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Sep 13, 2021 10 tweets 4 min read Read on X
1/10 It was once a struggle to get Black characters on TV. Yet even today, as streaming services advertise “Black Lives Matter” and “Representation Matters” collections, Black screenwriters often navigate a set of implicit rules. @hannahgiorgis reports: on.theatln.tc/NdmL2GF
2/10 In the 1950s and ’60s, Sammy Davis Jr. and Nat King Cole headlined variety shows. Yet it wasn’t until 1972, when @TheNormanLear and Bud Yorkin launched “Sanford and Son,” that networks tried something more daring, with a show regularly addressing racism.
3/10 “‘Sanford and Son’ and ‘The Jeffersons’ proved that series with predominantly Black casts could be hits,” Giorgis writes. “Yet white executives continued to view Black shows as too much of a gamble.”
4/10 The 1980s produced little programming that focused on Black performers. “The Cosby Show” was radical in its own way—pushing back on the expectation that it be “Black” in a way that conformed to the perceptions of white people, Giorgis writes.
5/10 “The Cosby Show” was criticized for how “unrealistic” it was, reflecting a “damned-if-you-do, damned-if-you-don’t dilemma that ‘Cosby’ writers faced: Be Black, but not too Black. Or: Be Black, but not like that,” Giorgis writes. “White writers were never whipsawed this way.”
6/10 The ‘Cosby’ spinoff “A Different World” went all the places its progenitor wouldn’t, Giorgis writes. It subtly altered “the trajectory of television—both through its handling of race and through the opportunities it gave to Black writers who have shaped the industry.”
7/10 In this new environment, the networks UPN and the WB went on to have evening slates full of Black shows and employed a disproportionate share of the writers of color in the industry. Writers at last felt “the creative freedom that comes from not having to explain yourself.”
8/10 Yet some of the biggest changes in the industry were not tied to a network but to one woman: Shonda Rhimes. For a time, Giorgis writes, Rhimes was producing roughly 70 hours’ worth of television annually and generating more than $2 billion a year for Disney, which owns ABC.
9/10 “And yet Black writers and showrunners say they still hit the same old walls,” Giorgis writes. Issa Rae’s dramedy, “Insecure,” accomplished “the rare feat of being a series that depicts Black life without pathologizing or feeling burdened by it.” Its success wasn’t a given.
10/10 “Decades ago, Black visionaries were up against both market factors and corporate resistance—not a fair fight,” Giorgis writes. “But demographics have changed, and so have public opinion and popular taste.” Read her full story: on.theatln.tc/NdmL2GF

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More from @TheAtlantic

Apr 4, 2023
1/ 55 years ago today, Martin Luther King Jr. was assassinated while on the balcony of his motel room in Memphis.

Writers and thinkers ever since have tried to understand King’s legacy, which has been complicated and confused over half a century: theatlantic.com/projects/king/
2/ Seven days diverted the course of a social revolution and changed America forever.

Our new podcast “Holy Week” tells the story of the fiery, disruptive period following King’s assassination: theatlantic.com/podcasts/holy-…
3/ “The sound bites evoking King are stretched like skin over the bones of existing debate. The figure celebrated looks nothing like the leader who lived—and who was killed—but like a granite-chiseled modern founding father,” Vann R. Newkirk II writes. theatlantic.com/politics/archi…
Read 5 tweets
Mar 11, 2023
People can achieve a singular satisfaction from middle age, writers in the @TheAtlantic have found. And they have some insights on how.
theatlantic.com/newsletters/ar…
Writer Deborah Copaken reflects on lessons learned from her decade-long friendship with Nora Ephron, who “teaches me, by example, how to navigate the postreproductive half of my life.”

theatlantic.com/culture/archiv…
1. Gather friends in your home and feed them. theatlantic.com/culture/archiv…
Read 8 tweets
Mar 8, 2023
1/ The first woman to win the Pulitzer Prize for fiction. The first Black person in Salem, Massachusetts, to formally teach white students. The longest-serving first lady.

To mark #WomensHistoryMonth, we’re sharing essays from women in history whose work appears in our pages:
2/ Charlotte Forten Grimké was an educator and abolitionist who wrote with forceful moral urgency. She was the first Black woman to appear in the pages of The Atlantic.

Read: “Life on the Sea Islands,” May 1864: on.theatln.tc/KN6Tdft
3/ If you know anything about Helen Keller, it's about her experience as a deaf and blind person in America. But Keller’s “writing about other subjects is incandescent,” @elcush once noted.

Read: “Put Your Husband in the Kitchen,” August 1932: on.theatln.tc/8gHsv32
Read 4 tweets
Mar 6, 2023
“For the past three years,” @AdrienneLaF writes, “I’ve been preoccupied with a question: How can America survive a period of mass delusion, deep division, and political violence without seeing the permanent dissolution of the ties that bind us?” on.theatln.tc/7ue6Tlk
In recent years, Americans have contemplated whether we’re moving toward a second Civil War. But what the country is experiencing now—and may continue to experience for a generation or more—is something different: a new phase of domestic terror.
Political violence is all around us, @AdrienneLaF writes. Today, it is “characterized by radicalized individuals with shape-shifting ideologies willing to kill their political enemies.” An excerpt from The Atlanti...
Read 4 tweets
Mar 4, 2023
This Sunday, should you do ... nothing?

Lounging around can free up time for things beyond your to-do list, @IsabelFattal writes. Here’s a reading list about do-nothing time—why we need it, how much of it we need, and the possibilities it creates: on.theatln.tc/MgWZv0U
@IsabelFattal Jason Heller and his wife have an agreement: One day a week, they do absolutely nothing.

In a society obsessed with productivity, this is harder than it should be—but it’s worth it: on.theatln.tc/AgE8VfK
@IsabelFattal Last August, Arthur C. Brooks argued that absolute idleness is harder—but more rewarding—than it seems: on.theatln.tc/nXSPfYm
Read 5 tweets
Feb 25, 2023
As we mark the first anniversary of Russia’s full-scale invasion of Ukraine, revisit George Packer’s October 2022 cover story. He traveled to Ukraine and spoke with people who had rallied to save their nation and defend the values Americans claim to hold. on.theatln.tc/CUB5r7V
"Here, all the complex infighting and chronic disappointments and sheer lethargy of any democratic society ... dissolved, and the essential things—to be free and live with dignity—became clear," Packer writes. on.theatln.tc/CUB5r7V
“It almost seemed as if the U.S. would have to be attacked or undergo some other catastrophe for Americans to remember what Ukrainians have known from the start,” he continues. on.theatln.tc/CUB5r7V
Read 6 tweets

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