The data behind Hollywoods sexism Stacy Smith

Today, I want to tell you
about a pressing social issue.

Now, it’s not nuclear arms,

it’s not immigration,

and it’s not malaria.

I’m here to talk about movies.

Now, in all seriousness,
movies are actually really important.

In film, we can be wildly entertained,

and we can also be transported
through storytelling.

Storytelling is so important.

Stories tell us what societies value,

they offer us lessons,

and they share and preserve our history.

Stories are amazing.

But stories don’t give everyone

the same opportunity
to appear within them,

particularly not stories

compartmentalized
in the form of American movies.

In film, interestingly enough,

females are still erased and marginalized

in a lot of our stories.

And I learned this for the first time
about 10 years ago

when I did my first study
on gender role in G-rated films.

Since then, we’ve conducted
more than 30 investigations.

My team is tired.

And I’ve committed my life

as researcher and activist

to fighting the inclusion crisis

in Hollywood.

So today, what I’d like to do
is tell you about that crisis.

I want to talk about
gender inequality in film.

I want to tell you how it is perpetuated,

and then I’m going to tell you
how we’re going to fix it.

However, one caveat before I begin:

my data are really depressing.

So I want to apologize in advance,

because I’m going to put you all
in a really bad mood.

But I’m going to bring it up at the end,

and I’m going to present a silver lining

to fix this mess that we’ve been in

for a very, very long time.

So, let’s start with the gravity
of the situation.

Each year, my research team
examines the top 100 grossing films

in the United States.

What we do is we look at every speaking
or named character on-screen.

Now, to count in one of my investigations,

all a character has to do is say one word.

This is a very low bar.

(Laughter)

Thus far, we’ve looked at 800 movies,

from 2007 to 2015,

cataloguing every speaking character
on-screen for gender, race, ethnicity,

LGBT and characters with a disability.

Let’s take a look
at really some problematic trends.

First, females are still
noticeably absent on-screen in film.

Across 800 movies
and 35,205 speaking characters,

less than a third of all roles
go to girls and women.

Less than a third!

There’s been no change from 2007 to 2015,

and if you compare our results

to a small sample of films
from 1946 to 1955,

there’s been no change
in over a half of a century.

Over half of a century!

But we’re half of the population.

Now, if we look at this data
intersectionally,

which has been a focus of today,

the picture becomes even more problematic.

Across the top 100 films
of just last year,

48 films didn’t feature one black
or African-American speaking character,

not one.

70 films were devoid of Asian
or Asian-American speaking characters

that were girls or women.

None.

Eighty-four films didn’t feature one
female character that had a disability.

And 93 were devoid of lesbian, bisexual
or transgender female speaking characters.

This is not underrepresentation.

This is erasure,

and I call this
the epidemic of invisibility.

Now, when we move
from prevalence to protagonist,

the story is still problematic.

Out of a hundred films last year,

only 32 featured a female lead
or colead driving the action.

Only three out of a hundred films

featured an underrepresented
female driving the story,

and only one diverse woman

that was 45 years of age or older
at the time of theatrical release.

Now let’s look at portrayal.

In addition to the numbers you just saw,

females are far more likely
to be sexualized in film

than their male counterparts.

Matter of fact, they’re about
three times as likely

to be shown in sexually
revealing clothing,

partially naked,

and they’re far more likely to be thin.

Now, sometimes, in animation,
females are so thin

that their waist size approximates
the circumference of their upper arm.

(Laughter)

We like to say that these gals
have no room for a womb

or any other internal organ.

(Laughter)

Now, all joking aside,

theories suggest, research confirms,

exposure to thin ideals
and objectifying content

can lead to body dissatisfaction,
internalization of the thin ideal

and self-objectification
among some female viewers.

Obviously, what we see on-screen

and what we see in the world,

they do not match.

They do not match!

Matter of fact,
if we lived in the screen world,

we would have a population
crisis on our hands.

So, as soon as I recognized
these patterns,

I wanted to find out why,

and it turns out that there are
two drivers to inequality on-screen:

content creator gender
and misperceptions of the audience.

Let’s unpack them really quick.

If you want to change
any of the patterns I just talked about,

all you have to do
is hire female directors.

Turns out, the female directors

are associated with,
in terms of short films and indie films,

more girls and women on-screen,

more stories with women in the center,

more stories with women
40 years of age or older on-screen,

which I think is good news for this crowd.

