Calling out “the systemic failure to hire women directors at all levels of the film and television industry,” the ACLU of Southern California and the national ACLU Women’s Rights Project on Tuesday demanded that federal and state civil rights agencies investigate the hiring practices throughout Hollywood for possible instances of gender discrimination.
“Blatant and extreme gender inequality in this large and important industry is shameful and unacceptable,” said Melissa Goodman, director of the ACLU Southern California’s LGBTQ, Gender & Reproductive Justice Project, in a press release. “The time has come for new solutions to this serious civil rights problem.”
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Citing statistical evidence, as well as a year’s worth of interviews with 50 women in the directing industry, the ACLU determined that women were “effectively excluded” from directing big-budget blockbusters and “seriously under-represented” in directing for television. The organization sent its findings Tuesday to the federal Equal Employment Opportunity Commission, the California Department of Fair Employment and Housing, and the Labor Department’s Office of Federal Contract Compliance Programs. If those agencies choose to launch an investigation and then uncover bias against women, they could file legal charges against studios, networks, and talent agencies under California or federal civil rights laws, all which prohibit employment discrimination on the basis of sex.
Such action is not unprecedented. In the 1960s and 1970s, federal civil rights agencies and the California Advisory Committee to the U.S. Commission on Civil Rights attempted to tackle gender and race discrimination in Hollywood through settlement agreements with the Association of Motion Picture and Television Producers, major studios, and some unions. But those monitoring and enforcement efforts were insufficient, the ACLU argued, and ceased altogether in the mid-1970s.









