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Popular
British TV programmes 'too white', feel ethnic Asians
London, July 17, 2008 (IANS)
Most
popular programmes on British television are white-centric and under-represent
ethnic Asian and African minorities, reveals a study by the Equality
and Human Rights Commission. The research finds that Asian and African
viewers feel that despite the growing number of ethnic minorities
living in Britain, they are still under-represented on hit television
shows.
When
non-whites do appear in dramas and soaps, they are often "token"
characters who are stereotyped as Asian shopkeepers, such as the
character Dev in "Coronation Street", and black single
mothers like Denise in "EastEnders". The study was commissioned
by Channel 4 following the "Celebrity Big Brother" race
row last year when Jade Goody and glamour model Danielle Lloyd rounded
on Indian film actress Shilpa Shetty.
Commission
chairman Trevor Phillips says all the evidence shows that television
was still "hideously white where it matters", a reference
to those in senior roles. "Most ethnic minority participants
felt the media had a responsibility to reflect Britain's diversity
across all genres and was failing to do so in three main ways: by
relying on tokenistic and stereotyped representation of characters;
by representing extreme and exaggerated characters; and by failing
to reflect the realities of contemporary ethnic minority culture."
Asian
and African viewers also say they are concerned that white viewers
get the wrong impression of ethnic minority groups because they
are often inaccurately portrayed on screen. One Indian woman tells
researchers: "We would like to see a more realistic view of
Asians. A lot of Asians are professionals and educated and we don't
just work in corner shops."
Muslim
respondents say that a recent episode of "Wife Swap" featured
a Muslim family where the mother was "completely over the top",
while Asian dramas often focussed on arranged marriages.
The
research comes only weeks after Samir Shah, a non-executive director
at the BBC, accused broadcasters of rampant tokenism in their programming,
The Telegraph points out.
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