The Prague Post - In LA, Clooney-backed school works to boost Hollywood diversity

EUR -
AED 4.332686
AFN 75.489884
ALL 96.543798
AMD 442.54568
ANG 2.111212
AOA 1081.623678
ARS 1611.180732
AUD 1.653775
AWG 2.117245
AZN 2.004871
BAM 1.955003
BBD 2.375011
BDT 145.009628
BGN 1.967566
BHD 0.445132
BIF 3497.878207
BMD 1.179524
BND 1.499576
BOB 8.148607
BRL 5.902288
BSD 1.179209
BTN 109.749308
BWP 15.800422
BYN 3.350505
BYR 23118.668978
BZD 2.371613
CAD 1.623809
CDF 2724.700459
CHF 0.921019
CLF 0.02658
CLP 1046.124648
CNY 8.039694
CNH 8.031715
COP 4242.712181
CRC 542.873985
CUC 1.179524
CUP 31.257384
CVE 110.550851
CZK 24.341013
DJF 209.624875
DKK 7.47249
DOP 70.178382
DZD 155.865867
EGP 61.827112
ERN 17.692859
ETB 184.77193
FJD 2.593007
FKP 0.876488
GBP 0.869185
GEL 3.173092
GGP 0.876488
GHS 13.034093
GIP 0.876488
GMD 86.702191
GNF 10356.220218
GTQ 9.015247
GYD 246.707288
HKD 9.239447
HNL 31.393053
HRK 7.533733
HTG 154.475687
HUF 363.273339
IDR 20200.821662
ILS 3.549771
IMP 0.876488
INR 109.810552
IQD 1545.176345
IRR 1552400.929498
ISK 143.796142
JEP 0.876488
JMD 186.204056
JOD 0.836313
JPY 187.1916
KES 152.515999
KGS 103.14891
KHR 4735.789078
KMF 493.040973
KPW 1061.540891
KRW 1735.687158
KWD 0.364166
KYD 0.982691
KZT 560.256748
LAK 25917.087247
LBP 105626.368122
LKR 372.095085
LRD 217.384474
LSL 19.356179
LTL 3.482828
LVL 0.713482
LYD 7.489689
MAD 10.919148
MDL 20.193593
MGA 4877.331309
MKD 61.62345
MMK 2476.85474
MNT 4217.46551
MOP 9.514539
MRU 47.181108
MUR 54.765548
MVR 18.223928
MWK 2048.83277
MXN 20.37167
MYR 4.660301
MZN 75.430819
NAD 19.332029
NGN 1599.493483
NIO 43.312819
NOK 11.140191
NPR 175.598893
NZD 1.996739
OMR 0.453525
PAB 1.179209
PEN 3.977372
PGK 5.086402
PHP 70.484222
PKR 329.087412
PLN 4.237917
PYG 7544.922779
QAR 4.300191
RON 5.089621
RSD 117.414496
RUB 88.905535
RWF 1722.694696
SAR 4.425646
SBD 9.493496
SCR 16.836628
SDG 708.894104
SEK 10.829329
SGD 1.498986
SHP 0.880634
SLE 29.010636
SLL 24734.022474
SOS 674.095385
SRD 44.149545
STD 24413.763849
STN 25.005907
SVC 10.317792
SYP 130.492148
SZL 19.332143
THB 37.707606
TJS 11.166993
TMT 4.134231
TND 3.401776
TOP 2.840011
TRY 52.748783
TTD 8.012664
TWD 37.222247
TZS 3074.101202
UAH 51.310273
UGX 4375.215555
USD 1.179524
UYU 47.450647
UZS 14332.395248
VES 562.104911
VND 31071.609059
VUV 140.757433
WST 3.254706
XAF 655.684018
XAG 0.014881
XAU 0.000244
XCD 3.187722
XCG 2.125215
XDR 0.816308
XOF 660.533368
XPF 119.331742
YER 281.463889
ZAR 19.264578
ZMK 10617.129288
ZMW 22.551611
ZWL 379.806223
  • RBGPF

