From Yahoo/Deadline:
“Authentic Portrayal Of
Characters With Disabilities Sees Significant Progress – Study”
In a new study commissioned by
the Ruderman Family Foundation, it was revealed that 22% of all characters with
disabilities on network television and 20% of such characters on streaming
services are portrayed authentically by an actor with the same disability. This
is good news as it shows a significant boost from the Ruderman Family
Foundation’s study from 2016 where 5% of characters on TV were cast
authentically. Even though the needle has moved, the topic of disability
remains largely absent from Hollywood’s diversity conversation. The
Foundation’s new white paper “Authentic Representation in Television 2018”
picks up from the organization’s 2016 paper on employment of actors with
disabilities on TV. The 2016 study was very eye-opening in that it revealed
that despite people with disabilities representing nearly 20% of the U.S.
population, 95% of characters with disabilities on television were played by
able-bodied actors. The 2018 study put a larger sample size under the
microscope than the 206 study. The study examined all TV shows aired in 2018,
including 284 shows across 37 networks and four streaming platforms. According
to the white paper, 55% of network television shows and 42% of shows on
streaming services had characters with disabilities. More than half of these
characters had mental disabilities, a third had physical disabilities and the
rest had cognitive disabilities. Breaking it down: 71% of all authentically
represented characters portrayed physical disabilities, 16% depicted mental
disabilities and 13% represented intellectual disabilities. CBS made it to the
head of the class when it came to authentic casting, with 14 authentic casts.
It shows that the network is walking the walk as they became the first
entertainment company to sign the Ruderman Family Foundation’s pledge to commit
to auditioning actors with disabilities. The CBS series NCIS: New Orleans
received the Foundation’s Seal of Authentic Representation, for its casting of
Daryl “Chill” Mitchell in the role of agent Patton Plame. NBC followed CBS with
eight authentic casts while Sundance Now had five. On the streaming side,
Netflix with eight characters who were authentically represented, followed by
Amazon Prime with three authentic characters. “While we are encouraged with the
entertainment industry’s progress on authentic casting of actors with
disabilities from 2016 to 2018, we believe our study provides Hollywood with
unprecedented empirical evidence that now is the time to offer more unique
narratives and diverse characters in order to foster a more inclusive
landscape,” said Jay Ruderman, President of the Ruderman Family Foundation. “At
a time when entertainment is advocating for inclusion, it is crucial that we
continue to advance the rights of people with disabilities and create more
opportunities for them in television and film.” The study continues the
Foundation’s ongoing efforts to bring awareness of the disabled community in
Hollywood and to include them in the discourse of diversity. At the end of
2019, actors Bryan Cranston, Edward Norton, Mark Ruffalo, Glenn Close, Eva Longoria
were among many actors, producers, writers and directors that signed the
Foundation’s recent open letter which calls on Hollywood executives to create
more opportunities for people with disabilities. The Foundation was honored
with the Media Access Awards last November with the SAG-AFTRA Disability
Awareness Award. Last year, Foundation has awarded TV series Speechless, NCIS:
New Orleans, Special, The OA, Ramy and This Close with its Seal of Authentic
Representation for accurate depictions of people with disabilities. For the
first time, it awarded the Seal to two feature films including Give Me Liberty
and The Peanut Butter Falcon.
^ While it is important to portray
the disabled on TV and in movies it is equally important to do so in a realistic
way. I am glad to hear that there is progress on that front and hope that it
continues to grow. ^
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