“Abbott Elementary leans into its feel-good credentials without ignoring difficult material.”
Read More“Mr. and Mrs. Smith tackles the intricacies of interracial relationships by showing us tough but open conversations.”
Read More“3 Body Problem’s most prominent deviation from the source material adds inclusion, which pays off creatively and commercially.”
Read More“Three Little Birds spotlights the Windrush Generation and recognizes Caribbean immigrants’ outsized contributions to British culture.”
Read More“I can’t remember the last time I’ve felt so seen by a show, or felt so strongly that watching Beef has helped me to see others.”
Read More“I didn’t expect to see my family’s experiences of Partition reflected in Ms. Marvel.”
Read More“The women of The Terror: Infamy feel clumsily sketched.”
Read More“Watchmen encapsulates the weariness of Black America, our wounds healing just enough for the scabs to be torn off again.”
Read More“What We Do in the Shadows subtly taps into the notion of its vampire characters as immigrants.”
Read More“The unsparing nature of When They See Us has sparked conversations about whether it’s another in a long line of works that rehash Black trauma.”
Read More“I was brought back to my first confrontations with racism, with having someone insist that I was somehow different or inferior.”
Read More“Star Trek has never adequately applied its own philosophy of IDIC—’Infinite Diversity in Infinite Combinations’—to gender and sexuality. Discovery attempts to rectify that.”
Read More“Ramy captures what it’s like to grow up as an Arab Muslim in America while providing a multitude of entry points for other communities.”
Read More“While other shows may cast Black supporting characters, seldom do we see our unique life experiences centered.”
Read More“Not only does One Day at a Time snatch the winning crown for the most inclusive show at Mediaversity, it blows its competition out of the water.”
Read More“Pose delivers a fabulous look at 80s ball culture while breaking ground for trans women, people of color, and the LGBTQ community as a whole.”
Read More“Anissa shines as the first Black lesbian superhero on TV and her significance can’t be overstated.”
Read More“Brooklyn Nine-Nine goes out of its way to speak directly to its audience and say, ‘we see you.’”
Read More“Marvel’s Runaways catapults us into the future, where demographics match those of reality and you can be attracted to whoever the F you want.”
Read More“A departure from many other long-running crime procedurals, Elementary deliberately avoids tired tropes.”
Read More