32 Overlooked Black TV Shows, From ‘The Best Man: The Final Chapters’ to ‘The 1619 Project’

3 weeks ago 13

Overlooked Black TV Shows Lovecraft Boarders Tamara Lawrance Supacell

Courtesy of HBO / BBC / Netflix

Television has always been more than an escape for me. Growing up in the 1990s and early 2000s on the South Side of Chicago, I was always thrilled to see women and girls who looked like me and reminded me of my family and friends. Series like “Moesha,” “A Different World,” “Girlfriends” and “Living Single” expanded my worldview. Representation is a powerful tool, stretching imaginations and inspiring growth and change. Interestingly, by the time I got to high school in the mid-2000s, many of these Black-led series vanished from TV altogether. Though there were some outliers, such as “Soul Food: The Series” and “The Wire,” the next time a Black woman led a dramatic series would be “Scandal” in 2012.

Since then, though, there has been a new swirl of highly successful Black-led shows like “Insecure,” “Abbott Elementary,” “Black-ish” and “Paradise.”  But it’s become increasingly rare for Black stories to run for more than a season or two on streaming platforms and networks. During Black History Month, I wanted to examine some unsung Black TV shows from the past decade that were either canceled far too quickly or didn’t get the shine that they deserved — they’re in alphabetical order (except for “The 1619 Project”), not ranked. From sitcoms like BET+’s “The Ms. Pat Show” to crime dramas like HBO’s “Get Millie Black” and even beloved franchises like Peacock’s “The Best Man: The Final Chapters,” here are 32 Black-led TV shows that debuted within the past decade that deserve a second (or third) look.

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