More underrepresented –

(Laughter)

Sorry.

(Laughter)

Sorry but not sorry.

More underrepresented characters
in terms of race and ethnicity,

and most importantly,

more women working behind the camera

in key production roles.

Easy answer to the problems
that we just talked about.

Or is it?

It’s actually not.

800 films, 2007-2015,

886 directors.

Only 4.1 percent are women.

Only three are African-American or black,

and only one woman was Asian.

So why is it so difficult

to have female directors

if they’re part of the solution?

Well, to answer this question,

we conducted a study.

We interviewed dozens of industry insiders

and asked them about directors.

Turns out, both male
and female executives,

when they think director,

they think male.

They perceive the traits of leadership

to be masculine in nature.

So when they’re going to hire a director

to command a crew, lead a ship,

be a visionary or be General Patton,

all the things that we’ve heard –

their thoughts and ideations pull male.

The perception of director or a leader

is inconsistent
with the perception of a woman.

The roles are incongruous,

which is consistent with a lot of research
in the psychological arena.

Second factor contributing
to inequality on-screen

is misperceptions of the audience.

I don’t need to tell this crowd:

50 percent of the people
that go to the box office and buy tickets

are girls and women in this country.

Right?

But we’re not perceived to be a viable
or financially lucrative target audience.

Further, there’s some misperceptions

about whether females can open a film.

Open a film means that if you
place a female at the center,

it doesn’t have the return on investment

that if you place a male
at the center of a story does.

This misperception is actually costly.

Right?

Especially in the wake
of franchise successes

like “The Hunger Games,”

“Pitch Perfect”

or that small little indie film,
“Star Wars: The Force Awakens.”

Our own economic analyses show
that gender of the lead character

doesn’t play a role in economic success
in the United States.

But what does?

Production costs alone

or in conjunction with how widely
a film is distributed in this country.

It’s not the gender of the lead character.

So at this point, we should
all be sufficiently depressed.

No change in 50 years,

few female directors
working behind the camera

and the entertainment industry
does not trust us as an audience.

Well, I told you
there would be a silver lining,

and there is.

There are actually
simple and tangible solutions

to fixing this problem

that involve content creators,

executives and consumers

like the individuals in this room.

Let’s talk about a few of them.

The first is what I call “just add five.”

Did you know if we looked
at the top 100 films next year

and simply added five female
speaking characters on-screen

to each of those films,

it would create a new norm.

If we were to do this
for three contiguous years,

we would be at gender parity

for the first time
in over a half of a century.

Now, this approach is advantageous
for a variety of reasons.

One? It doesn’t take away jobs
for male actors.

Heaven forbid.

(Laughter)

Two, it’s actually cost-effective.
It doesn’t cost that much.

Three, it builds a pipeline for talent.

And four, it humanizes
the production process.

Why? Because it makes sure
that there’s women on set.

Second solution is for A-list talent.

A-listers, as we all know,
can make demands in their contracts,

particularly the ones that work
on the biggest Hollywood films.

What if those A-listers

simply added an equity clause
or an inclusion rider

into their contract?

Now, what does that mean?

Well, you probably don’t know

but the typical feature film

has about 40 to 45
speaking characters in it.

I would argue that only 8 to 10
of those characters

are actually relevant to the story.

Except maybe “Avengers.” Right?

A few more in “Avengers.”

The remaining 30 or so roles,

there’s no reason why those minor roles

can’t match or reflect the demography

of where the story is taking place.

An equity rider by an A-lister
in their contract

can stipulate that those roles

reflect the world
in which we actually live.

Now, there’s no reason why a network,

a studio or a production company

cannot adopt the same contractual language

in their negotiation processes.

Third solution:

this would be for
the entertainment industry,

Hollywood in particular,

to adopt the Rooney Rule

when it comes to hiring practices
around directors.

Now, in the NFL,
the Rooney Rule stipulates

that if a team wants to hire a coach
from outside the organization,

what they have to do is interview
an underrepresented candidate.

The exact same principle
can apply to Hollywood films.

How?

Well, on these top films,

executives and agents can make sure

that women and people of color
are not only on the consideration list,

but they’re actually
interviewed for the job.

Now, one might say,

why is this important?

Because it exposes or introduces
executives to female directors

who otherwise fall prey
to exclusionary hiring practices.

