taste_is_sweet: (Owen is Screaming)
taste_is_sweet ([personal profile] taste_is_sweet) wrote2011-07-01 12:34 am

It's not SyFy -- It's the system.

A few minutes ago, my darling husband started talking to me from where he was reading Entertainment Weekly in the bedroom. He wanted to let me know about a new show on SyFy about The X-Men super-powered crime fighters called Alphas, because apparently Callum Keith Rennie is going to be in it (it looks like he'll be a reoccurring character, which most likely means he'll be a villain, because that's how SyFy rolls).

I asked Dom how many characters were in it and he said five. Then I said that without reading the article I could tell him how the team would look:

The leader would be a white male
There would be two other white guys on the team
There would be one black guy
There would be one woman, possibly of Asian descent

Turns out I was wrong--the female team member was played by a an American of Middle Eastern descent. The magazine had also made a mistake in that the cast has six members, not five, which naturally means there can be another female. She's white, of course.

I was surprised, though, to see that the Professor X analog of the team is a Dr. Rosen, because as far as I know that's a Jewish name and I'd been thinking that the Dr. Zimmerman of Sanctuary was just a fluke. Then again they're both doctors, right? You wouldn't want, say, the Bad-Ass sniper dude to be Jewish. Because then you'd have to set the show in Israel.

Much as I honestly applaud SyFy for being brave enough to have a character who, based on her last name, could possibly be Muslim (not to mention how nice it is to see Jewish surnames), I still think there's a big damn problem when I can guess the ethnic and gender makeup of the cast almost exactly based exclusively on knowing that it's an action show and the number of team members.

And while the last nails in the coffin of my love for SyFy were brutally hammered when they chose to cancel SGA for the horrendously racist and misogynistic casting and character choices of Stargate: Universe, I will say that I know they're not the only network that constantly uses these kind of ratios for their action teams. I don't want to keep picking on SyFy, but Stargate: Atlantis and Stargate: SG-1 were perfect examples of this. So is Hawai'i 5-0. There's always a bit of leeway as to the background of the female character if you already have a male PoC on the team, and if you have a team of three than the woman will most likely be the PoC as well. SyFy (sorry, SyFy! But seriously, you keep asking for it) did this with Being Human; I'm afraid I don't know about the cast from the original UK production.

Actually, I do want to pick on SyFy. After reading the cast descriptions for Alphas, it turns out that (of course!) the Really Strong Guy is black, the Sniper Dude (God forbid he not be a dude!) is named Cameron Hicks--seriously, does SyFy ration names or something? Or is the constant repetition some kind of in-joke?--the female character I mentioned earlier is described as 'a pretty girl in her twenties' (emphasis mine). The other woman is--OMG I SO CALLED IT!--basically a super-sexy, manipulative bitch ([livejournal.com profile] springwoof: she's a charmer, but ours is cooler). The youngest guy on the team is not quite the technopath I thought he'd be, but he still does shit with radio, television and cell-phone frequencies. He also seems to have an Autism Spectrum Disorder by the way he's described, but I'll bet the producers didn't want to out-and-out say so in order to not have to deal with anything approaching a real Autism Spectrum Disorder.

Way to go with the originality, SyFy! You keep pushing those boundaries, you edgy, outside-the-box, imagining greater network, you! ::golf clap::

I know I'm not the only one on LJ who's gotten more than a little bored and sick of this. It's not just the predictability, it's the fact that it's all so damn predictable. Why can't a team of five have four women and one man, with a female leader? Why do most of the characters in pretty much any show ever on a major network have to be white? It's tiring and it's sad and it's gotten to the point where looking at the new shows advertised on TV or in my husband's Entertainment Weekly is just discouraging.

I'm sure that at least some of the new network shows promised this fall will be as fantastic as the glossy photo ads and the previews claim, but I'm voting with my eyes and I'm not going to watch any of them. The stories may be different, but the faces are way too much the same.

[identity profile] green-grrl.livejournal.com 2011-07-01 04:48 pm (UTC)(link)
YES. The only thing I hate more than seeing the cast lineup of two white male leads + token POC/female sidekicks is seeing a cast lineup that's just flat-out all white male. ARGH.

[identity profile] taste-is-sweet.livejournal.com 2011-07-01 07:03 pm (UTC)(link)
I haven't seen a cast that's all white males in awhile, at least, but it might just be that we're not watching the same shows...

ETA: But I hear you. Boy, do I hear you. It makes me wish I had any power in the TV industry at all.
Edited 2011-07-01 19:05 (UTC)

[identity profile] green-grrl.livejournal.com 2011-07-02 12:14 am (UTC)(link)
I watched the premiere of Trust Me, because I was happy to see Will McCormack back on TV, but I hated it. In a Chicago advertising agency, the plot was all white guys in power (and not even Italian or Polish--in Chicago, mind you--straight WASP), one strident woman trying to break into their club (read: shrewish for "humor"), and all the extras were white. (Well, there was one black guy in the very first scene, but when I went to IMDB afterwards to find out who that unicorn was, he didn't even rate a credit.)

Shortly after that, the ads for White Collar started springing up, with ... two white guys, and I just couldn't go there. I know it's popular on my flist, and I've heard there is one character's wife and one black guy, but the promotions never showed them.

[identity profile] taste-is-sweet.livejournal.com 2011-07-02 12:36 am (UTC)(link)
Oh, yeah, White Collar! I'm sorry--I didn't know about Trust Me and I've never actually seen White Collar, and Elizabeth (the white wife of one of the white guys) is in so much fic I was certain she had to be a major character in the show. Hopefully.

There definitely does seem to be at least one CoC, but like you I don't know how often he or she or they might appear.

Unfortunately, I'm so much more interested in the 'team' shows like I wrote about that I don't even know how many or few other shows have Characters of Color in them. Of course, if the shows I do know about are any indication, than I'd say not many. :(

[identity profile] green-grrl.livejournal.com 2011-07-02 01:00 am (UTC)(link)
The only show I can think of off the top of my head that does casting well is Gray's Anatomy. Races, genders, ages, sexual identities—you name it, it's all mixed in at all levels from surgeon on down. And it's an ensemble "soap opera," so it's not just one or two faces up front plus the sidekicks. Hospital soap opera isn't really my kind of show, so I haven't watched a lot of it, but I wish everyone was casting this way. Other than a slightly higher proportion of "Hollywood beautiful" faces, it looks like walking into the hospital down the street from me.

[identity profile] taste-is-sweet.livejournal.com 2011-07-02 05:05 am (UTC)(link)
That would be cool. But yeah--I don't like soap operas, either. Why can't I get a cool adventure-type show where the characters look like the people I see in the local Supermarket?

[identity profile] green-grrl.livejournal.com 2011-07-02 05:28 am (UTC)(link)
The Brits are often better, at both the race thing and the "regular looking people" thing. Idris Elba is heading a police drama (very intense, very good) called Luther. First season was six episodes. Second season has just started, but I'm going to wait until it finishes before watching, or the suspense will kill me. :D