From Disability Scoop:
“With
Disabilities ‘Rarely’ Seen, Netflix Commits $100 Million Toward Inclusion”
Netflix is
pledging to do more after a report finds that representation of people with
disabilities and other groups is lacking in its original films and television
shows. The report released late last week was conducted by Stacy Smith at the
University of Southern California’s Annenberg School for Communication and
Journalism who regularly analyzes diversity on screen and was asked by Netflix
to assess its work. Smith and her team reviewed 126 films and 180 series
released in 2018 and 2019 to measure representation by gender, race/ethnicity,
LGBTQ+ and disability.
While the study
gave Netflix good marks on gender equality and for making progress in inclusion
of those from some underrepresented racial and ethnic groups, it found that the
LGBTQ+ community and people with disabilities “rarely” see themselves in
content on the streaming service. Characters with disabilities accounted for
just 5.3% of leads and 4.7% of the main cast in film and series on Netflix, the
study found. When all speaking characters were factored, only 2.1% had
disabilities. This is far short of reflecting the 27.2% of the population who
have disabilities, the report noted. When individuals with disabilities were
shown, they were likely to be male and most were white. Slightly more than half
of these characters had physical disabilities. Researchers observed little
change in representation of people with disabilities between 2018 and 2019,
concluding that “there is room for Netflix to grow in order to depict the full
range of how people experience disability.” Notably, the report found that
strong representation behind the camera among certain groups like women led to
better representation of those groups on screen.
In response,
Netflix said it will establish a fund that will invest $100 million over the
next five years in organizations that help bring underrepresented communities
into the television and film industries and in programs to train and hire new
talent at the company. “This study sets a high bar for the wider industry and
demonstrates how an internal audit is a critical first step toward inclusive
change,” Smith said. Ted Sarandos, co-CEO and chief content officer at Netflix,
said the company is committed to releasing a new version of the inclusion
report every two years through 2026. “By better understanding how we are doing,
we hope to stimulate change not just at Netflix but across our industry more
broadly,” Sarandos said.
^ It would be
great to see Netflix and all the other media outlets show more disabled in the
movies and shows. ^
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