The fourth solution

is for consumers like me and you.

If we want to see more films
by, for and about women,

we have to support them.

It may mean going
to the independent theater chain

instead of the multiplex.

Or it might mean scrolling down
a little further online

to find a film by a female director.

Or it may be writing a check
and funding a film,

particularly by a female director
from an underrepresented background.

Right?

We need to write, call and email companies

that are making and distributing films,

and we need to post
on our social media accounts

when we want to see
inclusive representation,

women on-screen,

and most importantly,
women behind the camera.

We need to make our voices heard
and our dollars count.

Now, we actually have the ability
to change the world on this one.

The US and its content,

films in particular,

have captured the imaginations
of audiences worldwide.

Worldwide.

So that means that the film industry
has unprecedented access

to be able to distribute
stories about equality

all around the world.

Imagine what would happen

if the film industry aligned its values

with what it shows on-screen.

It could foster inclusion

and acceptance for girls and women,

people of color,

the LGBT community,

individuals with disabilities,

and so many more around the world.

The only thing that the film industry
has to do is unleash its secret weapon,

and that’s storytelling.

Now, at the beginning of this talk,

I said that films –

that they can actually transport us,

but I would like to argue
that films, they can transform us.

None of us in this room

have grown up or experienced
a storytelling landscape

with fully realized female characters,

none of us,

because the numbers haven’t changed.

What would happen
if the next generation of audiences

grew up with a whole
different screen reality?

What would happen?

Well I’m here to tell you today

that it’s not only possible
to change what we see on-screen

but I am impatient for it to get here.

So let’s agree to take action today

to eradicate the epidemic of invisibility.

And let’s agree to take action today

to agree that US audiences
and global viewers

demand and deserve more.

And let’s agree today

that the next generation
of viewers and audiences,

that they deserve to see the stories

we were never able to see.

Thank you.

(Applause)

今天,我想告诉
你一个紧迫的社会问题。

现在,这不是核武器

,不是移民

,也不是疟疾。

我是来聊电影的。

现在,说真的,
电影真的很重要。

在电影中,我们可以尽情地娱乐,

也可以
通过讲故事来感动。

讲故事太重要了。

故事告诉我们社会重视什么,

它们为我们提供了教训

,它们分享和保存了我们的历史。

故事是惊人的。

但是故事并没有给每个人

同样的
机会出现在其中,

尤其是没有

以美国电影的形式划分的故事。

在电影中,有趣的是,在我们的许多故事中,

女性仍然被抹杀和边缘化

大约 10 年前,

当我第一次研究
G 级电影中的性别角色时,我第一次了解到这一点。

从那时起,我们进行
了 30 多次调查。

我的团队很累。

作为研究员和活动家

,我一生致力于与好莱坞的包容性危机作斗争

所以今天,我想做的
就是告诉你们那场危机。

我想谈谈
电影中的性别不平等。

我想告诉你它是如何长期存在的,

然后我将告诉你
我们将如何解决它。

然而,在我开始之前有一个警告:

我的数据真的很令人沮丧。

所以我想提前道歉,

因为我会让你们
都心情不好。

但我会在最后提出来

,我会提出一线希望

来解决这个我们已经

陷入了很长时间的混乱局面。

所以,让我们从情况的严重性开始

每年,我的研究团队都会
检查美国票房收入前 100 的

电影。

我们所做的是查看屏幕上每个说话
或命名的角色。

现在,要算上我的一项调查

,一个角色所要做的就是说一个字。

这是一个非常低的标准。

(笑声)

到目前为止,我们已经看过 800 部电影,

从 2007 年到 2015 年,

根据性别、种族、民族、

LGBT 和残疾角色对屏幕上每个说话的角色进行分类。

让我们来
看看一些真正有问题的趋势。

首先,女性
在电影中仍然明显缺席。

在 800 部电影
和 35,205 个会说话的角色中,

不到三分之一的
角色由女孩和女性担任。

不到三分之一!

从 2007 年到 2015 年没有变化

,如果你将我们的结果

与 1946 年到 1955 年的一小部分电影样本进行比较,半个多世纪

以来没有任何
变化。

半个多世纪!

