Close Menu
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram Pinterest
    BAUCE
    SUBSCRIBE
    • Hustle

      Top-rated employee assistance programs for medium-sized businesses

      November 3, 2025

      Best Value Health Insurance Options for Part-Time Employees

      November 3, 2025

      These Are The Best AI Tools for Business Owners

      October 28, 2025

      Why Adding a Multisport Court May Help Boost Team Morale at Work

      October 22, 2025

      The Hidden Cost of Blind Spots in Hybrid Work & How to Eliminate Them

      October 15, 2025
    • Believe

      9 Self-Care Practices Every Busy Black Woman Should Know

      August 5, 2025

      How to Build Confidence at Work: 4 Tips for Women Entrepreneurs

      July 24, 2025

      Why Physically and Psychologically Protecting Yourself at Work Is More Important Than Ever

      July 18, 2025

      How Working From Home May Make Anxiety Worse (And What to Do About It)

      February 27, 2025

      Overcoming Imposter Syndrome: Confidence Tips for Black Women Entrepreneurs

      January 27, 2025
    • Earn

      The 5 Financial Stress Archetypes: Which One Are You?

      September 10, 2025

      The Ultimate Guide to No Fee Checking Accounts in 2025

      September 9, 2025

      6 Niche Beauty Businesses You Can Launch Today

      August 17, 2025

      How to Build Wealth Through Real Estate Investing as a Millennial Woman of Color

      August 15, 2025

      7 Financial Habits of Millionaire Black Women Entrepreneurs

      July 30, 2025
    • Live

      Investing in Your Health: Why Wellness Programs Are a Smart Business Move

      August 16, 2025

      Focused on Family Planning? Here’s What You Need To Know About Egg Freezing

      July 11, 2025

      3 Ways Health Care Providers Can Keep Themselves Safe in the Industry

      July 1, 2025

      Playing with scents: what you should know before mixing perfumes

      June 16, 2025

      7 Benefits of Morning Exercises for Entrepreneurs

      May 31, 2025
    • Profiles

      Kellie Pean on Blending Data and Culture: How Brand New Breathes Creativity into Authentic Marketing

      November 12, 2025

      How FIT President Dr. Joyce F. Brown Built a Legacy of Lasting Change

      September 22, 2025

      How Candace Mitchell, Founder & CEO of MYAVANA, is Redefining Hair Care With AI

      September 15, 2025

      These Black Self-Made Women Share the Lessons That Changed Everything

      September 5, 2025

      Sweet Success: Zewiditu Jewel Is Changing the Culinary Game With Her Vegan Baked Goods Brand

      August 13, 2025
    • Academy
    • More
      • About
      • Contact
      • Jobs
      • Advertise
    • Shop
    BAUCE
    Live

    Can We Please Bring Back the Black Sitcom?

    By Deja JonesNovember 5, 20124 Mins Read
    Share
    Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email

    Black women are always angry and Latinas are sassy and sexual. At least that’s the images some networks are creating, allowing no justice for women of color.

    With shows such as “Love and Hip Hop”, “Basketball Wives”, and “Bad Girls Clubs” flooding network television with images of women bashing each other, fighting over men, and back-stabbing one another, it’s no wonder we can’t escape these generalized stereotypes that haunt us.

    On Monday nights, millions of women tune into these reality television shows and by the end viewers resort to posting Facebook statuses and tweets about the person on the show that they can’t stand. Reality television is destroying sisterhood. It teaches us to lose patience with each other as quickly as we are to bash women we don’t know personally online. This influences us to hurt each other on a regular basis, subconsciously fantasizing about being those big, bad girls that we see on our screens.

    What we need are good quality sitcoms that display images of love, respect, and unity – these are attributes that are often overshadowed in our communities. Can we get those back?

    Shows like “The Cosby Show” showed us a model for a successful black family. We could always count on Cliff to teach Theo a lesson on money management and women, while Claire passed down lessons of womanhood to Sandra, Denise, Vanessa, and Rudy. Shows like “Sister, Sister” served as a positive and relatable model for girls going through puberty in high school. Tia and Tamera Mowry helped us identify with the perils of adolescence when we were teenage girls. They gave us strength and hope that we’d reach a better day.

