
- Delay in possible Israel ground assault provides troops with better prep, experts say
- Civic engagement nonprofits say democracy needs support in between big elections. Do funders agree?
- Maryland Terrapins assisant coach Kevin Sumlin arrested for DUI in Florida
- Next ‘Mission: Impossible’ delayed a year as actors strike drags on
- Miners from a rival union hold hundreds of colleagues underground at a gold mine in South Africa
Recommendation
Residents worried after ceiling cracks appear following reroofing works at Jalan Tenaga HDB blocks
Giannis Antetokoumpo staying in Milwaukee, agrees to three-year extension with Bucks
The 2023 Soros Arts Fellows plan to fight climate change and other global issues with public art
Dwayne The Rock Johnson wants Paris museum to change the skin color of his new wax figure
Retirement planning: 3 crucial moves everyone should make before 2025
Washington state senator Jeff Wilson arrested in Hong Kong for gun possession and granted bail
Fountain electrocution: 1 dead, 4 injured at Florida shopping complex
Atlanta firefighter and truck shortages prompt the city to temporarily close 3 fire stations