The Writers Guild of America West has issued an open letter from its committee of black writers, the primary time the guild has launched a press release particularly from one among its committees, that calls on Hollywood and the studios to do extra than simply challenge statements of assist and truly prioritize the hiring of black writers.
The three-page letter penned by WGAW Committee of Black Writers co-chairs Michelle Amor, Hilliard Guess and vice chair of the committee Bianca Sams invokes “The Birth of a Nation” as a logo of generations of oppression in Hollywood and cites a 2020 UCLA Hollywood Diversity Report that claims black writers obtained solely 5.6% of all of the writing jobs amongst 2019 movies.
“Some have tried to blame this on a shortage of Black writers, yet there are at least 808 self-identified Black writers in the Guild; we have been here, ready to work,” the letter reads. “We need to revolutionize the way our industry hires writers. When companies and studios claim to champion diversity but refuse to prioritize hiring Black writers for a writers’ room or to contribute to Black narratives, you are perpetuating a system that either exploits or excludes Black experience and perspective.”
The letter calls for that studios adhere to their statements of assist for black voices and abolish the apply of hiring writers from very unique lists, saying that too typically black writers are thought-about unable to jot down for the mainstream, however white writers are all too continuously referred to as upon to inform black narratives.
“If you only hire other white people you know, you are enabling the spread of unconscious bias and racial inequity in Hollywood. If you don’t know any Black writers, expand your circle,” the letter says. “Your unwillingness to know and work with Black people is part of your unwillingness to humanize us as your equals. This mentality may be subtle in one context, and have the potential to be fatal for us in the next.”
The letter identify drops the numerous studios which have put out statements of assist for the Black Lives Matter motion within the wake of the protests surrounding George Floyd’s dying, however the committee says they’ll be watching intently on the actions Hollywood takes past their statements.
“Hollywood, what you do next is paramount. As the most powerful entertainment industry in the world, we challenge you, the powers that be, those individuals with unmistakable privilege, the elite executives who gave the ok on those statements, to begin instituting real systemic change,” the letter concludes. “Basically, either you commit to a new, institutionalized system of accountability with and to Black writers, or you prove that you’re putting on just another strategic, virtue-signaling performance deemed necessary to survive the times. But you won’t be able to survive without the radical inclusion of Black writers and artists on your sets and in your studios.”
The full textual content of the letter is hooked up right here.
Every Black Director Nominated for an Oscar, From John Singleton to Spike Lee (Photos)
Spike Lee turned solely the sixth black director to obtain an Oscar nomination within the Academy’s historical past for his work on “BlackKklansman.” But up to now, no black filmmaker has gained in that class.
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John Singleton, “Boyz N the Hood” (1991) • Two years after Spike Lee was handed over for a nomination for “Do the Right Thing,” John Singleton turned the primary African American to earn a Best Director nomination for his star-studded drama set in South Central L.A. That yr, Jonathan Demme gained the award for “The Silence of the Lambs.”
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Lee Daniels, “Precious” (2009) • Eighteen years handed earlier than a second African American filmmaker was acknowledged: Lee…