但我们是人口的一半。

现在,如果我们交叉查看这些数据

这一直是今天的焦点,

那么情况就会变得更加成问题。

在去年的前 100 部电影
中,有

48 部电影没有一个黑人
或非裔美国人的角色,

没有一个。

70 部电影没有亚洲
或亚裔美国人

的女孩或女性角色。

没有任何。

八十四部电影没有一个
女性角色有残疾。

93 个没有女同性恋、双性恋
或跨性别女性角色。

这不是代表性不足。

这就是擦除

,我
称之为隐形流行病。

现在,当我们
从流行转向主角时

,故事仍然存在问题。

在去年的 100 部电影中,

只有 32 部由女性主演
或共同主演推动动作。

一百部电影中只有三部的故事

由代表性不足的
女性主导故事,

并且只有一位在影院上映

时年满 45 岁或以上
的多元化女性。

现在让我们看看形象。

除了你刚刚看到的数字之外,

女性
在电影中被性感化的可能性要远

高于男性。

事实上,她们穿着

暴露性
服装、

部分裸露的可能性大约是她们的三倍,

而且她们更可能很瘦。

现在,有时,在动画中,
女性非常瘦

,以至于她们的腰围接近
上臂的周长。

(笑声)

我们喜欢说这些女孩
没有子宫

或任何其他内脏的空间。

(笑声)

现在,抛开所有的玩笑不谈,

理论表明,研究证实,

接触瘦弱的理想
和客观化的内容

会导致一些女性观众对身体产生不满、
内化瘦弱的理想

和自我客观化

显然,我们在屏幕上看到的

和我们在世界上看到的

并不匹配。

他们不匹配!

事实上,
如果我们生活在银幕世界中,

我们将面临人口
危机。

因此,一旦我认识到
这些模式,

我就想找出原因

,事实证明
屏幕上的不平等有两个驱动因素:

内容创作者的性别
和观众的误解。

让我们快速拆开它们。

如果你想改变
我刚才谈到的任何一种模式

,你所要做的
就是聘请女性导演。

事实证明

,就短片和独立电影而言,女性导演与

银幕上更多的女孩和女性、

更多以女性为中心的故事、

更多与
40 岁或以上女性在银幕上的故事有关,

这 我认为这对这群人来说是个好消息。

代表性不足——

(笑声)

对不起。

(笑声)

抱歉,但不抱歉。

在种族和民族方面代表性不足的角色更多

,最重要的是,

更多女性在镜头

后担任关键制作角色。

简单回答
我们刚才谈到的问题。

或者是吗?

实际上不是。

800 部电影,2007-2015 年,

886 位导演。

只有 4.1% 是女性。

只有三人是非裔美国人或黑人

,只有一名女性是亚洲人。

那么,如果

女性导演

是解决方案的一部分,为什么就这么难?

好吧,为了回答这个问题,

我们进行了一项研究。

我们采访了数十位业内人士,

并询问了他们有关董事的情况。

事实证明,无论是男性
还是女性高管,

当他们想到董事时,

他们都会想到男性。

他们认为领导的

特质本质上是男性化的。

因此,当他们要聘请导演

来指挥船员、领导船只、

成为有远见的人或成为巴顿将军时

,我们所听到的所有事情——

他们的想法和想法都会吸引男性。

对董事或领导

的看法与对女性的看法不一致。

角色不协调,

这与心理学领域的大量研究是一致的

导致
屏幕上不平等的第二个因素

是观众的误解。

我不需要告诉这群人

:去票房买票的人中

有 50% 是这个国家的女孩和妇女。

对?

但我们不被认为是可行的
或经济上有利可图的目标受众。

此外,

对于女性是否可以打开电影存在一些误解。

打开一部电影意味着如果你
把一个女性放在中心,

它不会像

你把一个男性
放在故事的中心那样获得投资回报。

这种误解实际上代价高昂。

对?

尤其是在

《饥饿游戏》、

《Pitch Perfect》

或那部小型独立电影
《星球大战:原力觉醒》等特许经营成功之后。

我们自己的经济分析
表明,主角的性别对美国

的经济成功没有影响

但有什么作用?

