A USA Today’s article discusses current interracial relationship trends on television and the minimal reaction to them:
Interracial pairings suddenly are integral to several of today’s top-rated TV shows, including Grey’s, Lost, My Name Is Earl and ER.
But these on-screen pairings no longer draw the kind of attention and reaction they did in the ’60s and ’70s. Romances between people of different colors are being handled more offhandedly, with race being neither an issue nor much of a plot point.
and
“The reality is that interracial couples still deal with discrimination and hate,” says Carmen Van Kerckhove, co-director of New Demographic, a diversity training company. “It’s a positive thing that we’re seeing less of a tragic element. Television models for us what we should think about people, really determines our taboos and what’s acceptable. The more people see positive and normal representations, that will lessen the fear and taboo.”
and
In real life, the gap slowly is narrowing. According to the most recent Census, interracial marriages grew from less than 1% in 1970 to nearly 6% in 2000. And as more of the world becomes a melting pot, interracial relationships have popped up more frequently on TV as well, though often tangentially. Some examples:
• Debra Messing’s Grace dated guest star Gregory Hines on Will & Grace in 2000.
• David Schwimmer’s Ross character fell for Aisha Tyler’s Charlie on Friends in 2003.
• Gary Dourdan’s Warrick has a history with Marg Helgenberger’s Catherine on CSI.
So as the TV landscape has evolved, the issue now is less of whether mixed couples are featured on top shows, but when, how and if the writers will make their race part of the story line.
Read the article in its entirety.
