Discover Yahoo! With Your Friends

Explore news, videos and much more based on what your friends are reading and watching. Publish your own activity and retain full control.

To get started, first

YOUR FRIENDS' ACTIVITY

    Diverse Web series grows through social media

    WASHINGTON (AP) — After growing tired of watching stereotypes of people of color on U.S. television screens, Issa Rae created her own vision of reality with "The Mis-Adventures of Awkward Black Girl."

    The Web-based show follows J, played by Rae, and her mishaps and successes in work and love.

    "The Web series came about because I really didn't see anybody like me on the screen, nobody that I could relate to," said Rae, the show's producer, writer and director. "There's just so many limited archetypes for black females in particular, and just people of color in general, and it's frustrating to look at the screen and only be able to relate to people like Tina Fey or Amy Poehler, people who don't look like me."

    Since the series first posted online in February, the debut episode has garnered more than 240,000 hits. Subsequent episodes have received more than 100,000 hits and 1,000 viewer comments. Nearly 17,000 people are dedicated to the show's Facebook page. Rae said she and co-producer Tracy Oliver are packaging "Awkward Black Girl" as a half-hour comedy to sell to a cable network but are strongly thinking about keeping it online to build the audience and maintain stronger contact with viewers.

    "Social media is what made the show honestly," Rae said. "Had it not been for social media, this show just wouldn't have been what it is today. I couldn't have done this 10 years ago."

    Susan Fales-Hill, who produced and wrote for the long-running NBC situation comedy "A Different World," called Rae's work fresh, incisive, and non-stereotypical.

    "She is showing an educated, African-American woman leading an integrated life and a professional woman with friends of many different nationalities and backgrounds, and just trying to make her way," Fales-Hill said.

    She said Rae's guerrilla approach to TV making is brilliant and an inspiration to veterans in the industry like her.

    "A lot of us came up during a time when there was a studio system, more jobs and you came up through the ranks," Fales-Hill said. "So for us, it's a culture shock. ... I find it very liberating that she has created her own show. She's definitely making a lot of us think about how we can do things and how much more aggressive we should be."

    Rae, 26, born Jo-Issa Rae Diop, created the concept for the show two years ago while on a public theater fellowship in New York. A Los Angeles, California, native, she didn't know anyone in New York, and that provided many awkward experiences. After returning to the West Coast, Rae gathered a few friends to help her begin shooting the series with her own camera equipment in January.

    "I knew if I didn't shoot it myself it was never going to get done," said Rae, who attended Stanford University and the New York Film Academy in Los Angeles.

    Rae recruited her friend Andrew Allan James to star as A, her annoying co-worker and admirer. The diverse cast now includes J's best friend CeCe, an Indian-American, played by Sujata Day, and her love interests White J, played by Lyman Johnson, and Fred, an African-American, played by Madison T. Shockley III.

    "Diversity is important to the series just because it exists in my life," Rae said. "In real life, I do happen to have a Bengali-American best friend."

    As the show's fan base has grown, so has its production. By episode four, Oliver, who plays J's co-worker and rival Nina, joined in as a producer and helped pull together a full crew for the show. The episodes grew from about four minutes to 12.

    After episode six, Rae and Oliver, former Stanford classmates, realized they could no longer afford to fund the series. Rae, on a temporary worker's salary, said she could not cover the 12-hour-day shoots and production costs.

    The two had received a couple emails from people offering to donate to the show, so they decided to start an official campaign for viewers to donate through the online fundraising platform Kickstarter.com. By the end of day one, Rae said the show had received $4,000.

    "It was just overwhelming," she said. "We just knew that we had something on our hands and that people really believed in our project and that was just extremely touching."

    After about a month, the show had more than $56,000 from nearly 2,000 donors.

    Since "Awkward Black Girl" launched, Rae has signed with United Talent Agency and 3 Arts Entertainment. She hopes her success will lead to more opportunities for minorities to tell their stories.