制作成本单独

或与
电影在该国的发行范围相结合。

这不是主角的性别。

所以在这一点上,我们
都应该足够沮丧。

50 年没有变化,

很少有
幕后工作的女导演

和娱乐业
不信任我们作为观众。

好吧,我告诉过你
会有一线希望,

而且确实存在。

实际上,有一些
简单而切实的解决

方案可以解决这个问题

,这些解决方案涉及内容创建者、

高管和消费者,

比如这个房间里的个人。

让我们谈谈其中的几个。

第一个是我所说的“只需添加五个”。

你知道吗,如果我们
明年看看排名前 100 的电影,

并在每部电影中简单地
在屏幕上添加五个女性演讲角色

这将创造一个新的规范。

如果我们
连续三年这样做,

我们将

在半个多世纪以来首次实现性别平等。

现在,由于各种原因,这种方法是
有利的。

一? 它不会剥夺
男演员的工作。

天禁。

(笑声)

二,它实际上具有成本效益。
它不会花费那么多。

三是构建人才管道。

四是
使生产过程人性化。

为什么? 因为它
确保有女性在场。

第二种解决方案是针对一线人才。

众所周知,一线明星
可以在他们的合同中提出要求,

尤其是那些
为好莱坞大片工作的人。

如果那些 A-listers

只是在他们的合同中添加了股权条款或包含附加条款

怎么办?

这是什么意思?

好吧,你可能不知道

,典型的故事片中

有大约 40 到 45 个会
说话的角色。

我认为这些角色中只有 8 到 10 个

实际上与故事相关。

除了“复仇者联盟”。 对?

在“复仇者联盟”中还有一些。

剩下的 30 个左右的角色,

这些次要角色没有理由

不能匹配或反映

故事发生地点的人口统计。

A-lister 的股权骑手可以
在他们的合同

中规定这些角色

反映
了我们实际生活的世界。

现在,网络

、工作室或制作公司没有理由

不能

在他们的谈判过程中采用相同的合同语言。

第三种解决方案:

这将
是娱乐业,

尤其是好莱坞,在围绕导演招聘

时采用鲁尼规则

现在,在 NFL 中
,鲁尼规则规定

,如果一支球队想
从组织外部聘请教练,

他们要做的就是面试
一个代表性不足的候选人。

完全相同的原则
也适用于好莱坞电影。

如何?

好吧,在这些顶级电影中,

高管和经纪人可以

确保女性和
有色人种不仅在考虑名单上,

而且他们实际上
接受了这份工作的面试。

现在,有人可能会说,

为什么这很重要?

因为它将高管暴露或介绍
给女性董事

,否则她们会
成为排他性招聘行为的牺牲品。

第四种解决

方案适用于像我和你这样的消费者。

如果我们想看更多
由女性拍摄、为女性拍摄和关于女性的电影,

我们必须支持她们。

这可能意味着
去独立影院

而不是多厅影院。

或者这可能意味着在网上进一步向下滚动

以查找女性导演的电影。

或者它可能是开支票
并资助一部电影,

特别是由一位
来自代表性不足的女性导演。

对?

我们需要给

制作和发行电影的公司写信、打电话和发送电子邮件,

当我们想要看到
包容性的代表、

银幕上的女性

,最重要的
是镜头背后的女性时,我们需要在我们的社交媒体账户上发帖。

我们需要让我们的声音被听到
,我们的钱也很重要。

现在,我们实际上有能力
在这一点上改变世界。

美国及其内容,

尤其是电影,

已经吸引了
全世界观众的想象力。

全世界。

因此,这意味着电影业
拥有前所未有的机会

,能够在世界各地传播
有关平等的故事

想象一下,

如果电影业将其价值观

与其在银幕上展示的内容保持一致,将会发生什么。

它可以

促进女孩和妇女

、有色人种

、LGBT 社区、

残疾人

以及世界各地更多人的包容和接受。

电影业
唯一要做的就是释放它的秘密武器

,那就是讲故事。

现在,在这次演讲的开头,

我说电影——

它们实际上可以运送我们,

但我想说
电影,它们可以改变我们。

我们在这个房间里

没有一个人长大或经历过
一个完全实现女性角色的讲故事的景观

,我们

都没有,因为数字没有改变。

如果下一代观众

在完全
不同的屏幕现实中长大,会发生什么?

会发生什么?

好吧,我今天在这里告诉你

,不仅
可以改变我们在屏幕上看到的内容,

而且我迫不及待地想要它到达这里。

因此,让我们同意今天采取行动

根除隐形流行病。

让我们同意今天采取行动

,同意美国观众
和全球观众

要求并应得更多。

今天让我们同意

下一代观众和观众

,他们应该看到我们从未见过的故事

谢谢你。

(掌声)