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Freakshow
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Forum Icon Join Date: Feb 01, 2008
Location: Brooklyn, NY
Posts: 57,020
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Rachel Lindsay says She's Ready to Leave "Bachelor" Franchise over Lack of Diversity
"The Bachelorette's" Rachel Lindsay is Ready to Leave the Franchise if Changes Aren't Made: "We Still Don't Have the Diversity This Show Needs"
by Dave Nemetz June 8, 2020 Former "Bachelorette" star Rachel Lindsay is making headlines for declaring she’ll quit the franchise if it doesn’t address its lack of diversity — and now she’s explaining her stance. In a blog post on her personal website on Monday, Lindsay — who vied for Nick Viall’s heart on Season 21 of "The Bachelor" before becoming the first African-American "Bachelorette" in franchise history — began by saying being on "The Bachelor" “was a fun and fulfilling experience” and that she agreed to be "The Bachelorette" because “I wanted to be a trailblazer in this franchise to diversify the lead role.” But nearly four years later, she says, “we still don’t have the diversity that this show needs, and that our audience deserves.” (TVLine has reached out to ABC for a response to Lindsay’s comments.) She added that on "The Bachelor", “people of color become placeholders as the token person of color to add some flavor” to their seasons, and she also took herself to task for not speaking up enough. “I have not been loud enough on the deep-rooted, 18-year systemic problems in this franchise… I have come to the conclusion that if changes are not made on the inside and outside of the franchise, I will dissociate myself from it.” Lindsay calls on the franchise to “cast leads that are truly interested in dating outside of their race,” take action to rectify the lack of diversity, hire more diverse producers “to make your contestants of color feel more comfortable,” stop creating “problematic storylines” for people of color and make a statement acknowledging the franchise’s systemic racism. To back up that last charge, Lindsay cites a number of quotes from producers and executives, including "Bachelor" creator Mike Fleiss admitting that the lower ratings for Lindsay’s "Bachelorette" season “revealed something about our fans.” After pointing out that if the NFL can apologize for past mistakes, “the Bachelor franchise can most certainly follow suit,” Lindsay concluded by saying the upcoming best-of series The Bachelor: The Greatest Seasons — Ever! “will weekly highlight the very thing that is wrong with this franchise.” https://tvline.com/2020/06/08/the-ba...ement-leaving/ |
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#2 |
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Member
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Join Date: Jan 09, 2001
Posts: 125,178
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Former Bachelor producer claims the franchise avoided diversity: Women with afros or braids wouldn't be cast
In an open letter to ABC, ex-producer Jazzy Collins, who joined The Bachelor franchise with Rachel Lindsay's Bachelorette season, says that the series wouldn’t look at casting men or women of color beyond “the token Black person, Asian person or Latinx person to satisfy what you believe to be the needs of the viewers.” Collins adds she didn't see any diversity changes after Lindsay's casting. “My hope was that having a racially diverse cast of gentlemen would be an important milestone that would continue into the future," she wrote. "That was not the case. Your show has white-washed for decades, inside and out. Your head of post-production is white. Your casting director is white. Your executive in charge is white. I am calling on you to select a diverse cast and production team for season 25 of The Bachelor and moving forward. Not only is it important to have a diverse cast reflect what the rest of America looks like, it’s important for the production and casting teams to be able to share the same experiences as the cast members.” |
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#3 |
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Freakshow
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Forum Icon Join Date: Feb 01, 2008
Location: Brooklyn, NY
Posts: 57,020
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#4 |
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Freakshow
Moderator
Forum Icon Join Date: Feb 01, 2008
Location: Brooklyn, NY
Posts: 57,020
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"The Bachelorette" Star Rachel Lindsay, Franchise's First Black Lead, Says She's Ready to Cut Ties Amid Chris Harrison Controversy: "I Can't Take It Anymore"
by Dave Nemetz February 12, 2021 "The Bachelorette" alum Rachel Lindsay, who became the ABC reality franchise’s first Black lead, now says she won’t renew her "Bachelor" contract when it expires, as the fallout continues from a current "Bachelor" contestant’s controversial photos and host Chris Harrison’s response to them. “I’m f–king tired. I’m exhausted. I have truly had enough,” Lindsay said on Friday’s episode of her Higher Learning podcast with Van Lathan. “How much more do I want to be affiliated with this?… I said I was gonna leave if they didn’t have leads of color. Okay, they did that, and they made some other changes. They hired a diversity consultant. Who didn’t attend the class? Did Chris Harrison not sit through that?… I can’t take it anymore. I’m contractually bound in some ways. But when it’s up, I am too.” https://tvline.com/2021/02/12/the-ba...l-kirkconnell/ |
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#5 |
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Freakshow
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Forum Icon Join Date: Feb 01, 2008
Location: Brooklyn, NY
Posts: 57,020
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Rachel Lindsay sat down with Billy Bush Monday to talk about the aftermath of her interview with “The Bachelor” host Chris Harrison regarding contestant Rachael Kirkconnell, which led to Chris saying he would be temporarily stepping away from the franchise.
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#6 |
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Member
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Join Date: Jan 09, 2001
Posts: 125,178
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The Bachelor is embroiled in another racism controversy because it's "a racist television program"
"Off the top of my head, here’s a bunch of racist stuff that’s happened in the Bachelor Cinematic Universe," says Ali Barthwell. "The casting of racist contestants; the casting of racist contestants on seasons with leads of color; going 24 seasons before having a Black man as the Bachelor; going 12 seasons before having a Black woman as the Bachelorette; casting entire seasons of both shows without contestants of color; casting token contestants of color; pitting contestants of color against racist contestants and encouraging drama between them; sending a racist on a two-on-one date with a Black man in the f*cking woods; letting white contestants use racist language to describe contestants of color they didn’t like; painting the racist actions of racist contestants as 'personality conflicts'; the host of the show saying things like 'woke police' on television where people could see him; not protecting or standing behind contestants or leads of color when they were being targeted for racist harassment online; painting the life experiences of contestants of color as exotic, calamitous, or ungraspable; relying on stereotypes about people of color as part of their storytelling. Did I forget anything?" Barthwell points out The Bachelor has responded to the latest controversy by doing what it always does: making "performative gestures of solidarity, increasing the number of people of color on the show without supporting them, and prioritizing the feelings and safety of their white contestants...I’m sure Rachael (Kirkconnell) didn’t intend to do something racist (over and over), and I’m sure Chris Harrison didn’t intend to mansplain and whitesplain racism to Rachel Lindsay. I’m sure the producers didn’t intend to create a racist television program. Who does? I’m sure even the people who made all of those racist terrorist stereotypes on 24 were trying to have fun and get those residual checks. But when you do something racist, your intention doesn’t matter, your impact does. And the impact of all these actions is that The Bachelor is a racist television program. You could make the argument, Well, what television show isn’t? They don’t have nearly enough characters of color on Girls, Sex and the City, or Friends despite being set in New York City, Earth. But when you make a racist television program, you have to be accountable for the impact of putting something racist out into the world. So far, Chris Harrison and Rachael have put out a few anemic iPhone Notes-app statements that barely acknowledge the problem, let alone lay out a path for accountability. Chris Harrison has committed to 'stepping back,' but what does that mean? For how long? What is he doing to confront his racism? What is Rachael doing to educate her family and friends so that if she ends up with Matt, he won’t be walking into a racist environment?" ALSO:
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