DreamWired
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Celebrity
  • DramaAlert
  • Gossip
  • Movie
  • TV
  • Music
  • Comics
  • Shop
  • Home
  • Celebrity
  • DramaAlert
  • Gossip
  • Movie
  • TV
  • Music
  • Comics
  • Shop
No Result
View All Result
Dream Wired
No Result
View All Result
Home Celebrity

How The Other Black Girl Portrays Racism in the Workplace

rmtsa by rmtsa
October 8, 2023
in Celebrity
0
How The Other Black Girl Portrays Racism in the Workplace
74
SHARES
1.2k
VIEWS
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter


You might also like

Ferris Wheel At Louisiana Harvest Festival: Girls Thrown Off (Vid.)

Naturi Naughton-Lewis Regrets Not Working With Ryan Coogler

Brandy and Ray J Share a Heartfelt Moment Amid Rumored Rift

“The Other Black Girl,” Hulu’s new series based on the best-selling novel by Zakiya Dalila Harris, is an important addition to the streamer’s arsenal as a show that centers on the hostile environments that Black women can face in the workplace. It’s a near-universal experience for many Black women and is finally being represented on screen.

But when the show takes a turn and reveals the main villain to be another Black woman perpetuating violence against her own community, the show falls short, creating a world where Black women are pitted against each other. As a Black woman who has often been the “only” in workplace settings, the experiences that Nella (played by Sinclair Daniel) goes through at Wagner Publishing resonated. But, unlike Nella, I always had Black colleagues to lift me up, not keep me down.

I have always found that the Black women I worked with had my back.

In “TOBG,” Nella experiences a workplace that feels familiar to many Black women: constant microaggressions alongside the classic refrains of “I hear you and I’m listening” and “diversity matters” from well-meaning white colleagues. Add in having to work with a racist author (who in episode two says, “I don’t see color, I see characters”) and the fact that Nella stays working at Wagner is a testament to her resilience and her supportive best friend, Malaika (Brittany Adebumola).

Nella is the only Black person in the office, until Hazel (Ashleigh Murray), the “other” Black girl, shows up, and Nella has a friend. Hazel immediately becomes a confidant; she can roll her eyes alongside Nella when she has to stop wearing her preferred lotion because her boss “doesn’t like the smell” in episode one. But when Hazel starts to undermine Nella — and Nella becomes surrounded by Hazel’s suspicious friends with straight hair and weird behavior — something doesn’t add up. What Nella finds as she peels away the layers is a conspiracy years in the making.

On the one hand, “TOBG”‘s portrayal of Black women’s experiences in the workplace is extremely realistic. As a young Black person working in nonprofit organizations — overworked, underpaid, and at the whim of racism and capitalism — there were times I felt like I was losing my mind. I’d overthink every snide comment, every missed opportunity, and every side-long glance. When I realized that proximity to whiteness and assimilation might be the only way to reach success, I felt the pressure to climb up that ladder, at any cost; to push down those around me until I rose up, the final survivor in the gauntlet of a racist workplace culture. But when I started my own journey into understanding racism and systemic and institutional oppression, I realized that I couldn’t be successful alone. I needed a community of other Black women trying just as hard to succeed, fighting just as hard to challenge racism in the workplace.

“The show had an opportunity to show how Black women, so often, actually work together against this racism.”

The show had an opportunity to show how Black women, so often, actually work together against this racism. But instead, it seems almost obsessed with portraying what it means to cater to whiteness. In episode nine, Diana, the cult leader aiming to turn Black women into mindless but successful puppets through hair grease, says that “it took the right people to get me to where I am today.” And when she says “right people,” we know she actually means white people, not the folks in her own community. And this is what “TOBG” gets wrong: although Black women are indeed often pitted against each other by others, the story here becomes too much about whiteness and proximity to whiteness. Take, for example, when Hazel undermines Nella when she voices complaints about Colin Franklin’s stereotypical and racist portrayal of a Black secondary character in his book. Hazel is ultimately catering to the feelings of a white man instead of being in a collective community with her fellow Black colleague, who is bravely speaking her mind.

