In order to be more inclusive, the television network American Broadcasting Company, better known as ABC, is choosing to decline scripts for new programs because they are not diverse enough. This past week Dana Walden, the chairman of entertainment for Walt Disney Television, the parent company of ABC, stated, "For the first time we received some incredibly well-written scripts that did not satisfy our standards in terms of inclusion.” These scripts were rejected because they either did not include a diverse cast or it was not written by people from underrepresented groups.
Last year, ABC released a list of new inclusion standards for future programs. The decision to have new standards came following the Black Lives Matter movement and the death of George Floyd. These new standards are for on and off-camera representation. There are four sections with five to six guidelines in each section. At least three of the guidelines in each section need to be followed for a show to get an opportunity to be greenlit by the network.
The first section pertains to on-screen representation. ABC is requesting that at least 50% of regular and recurring characters or actors must come from underrepresented groups. There should also be meaningful integration of underrepresented groups in the overall themes and narratives of the show’s premise. Section two circles around creative leadership. 50% of the producers, and writing staff or executive story editors must also come from diverse backgrounds. The first two sections guarantee that at least half of everyone acting or developing any given show has to be an underrepresented individual.
Section three is titled “below-the-line” and the guidelines state that half of the entire crew or key roles involved with the project should be underrepresented. The promotion of career progression for one underrepresented crew/team member should now be guaranteed. The last section focuses on industry access and career development.
ABC states that paid employment opportunities like internships should facilitate eligibility for underrepresented individuals. There should be training and skill development opportunities for those in internships as well. These last two sections assure that half of the entire behind-the-scenes employees have to come from diverse backgrounds and that there will be a significant amount of employment opportunities for those who come from underrepresented communities.
In addition to the standards list, ABC Executive Vice President of Development and Content Strategy, Simran Sethi, included a database of diverse and underrepresented employees. The database was included so future showrunners can find cast or crew members that fit the inclusion criteria easily. Sethi also attached a list of vendors that are owned by members of underrepresented groups to show support even outside the acting realm. This gives those who want to have their show on ABC a quick list of people that the network expressly suggests they should hire or work with moving forward.
According to Fox News, Walden admitted that ABC had passed on a high-quality script simply because the show centered around a white family that would have included a diverse cast of neighbors and friends. “Pass. That’s not going to get on the air anymore because that’s not what our audience wants,” Walden said during the panel discussion.
"well-written script" just means very woke but to many white people
It was alright for 2 seasons. After Fentanyl Floyd though, it went full retard with the BLM messaging and nearly halved its viewership.
It started tanking hard the moment the second season started and Nolan's replacement CO showed up [because the previous actress was fired for making a 'metoo' accusation against one of the black supporting actors after a fling/relationship they had], checked out an automatic rifle, then opened fire with it on a bunch of random gangbangers.
It's been mentioned before that;
Said rifle isn't automatic IRL.
No sane cop would fire a weapon like that under the conditions they were in.
No sane PPD would give a random cop, golden ticket or not, a fully automatic rifle for a normal day patrol.
On top of all that the woman was an absent mother who broke her restraining order to see her daughter at the end of the same episode [the first of the second season], got chewed out by the father who had been raising the daughter single handedly at this point, and still she had the fucking audacity to say she was going to "fight for her kid" when she left them both in the fucking first place!
Were I being generous I'd call her a massive cunt but she lacks both the depth and warmth. She's just a horrible person that reflects all too many writers and woketivists these days.