CBS Studios and its parent Paramount have been sued for allegedly carrying diversity quotas that discriminate against straight white men in what may be the opening legal salvo against efforts to boost diversity and inclusion in Hollywood in the wake of the Supreme Court’s decision knocking down affirmative action.
Brian Beneker, a script coordinator for SEAL Team, alleges in a lawsuit filed in California federal court on Wednesday that he was repeatedly denied a staff writer job after the implementation of an “illegal policy of race and sex balancing” that promoted the hiring of “less qualified applicants who were members of more preferred groups,” namely those who identify as minorities, LGBTQ or women. He seeks at least $500,000, as well as a court order making him a full-time producer on the series and barring the further use of discriminatory hiring practices.
Beneker is represented by America First Legal Foundation, a conservative group founded by Stephen Miller, a White House policy advisor under the Trump Administration. The organization has been filing complaints with the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission against major companies, including Morgan Stanley, Starbucks and McDonald’s, over corporate diversity and hiring practices that allegedly run afoul of civil rights laws. CBS, which declined to comment, is believed to be the first company in the entertainment industry in its crosshairs.
The lawsuit was filed following the U.S. Supreme Court’s decision last year striking down race-conscious admissions in colleges and universities in Students for Fair Admissions v. Harvard. In that case, the group that sued claimed a violation of the 14th Amendment’s Equal Protection Clause, which protects against discrimination by the government. Although the ruling is not directly applicable to companies, which are governed by a separate set of federal and state anti-discrimination laws that do not allow employers to consider race in hiring decisions, several legal experts told The Hollywood Reporter to expect a surge of reverse discrimination lawsuits challenging diversity, equity and inclusion programs.
Chief Justice John Roberts wrote in the opinion, “Eliminating racial discrimination means eliminating all of it.”
In the complaint, Beneker, who has worked as a script coordinator for CBS’ SEAL Team since 2017 and also wrote some episodes as a freelance scriptwriter, details instances in which he was allegedly passed up for staff writing positions in favor of Black or women candidates, who he claims were less-experienced than him and often had no writing credits.
When he asked why a Black writer was hired instead of him in 2019, he was told by the showrunner that it was because CBS wanted a minority to satisfy racial quotas for its writers’ rooms, per the complaint. It was allegedly indicated to him that he “did not check any diversity boxes” as a straight, white man.
Since 2020, when he was allegedly assured that he would receive the next available staff writing position, Bedeker says CBS has brought on at least six additional writers, all of whom are women.
“During Season 6, (in approximately May of 2022), two female writer’s assistants, without any writing credits, were hired as staff writers,” states the complaint. “The first of these two hires was black. The second identified as lesbian.”
The lawsuit argues CBS’ hiring practices has “created a situation where heterosexual, white men need ‘extra’ qualifications (including military experience or previous writing credits) to be hired as staff writers when compared to their nonwhite, LGBTQ, or female peers.”
According to the complaint, CBS carries racial quotas. In a 2022 interview, CBS Entertainment Group chief executive George Cheeks allegedly said he set a goal that all writers’ rooms on the network’s primetime series be made up of at least 40 percent minorities for the 2021-22 season. Seventeen of 21 shows hit or exceeded that target, he said.
For the 2022-23 broadcast season, the network said in 2020 that half of all writers must be nonwhite as part of a broad initiative to “more accurately reflect diversity both on-screen and behind-the-camera.”
The complaint brings claims for violations of the Civil Rights Act of 1866, which bars racial discrimination in the making and enforcement of private contracts, and Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, which prohibits employment discrimination based on race, religion and sex, among other things.
The lawsuit further calls into question the legality of diversity, equity and inclusion programs that explicitly account for race, which was on legally tenuous ground even before the Supreme Court’s decision in Students for Fair Admissions v. Harvard. Last year, 13 Republican Attorneys General wrote letters to Fortune 100 companies warning them that several of their efforts to boost diversity are discriminatory. In response, a group of Democrat Attorneys General urged them to “double-down on diversity-focused programs.”
The Equal Employment Opportunity Commission and Department of Justice maintain that Title VII bars discriminating in all actions affecting the terms and conditions of employment, including those falling short of hiring, firing and promotion decisions, wrote EEOC commissioner Andrea Lucas in a Reuters op-ed. The Supreme Court’s ruling could implicate race-conscious corporate DEI initiatives from providing race-restricted access to mentoring, internship or training programs to tying executive or employee compensation to the company achieving certain demographic targets.
A federal judge last year dismissed an investor lawsuit against Starbucks’ board for supporting the company’s diversity, equity and inclusion policies. The complaint targeted a policy aiming to increase minority representation at all corporate levels to at least 30 percent by 2025.
Have any of those attorney generals followed through after every company ignored their sternly worded letter? Of course not. Fucking worthless pieces of shit.
I would like to know how the guy voted. Most of the white male writers that are now complaining are leftists that thought it would not affect them.
They never stop to think that in order to have 50% poc and 50% women out of a team of 10 translates to 3 white women, 2 white alphabet people and 5 poc, there are no straight white men involved.
I care so little about modern entertainment that I want them to keep doubling down on diversity and make as much shit content as possible. They are all leftists anyway.
I remember last time somebody filed similar lawsuit, the guy was actually jewish
Is that a good show? I meant to watch it but got tied up with other shows. Doesn’t surprise me because I remember at the time it was getting bad reviews for being too white or masculine so I need to watch it.
Chris Gore is doing a series on his channel about this topic (racism against whites in Hollywood)
I've seen a bit and thought it was good - will go back and watch it now...
Why should I believe this is anything other than the result of you typing a prompt into an AI text generator?
Source: HW Reporter
Next time just use an archive link
Your link is broken.
Why are they so racist in their recruiting?
Because Special Forces is a meritocracy. And according to the Smithsonian self reliance and meritocracy are white traits
Smithsonian sounds kinda’ based.
Accidentally so.
SEALs have to be able to swim.
In addition to the other answers, white people are more cooperative and bigger risk takers. You want the cooperation because a bunch of retards blazed on testosterone can't execute complex missions. You want the risk taking because nobody who highly values self-preservation is going to drop behind enemy lines.
One pop demonstration of this is black people that laugh at white people wrestling crocodiles or dying to reach the North Pole first or something. Relatable yes, but that's partly why the world's exploratory firsts are mostly white.
Black people take so few risks that Indonesians colonized Madagascar before any Africans got around to it.
Honourable exceptions like Johnny Kim, SEAL, doctor and astronaut.
He's almost as accomplished as that Sins guy