It was extremely unsettling as a Black woman to watch all this play out. Although the ultimate villain is capitalism and racism, the people who are leading the charge to silence and quell Black women are other Black women. And that can lead to harmful and negative stereotypes about Black women and their interactions in the workplace. In my experiences, especially in nonprofits, I have always found that the Black women I worked with had my back — whether it was a subtle nod in the hallway, eye contact in a meeting when something harmful was said, or a quick “you there?” in a Teams message when things were rough. The work relationships I have had with other Black women were more like Nella and Malaika’s friendship: supportive, ride or die, showing what happens when Black women trust each other and stick together against the horrors of racism.

The show frustrated me for many reasons, but I do think the overarching message is an important one: it’s a story about the real horrors that Black women face in the workplace and acknowledges that we are sometimes the ones keeping our own communities down. But the real villain, in the end, shouldn’t be Black folks. The real villain should be the perception that proximity to whiteness is needed in order to succeed. When the stories being made about us focus on the horror within our community instead of the ways the Black community can rise together against the horrors perpetuated against us, we all miss out.



Source link

Tags: BlackGIRLPortraysRacismworkplace
Share30Tweet19
rmtsa

rmtsa

Recommended For You

Ferris Wheel At Louisiana Harvest Festival: Girls Thrown Off (Vid.)

by rmtsa
November 3, 2025
0
Ferris Wheel At Louisiana Harvest Festival: Girls Thrown Off (Vid.)

Two girls were injured and hospitalized after reportedly being thrown from a Ferris Wheel at the Louisiana Harvest Festival. RELATED: Say, WHAT?! Louisiana Popeyes Manager Reportedly Arrested For Assaulting...

Read more

Naturi Naughton-Lewis Regrets Not Working With Ryan Coogler

by rmtsa
November 3, 2025
0
Naturi Naughton-Lewis Regrets Not Working With Ryan Coogler

Source: Dia Dipasupil / Getty Looking back on her career during a panel at the ABFF Pop-Up in New York City on Oct. 25, actress Naturi Naughton-Lewis revealed...

Read more

Brandy and Ray J Share a Heartfelt Moment Amid Rumored Rift

by rmtsa
November 3, 2025
0
Brandy and Ray J Share a Heartfelt Moment Amid Rumored Rift

The “Boy Is Mine” tour just delivered an unexpected, heart-melting moment that proved blood is thicker than beef—or even branding blunders. During the Atlanta stop of the tour,...

Read more

6 Times Supermodel Eva Marcille Proved She Had An Insane Face Card – Essence

by rmtsa
November 3, 2025
0
6 Times Supermodel Eva Marcille Proved She Had An Insane Face Card – Essence

(Photo by Paras Griffin/Getty Images for BET) Eva Marcille, the stunning supermodel who first captured our hearts as the winner of America’s Next Top Model Cycle three, has cemented herself...

Read more

‘Love Island’s’ Huda Mustafa Apologizes After Racist Livestream

by rmtsa
November 2, 2025
0
‘Love Island’s’ Huda Mustafa Apologizes After Racist Livestream

Source: Gilbert Flores / XNY/Star Max Huda Mustafa has issued an apology to Olandria Carthen, which comes after she laughed at a fan on a livestream who called her former...

Read more
Next Post
One Of Angus Cloud’s Final Films, ‘Your Lucky Day’, Releases Trailer Showcasing His Talents – Deadline

One Of Angus Cloud’s Final Films, ‘Your Lucky Day’, Releases Trailer Showcasing His Talents – Deadline

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Browse by Category

  • Celebrity
  • Comics
  • DramaAlert
  • Gossip
  • Movie
  • Music
  • TV
  • Uncategorized
DramaWired

Browse the Latest Entertainment News on DramaWired.com. Celebrity News, Movies, Music, Gossip, Comics, TV and More News.

CATEGORIES

  • Celebrity
  • Comics
  • DramaAlert
  • Gossip
  • Movie
  • Music
  • TV
  • Uncategorized
No Result
View All Result

Recent News

  • Guillermo del Toro’s FRANKENSTEIN Is a Gothic Masterpiece of Horror and Heart — GeekTyrant
  • ‘One Piece’ Season 2 Cast, Everything We Know So Far
  • Blueface Confirms Release From Prison With Fresh Out Video

Copyright © 2025 DramaWired.
DramaWired is a content aggregator and not responsible for the content of external sites.

No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Celebrity
  • DramaAlert
  • Gossip
  • Movie
  • TV
  • Music
  • Comics
  • Shop

Copyright © 2025 DramaWired.
DramaWired is a content aggregator and not responsible for the content of external sites.

Welcome Back!

Login to your account below

Forgotten Password?

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Log In