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For Hollywood, diversity and inclusion has become a hot button issue. Studios have discovered that having unique and different voices is good for business. ....
He is calculating and cunning, but also sincere, honorable and, at times, quite funny. Episode four of the series, entitled Terry Thomas, was a particularly emotional experience for actor Michael Greyeyes. Very often people who are businessmen, casino owners or bosses are corrupt and greedy people, he said. With episode four [Sierra Teller Ornelas] and the other writers obliterate that stereotype. For Hollywood, diversity and inclusion has become a hot button issue. In the last few years, the traditionally white industry has begun to institute official initiatives to foster a culture of inclusivity. While some of these goals were created due to public outcry, studios quickly discovered that having these unique and different voices was good for business. ....
In âRutherford Falls,â Jana Schmieding makes most of first major role By Matthew Gilbert Globe Staff,Updated May 13, 2021, 4:00 p.m. Email to a Friend Jana Schmieding (with Ed Helms) as Reagan Wells in Rutherford Falls. Colleen Hayes/Peacock via AP The tone of âRutherford Falls,â the Peacock comedy starring Ed Helms, is gentle and breezy, but the story â a small town faces its historical mistreatment of Native Americans â has deep, dark roots. Some of the early episodes reveal a show still trying to find the right balance between the tone and the story, but by the later half-hours, everything comes together nicely. The show is also historically significant, as a rare Native-themed comedy that features many Native actors and writers. ....
Reginald Cunningham Sierra Teller Ornelas knows how to tell a story. She proved it over the last five years, working as a writer and producer for revered sitcoms like Superstore and Brooklyn Nine-Nine. Now, the Navajo and Mexican American creative is turning to a story close to her heart as co-creator and executive producer of Rutherford Falls. The sharp new Peacock comedy centers Native characters and challenges what we’ve come to accept as the American narrative. Ed Helms stars as museum owner Nathan Rutherford, the namesake of a small northeast town where his family has lived for centuries. His unflappable reverence for this legacy makes him sensitive to even the slightest criticism, so when the city votes to move a statue of his ancestor from a dangerous location, he loses it. “It’s history,” Nathan nobly tells the mayor (Dana L. Wilson). “You can’t change history unless you have a time machine.” Meanwhile, his best friend Reagan Wells ( ....