    -13.5000

    69

    -19.57%

  • CMSD

    0.1700

    22.83

    +0.74%

  • CMSC

    0.1500

    22.64

    +0.66%

  • BCC

    0.1700

    81.72

    +0.21%

  • JRI

    0.0000

    12.92

    0%

  • BCE

    0.3500

    23.85

    +1.47%

  • RIO

    -0.3300

    98.87

    -0.33%

  • GSK

    0.2400

    59.18

    +0.41%

  • NGG

    0.0000

    88.95

    0%

  • RYCEF

    0.4200

    17.66

    +2.38%

  • RELX

    0.4600

    34.71

    +1.33%

  • VOD

    -0.0300

    15.62

    -0.19%

  • AZN

    2.1400

    204.38

    +1.05%

  • BTI

    -1.1800

    57.51

    -2.05%

  • BP

    -0.2700

    46.17

    -0.58%

In LA, Clooney-backed school works to boost Hollywood diversity
In LA, Clooney-backed school works to boost Hollywood diversity / Photo: Frederic J. BROWN - AFP

In LA, Clooney-backed school works to boost Hollywood diversity

At just 14 years old, Ja'saray Juarez debates what makes a good ad with her friends -- catchy music, clever camera work and appealing characters are all part of the mix. She will eventually film her own commercial to show her class.

Text size:

In a few years, the freshman hopes to launch her career behind the camera, thanks to a special program at her Los Angeles high school for hundreds of young people from underrepresented communities looking to break into showbiz.

Since September, the public high school has been home to a magnet program for film and television studies that has received financial backing from Oscar winner George Clooney.

"I'm so glad I get to learn about how to make films... how to script, how to write dialogue," the teen told AFP in a classroom decorated with movie posters, old-school film clapboards and even a director's chair.

Ninety percent of the students at the Edward R. Roybal Learning Center are Latinos, and many of them come from families of modest means. For them, Hollywood Boulevard and the starry Walk of Fame are worlds apart from their own realities.

To help those students chase their entertainment business dreams, Clooney rallied some of his famous friends -- including actors Eva Longoria and Don Cheadle -- along with Paramount, Disney and other studios to fund the project.

The goal? To combat the lack of diversity in US film and television -- an issue that often rears its head at the Oscars, set for Sunday -- from the bottom up.

- 'Starting early' -

"Our aim is to better reflect the diversity of our country," Clooney said in a statement.

"That means starting early. It means creating high school programs that teach young people about cameras, and editing and visual effects and sound and all the career opportunities that this industry has to offer."

Costume designers, lighting technicians, hair and makeup artists -- in Ja'saray's classroom, posters listing 80 or so showbiz professions are there to show students the variety of paths available.

"I had absolutely no idea that there were that many. I thought it was just basic director and actors," says the teen, who explains she initially wanted to try her hand at animation but now is thinking about pursuing screenwriting.

"It just opened my eyes."

In fact, there are 65,000 "below-the-line" technical industry jobs in the United States, Clooney said when the program was launched -- from camera and lighting crew to editors.

Since the eruption of the #OscarsSoWhite equality movement in 2015, on-screen representation of minority communities has been scrutinized.

The Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences, which organizes and hands out the Oscars, admitted a large number of new members to diversify its voter rolls.

Slowly, that process seems to be having the desired effect.

This year, many observers see the 11 nominations for the frontrunning "Everything Everywhere All at Once," a zany sci-fi romp with a primarily Asian cast, as a sign of progress.

- Internships -

But behind the scenes, crews remain largely white. A strong union tradition means that jobs are nearly impossible to get without connections -- something those in underrepresented communities may not have.

"There's a real diversity problem, especially on crews," says Brittany Hilgers, who teaches film basics at the school after 12 years as a working screenwriter.

The Annenberg School for Communication and Journalism at the University of Southern California is one of the few academic institutions to study diversity in Hollywood, under its "inclusion initiative."

From 2016 to 2018, researchers went through the credits of 300 films. They found that 80 percent of all film editors were white men. Only 14 percent of costume designers were minorities.

The Roybal program hopes to move the needle by leaning on unions and its studio partners to offer internships, possibly leading to job placement.

After a year of generalized film study at the school, they gradually specialize in a chosen field -- in addition to their regular studies in standard subjects like math and science.

"The kids that want to do editing are going to learn how to do editing on the actual software that the people in the industry use," Hilgers explains, emphasizing that teachers are looking to help the students graduate with marketable skills.

For a sector in need of fresh faces, "it is important to invest now and not wait until they get to college, because the truth is, not every student makes it there," says the school's principal Blanca Cruz.

Junior David Flores says he feels that the program is giving him "a pretty big leg up."

He's already learned to use film editing software and a boom mic.

Beyond the practical skills, Flores says he's getting lessons in how to network.

"Now that I'm here in the school, I see a pathway for myself" in the industry, he says.

Cruz says she is hoping to eventually see the film program instituted in other LA public schools. Clooney has said he envisions taking the idea to New York, Chicago and Atlanta.

U.Pospisil--TPP