    "I think it sends a message to mainstream media that we don't have to have these white male and female leads for everybody to relate to them," Rae said. "It's sort of unfair to think that, so I hope that this show influences future casting decisions just based off what we've been able to do so far. "

    ____

    Online:

    http://www.awkwardblackgirl.com

     

    26 comments

    • Natalie G  •  5 mths ago
      Yayyyy...for ABG I love this show and am so happy that news of it has hit the mainstream. The more fans hopefully will encourage someone to pick this show up "QUICK"..I'm awkward too...lol
    • AskWho  •  5 mths ago
      lol
    • Me  •  5 mths ago
      Hi babygirl, I am Caribbean/West Indian woman living in the Caribbean and babygirl is an endearment - take it to Oprah maybe she can help to host the show on her network
    • Persephinae  •  5 mths ago
      Good for you! People of any race or color should not have to buy in or invest themselves in old outdated stereotypes, and Hollywood needs to embrace the new century and this funny thing called the "internet" :D
    • A Yahoo! User  •  5 mths ago
      Show is hilarious. Believe it or not, not every minority wants to be a White person. I'm just saying....
    • Anony.  •  5 mths ago
      This show is f***ing amazing.
      -Awkward White Girl
    • bignick  •  5 mths ago
      DYNOMITE! I say this tongue in cheek. It sounds so refreshing to hear of this kind of program, removed from the Hollywood templates that most entertainment seems to be based on. I will be looking for it online asap.
    • trevina  •  5 mths ago
      I really like this show. Yes the "I don't see anyone like myself on TV" may seem redundant but it is necessary to describe the disparity between representation of black people vs. white people in the media. Negative stereotypes abound, but there are little no opportunities for black women like Issa Rae to showcase their talent, unless the are watered down, depicted as an indigent or a crackhead, or non-existent."Webisodes" is the new wave with YouTube as its spear-head. I am glad black communities are tapping into that, because mainstream media is dead.
    • Saba  •  5 mths ago
      Love this show so much. Hope everyone at ABG has even more success.
    • FED up with feds  •  5 mths ago
      the only way to make a stereotype outdated is to not be a stereotype
    • KLS  •  5 mths ago
      This show is perfect. There are so many of us that relate to it. Other races actually think all Black women are like the ones on tv, the news, music videos, and Tyler Perry movies...lol There's millions of us so I don't understand how anyone could think we could all be the same.
    • Eliza Roussinos  •  5 mths ago
      nice article overall
    • Eliza Roussinos  •  5 mths ago
      super nice stuff
    • fgh  •  5 mths ago
      nice
    • Vicki C  •  5 mths ago
      You know I am so tired of "didn't see anybody like me". Well, guess what? I am a 61 year old, white, non-practicing lesbian, over-weight, out of shape woman doing social service type work, living with 112 elderly and disabled folks. Now you tell me, does that description fit anybody you see on television? No it doesn't and that's just the way it is. I do not feel the compelling need to produce a show about me and others like me. So please if you want to be on television and you have the talent then do it and stop with the.."didn't see anybody like me". I am so tired of that mantra,
    • fretsweeper  •  5 mths ago
      Great stuff. As a Black American metal guitarist, I can totally relate to this. We are few!!
    • America  •  5 mths ago
      I , guess nobody could relate to the Cosby show .....How many year ago was that on ??/ Everybody watched the Cosby's ....A wonderful role model ... I , guess Oprah doesn't look like her either ....Why , does everything have to be about color ????? BET has plenty of shows also .
    • KalaG  •  5 mths ago
      My favorite show right now! TEAM FRED! Twitter @KG1913
    • Malaka  •  5 mths ago
      This show is awesome. That's real life!
    • Vee Bee  •  5 mths ago
      This is amazing! Congrats to the ABG crew! I hope that the show stays true to form once you guys do get a tv deal. Rest assure I will never miss a show!
    [ [ [['Dekraai', 10]], 'http://news.yahoo.com/photos/mourners-remember-seal-beach-shooting-victims-1318620627-slideshow/', 'Click image to see more photos', 'http://l.yimg.com/a/p/us/news/editorial/3/2c/32c8e92d889f42edb719cb5257afdf4e.jpeg', '461', ' ', 'Reuters/Lori Shepler', ], [ [['iPhone 4SXXXXXXX', 11]], 'http://news.yahoo.com/photos/thousands-line-up-for-apple-s-iphone-4s-1318602841-slideshow/', 'Click image to see more photos', 'http://l.yimg.com/a/p/us/news/editorial/f/4f/f4f15e8f6f323f5386dc9fdf9e15dca8.jpeg', '500', ' ', 'AP/Kirsty Wigglesworth', ] ]
    [ [ [['xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx', 11]], '27013743', '0' ], [ [['keyword', 9999999999999999999999999999999999999999999999999999999]], 'videoID', '1', 'overwrite-pre-description', 'overwrite-link-string', 'overwrite-link-url' ] ]
    Loading...