The Humor Mill Sept 2015 | Page 50

This Weeks Star Spotlight focuses on actor, writer and producer Issa Rae, born January 12, 1985. She hails from Potomac, Maryland but calls Southern California home. She’s a Stanford University alum and the daughter of a successful doctor. Her resume screams smart visionary with an eye for specifics leaving no room for reversing her vision - even if it means declining offers from networks. She’s currently signed to UTA, meanwhile trying relentlessly to conceptualize her ideas in hopes of getting picked up by a major television network. She grew up going to an all-white school in Maryland until her family relocated to Los Angeles where she ended up in an all black school. She was known as a black girl who talked and acted white which totally contradicted the typical black girl stereotypes that she was “supposed to” fall under. Because of her early childhood experiences a visionary was born. Rae went on to create an online comedy series called Awkward Black Girl which received an award for best web show and has reached over 20 million views on You Tube. She’s made the Forbes 30 under 30 Entertainment list leaving her wondering why her comedy web series was so successful on YouTube but not as successful in trying to transition to TV. She’s not seeing eye-to-eye with network execs and her pitches are constantly being modified and her ideas become completely reversed from the origin and conception of what she’s trying to offer mainstream television. Awkward Black Girl is based on what it felt like to be the only black girl in Maryland and then to transition to a black community where she was ridiculed for not being black enough. Those experiences and feelings manifested into her ideas for possible TV shows and many web series ideas. The basic focus is on stereotypes in the black community that target women and shed a light on behaviors that she can’t relate to. She’s like a white girl trapped in a black girl’s body. This has given her the podium to voice all the things that “she should be” that she’s actually not. The Misadventures of Awkward Black Girl was her best-selling memoir expressing that for her - black television was a connection to black culture, colloquial speech and tradition, as she was only acquainted with white vernacular. She’s had complications trying to pitch to different networks like HBO and ABC, coming close to working with Chris Rock and even Shonda Rhimes but their direction was different. Networks want seasoned directors and producers. The objective is to create something the network deems as substantial which will increase the chances of being picked up and that’s where Rae fell into the rookie category. The complexity associated with white Hollywood executives is a hardship especially when you’re trying to give black women a different voice other than, loud, angry and stereotypical. My hope is that Issa Rae gives us something distinctive, something Hollywood hasn’t seen yet. I’m counting on her to break down barriers and construct a new trademark in media… because we’re long overdue and we deserve it. On behalf of myself and the HumorMill Magazine we hope to see more of Issa Rae and her comedic and clever storytelling. But in the meantime I’ll continue to admire her reluctance to compromise her vision.