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Perfectly Imperfect: 6 Layered Black Women Moving TV Forward

Respectability has been a pillar of Black American culture since Emancipation. Since Black people arrived on the shores of America, we have been subjected to hardships and cruelties based solely on our skin color. For centuries we’ve combated horrible stereotypes in our everyday lives and American popular culture. For Black women, in particular, being anything other than docile and likable meant that you could be seen as masculine, mean, overly sexual, asexual, and conniving. These terms were weaponized against Black people by outsiders and insiders like W.E.B Dubois, who touted his talented tenth, the most educated of the race, as the epitome of “good” Blackness and the embattled Bill Cosby with his “perfect” portrayal of the Black family in “The Cosby Show.”

Though respectability has been lauded as a tool for full citizenship in the Black community, it’s a falsehood. More than that, the performance of likability is exhausting. It forces a constant state of people-pleasing, one that often requires self-betrayal. Respectability won’t cause those who cling to their hatred, anti-Blackness, and racism to throw away their long-seated feelings of anger and disgust. It certainly won’t alleviate misogynoir. 

Continue reading at Indiewire.

tags: Indiewire, Black Women, TV, Riches, Rap Sh!t, P-Valley, Harlem, Run the World, Insecure
categories: Culture, Film/TV
Friday 02.03.23
Posted by Aramide Tinubu
 

'Riches' Creator And Cast Dive Into Prime Video's Deliciously Bingeable Black Family Drama

Written and created by Abby Ajayi, Prime Video’s Riches is a delicious and highly bingeable global drama series. The show follows Nina Richards (Deborah Ayorinde), whose carefully curated world in Brooklyn comes crashing around her when she learns that her estranged father, Stephen Richards (Hugh Quarshie), has died unexpectedly. Convinced by her brother Simon (Emmanual Imani) to attend their father’s funeral in the U.K., Nina realizes that the late mogul has left more than a few loose ends. 

Upon landing in the U.K. and encountering their hostile stepmother, Claudia (Sarah Niles), and half-siblings, Gus (Ola Orebiyi), Alesha (Adeyinka Akinrinade), and Wanda (Nneka Okoye), Nina and Simon learn that their father has left his beauty empire, Flair & Glory in their hands. What happens next is more than any of the Richards — especially Nina could have expected. 

Continue reading at Shadow and Act.

tags: Riches, Prime Video, Deborah Ayorinde, Abby Ajayi
categories: Culture, Film/TV
Monday 12.12.22
Posted by Aramide Tinubu
 

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