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A group of industry actors, filmmakers, writers, and showrunners has come together to sign an open letter organized by the Inevitable Foundation. They are urging Hollywood to finance and market more projects that accurately portray people with disabilities. Among the signatories are “Coda” director Sian Heder, Alyssa Milano, Ramy Youssef, Rachel Bloom, Marlee Matlin, “Three Body Problem” showrunner Alexander Woo, and “A Quiet Place Part II” star Millicent Simmonds.
The letter also calls for more data collection on content that features individuals with disabilities and ensuring that entertainment venues are accessible to everyone. The Inevitable Foundation actively invests in disabled writers and filmmakers to help them achieve artistic and financial freedom. They aim to use film and television to destigmatize disability and mental health on a global scale.
Read the letter below:
Hey Hollywood,
There is a massive, loyal, and engaged audience of viewers and consumers within the global entertainment landscape who remain entirely underserved. It’s an expansive community that lives everywhere from large coastal cities to rural areas, with wide-ranging political and religious views.
It’s an audience — given its mere scope, collective buying power, and influence — that should have unlimited choices when it comes to quality entertainment. But they have simply been ignored. We’re talking about the Global Disability Audience, which includes more than a billion people worldwide.
For a global industry that focuses so much on box office and streaming profitability, this is a truly puzzling business decision. Over 25% of Americans have a disability, including physical, invisible, and developmental disabilities, neurodiversity, mental health conditions, chronic illnesses, and those who are Deaf, hard of hearing, blind, or low-vision. There are over 20 million U.S. households with at least one disabled person. This massively underserved group deploys $21 billion in discretionary income each year.
And this audience is only growing — Gen Z is 71% less likely to report good mental health compared to Millennials, and one in three 18-24 year olds experience a mental health condition, up from one in four in 2000. But as this audience thinks about what to watch — on television, on streaming platforms, and in movie theaters — their options remain egregiously limited when it comes to stories that both entertain and represent them.
It’s why 66% of audiences, both disabled and non-disabled, are unsatisfied with current representations of disability and mental health in film and television. It’s also why 20% of all adult audiences would subscribe to a new streaming service and go to more movies in theaters if the projects included authentic representations of people with disabilities and mental health conditions.
Given the size of this global audience, you would think that Hollywood would be hugely invested in capturing and entertaining this demographic. You would think that there would be new films and television shows coming out every week that aim to engage and entertain this audience given its scale. But this isn’t even close to being the case. Hollywood, it’s time to Greenlight Disability. Everyone has a role to play:
Engaging the Global Disability Audience doesn’t need to be pushed to your (likely underfunded) DEI department. You don’t need to invest in this audience to check a box, warm people’s hearts, or even because it’s the right thing to do.
This is a highly lucrative audience who is eager to be entertained and has plenty of money to spend. At minimum, investing in the global disability audience simply supports your business objectives.
So what are you waiting for?
Sincerely,
Richie Siegel
Marisa Torelli-Pedevska Co-Founders, Inevitable Foundation
With the support of:
Adam Conover
Aisling Bea
Alexander Woo
Ali Stroker
Alyssa Milano
Ben Watkins
Brandon Sonnier
Carol Barbee
Craig Thomas
Chris Cooper & Marianne Leone
Dara Resnick
David Nutter
Eddy Kitsis
Ginger Gonzaga
Jason Katims
Jack Thorne
Jen Statsky
Jillian Mercado
Jorge Gutierrez
Kiera Allen
Lauren Ridloff
Lauren “Lolo” Spencer
Marlee Matlin
Mickey Sumner
Millicent Simmonds
Nyle DiMarco
Paul W. Downs and Lucia Aniello
Paul Feig
Rachel Bloom
Ramy Youssef
Rick Glassman
Rob Delaney
Samara Weaving
Sammi Haney
Sian Heder
Steve Way
Tim Omundson
Troian Bellisario
Source: Variety