    We need shows like “Living Single” that display images of friendship and what it meant to have each other’s back rather than stabbing each other in the back. Shows that promote the meaning of sisterhood rather than self-hate. We need “A Different World” to highlight the power that resides among black collegiate youth rather than shows like “Sixteen and Pregnant” where teens are barely finishing high school. The emergence of “Scandal” gives us promise that there are perhaps more days ahead that will showcase our television screens with black women of power.

    Sitcoms present us with real life situations that we can all identify with and help us reach solutions to those problems from different perspectives. It’s visual and entertaining self-help. Reality television shows us that it’s okay to fight and scheme our way out of situations. With the television audience getting younger and younger is self-destruction the message we want to inadvertently send to minority youth?

    With BET’s attempt at quality shows like “Reed Between the Lines” and “Let’s Stay Together” struggling to stay on-air and the cancelation of shows such as Hawthorne, we can only wonder if we’ll ever have an age of good quality television like we did in the 80’s and 90’s. Last month, Debra Lee weighed in on African Americans’ shaky commitment to quality programming:

    “Over the 28 years I’ve been at BET, we’ve tried different shows, series and nightly news, and it’s always a matter of what are people going to show up to watch. We started a new show last week called Don’t Sleep! With T.J. Holmes, which is supposed to address these kinds of issues. It’s designed to be a mix of entertainment and news and commentary. We hoped it would have been a Jon Stewart, Stephen Colbert-type show […]. To be honest, the ratings haven’t been great in the past two weeks (referring to Holmes’ show). Our audience always says they want this kind of programming, but they don’t show up.”

    Saving the black sitcom begins with us. We have to show them what we want by ignoring the bullshit shows that producers call “TV”. We are worth more than broken wine bottles, gold-diggers, and uneducated potty-mouths. Although reality TV may have stripped us of our viewing virginity, it’s never to late to salvage it. Give us the classic girls of yesteryear. Give us our dignity back. We don’t want your nasty images that plague us like never-ending STDs. We’re pledging celibacy against reality TV until we get our sitcoms back.

    Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email Reddit WhatsApp
    Deja Jones

    Related Posts

    Investing in Your Health: Why Wellness Programs Are a Smart Business Move

    August 16, 2025

    Focused on Family Planning? Here’s What You Need To Know About Egg Freezing

    July 11, 2025

    3 Ways Health Care Providers Can Keep Themselves Safe in the Industry

    July 1, 2025
    View 4 Comments

    4 Comments

    1. La La on November 6, 2012 10:30 pm

      Very well written article! I agree with your points. I’m always saying I miss the 90’s shows!

      Reply
    2. mm
      Bauce on November 7, 2012 8:06 am

      Definitely! Reality TV is killing sisterhood and I definitely think we need to turn towards sitcoms and scripted television to get quality back on-air.

      Reply
    3. Amy Grier on November 15, 2012 4:13 pm

      I grew up in the 70’s and 80’s watching “Good Times,” “The Jefferson’s,” “Sesame Street,” “What’s Happenin’,” “The Cosby Show,” “A Different World,” and others. It gave me a sense that seeing all kinds of people on TV was normal. It was kind of a golden age in retrospect, and particularly important for a white girl growing up in a rural area with almost all white friends. Why have we gone backwards on this?

      Reply
    4. mm
      Bauce on November 18, 2012 6:17 am

      That’s a great perspective Amy – we should consider how black programming not only affects our community – but people outside of it as well.

      Reply
    Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

    TOP RESOURCES FOR YOU

    Black Women Web Designers: 15 Expert Professionals to Hire for Your Next Project

    How To Truly Break The Cycle of Debt

    It’s Time To Stop Sleeping On Your Credit Score, Sis – Here’s Why

    These Are 15 of the Highest Paying Careers To Pursue

    15 Good Jobs That Women Can Do From Anywhere Without Experience

    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram Pinterest
    • Advertise
    • Privacy Policy
    • Contact
    • Jobs
    • Subscribe
    © 2025 BAUCE MEDIA

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.