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Swarm Is Undeniably Imperfect and Disturbing. But Isn’t That the Point?

The discourse surrounding the latest psycho-horror series from Janine Nabers and Donald Glover urges us to examine the parameters in which Black art exists.

In Swarm, Prime Videoโ€™s latest psychological horror series from Atlanta scribe Janine Nabers and creator Donald Glover, Dominique Fishback stars as Dreโ€”a crazed fanโ€”whoโ€™s obsessed with a Niโ€™jah, a Beyonceฬ-like figure.

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Stefon Diggs and Cardi B Viral Boat Video Prompts Response from Patriots Coach
Stefon Diggs and Cardi B Viral Boat Video Prompts Response from Patriots Coach

Inspired by a myriad of true events, we watch over the course of seven episodes as her quest to be in the orbit of Niโ€™jah (a journey triggered by a tragic event in the premiere episode) becomes deadlier at each turn. The show, a Black woman-led successor to Atlanta, is weird, creepy, disturbing, imperfect, messy, critical and yet not critical enough at times. Naturally, its messageโ€”or rather, the audienceโ€™s interpretation of its messageโ€”has been fodder for online discourse ever since it dropped over the weekend.

One aspect of the conversation that sticks out to me is the argument that viewers shouldโ€™ve been able to humanize and/or relate to Dre at some point. Despite the killings, despite seeing her mop up blood and immediately get the munchies after. Despite her recklessness and delusions; despite her strangulations and stabbings. Despite her being quite literally a serial killer, we are somehow supposed to find a redeeming quality in this anti-hero.

And I think a part of this necessity to want to do that is due to the fact that this character, this killer, this deranged person, is a Black woman. Without giving too much away, thereโ€™s a scene in Episode Six where a real-life stan struggles to see how that devotion (read: obsession) could be taken so far as to kill someone. Killing? Thatโ€™s too much. A Black woman doing the killing? Thatโ€™s unimaginable. Itโ€™s a sentiment thatโ€™s prevalent throughout the entire mind-bending episode (when you watch it, youโ€™ll understand exactly what I mean). Black women โ€œfall through the cracksโ€ in society as it is already. Nobody really checks for us, folks barely look out for us. So how much more would a Black woman serial killer be able to skirt by committing heinous acts?

Photo: Courtesy of Prime Video

And itโ€™s because of this continuous overlooking and disregard that even we, as a collective audience, struggle to accept this sort of depiction on TV. When have we ever seen a completely unhinged, delusional, unforgiving, unapologetic, wholeheartedly imperfect, crazed psychotic, unrelenting, unstable Black woman character with this much brazen audacityโ€”and very little humanistic qualities or desire for evolutionโ€”on our big or small screen? Itโ€™s unimaginable.

Dre embodies the true spirit and action of a serial killer in that sheโ€™s unfortunately unchanging in her nature and impulses. No amount of love, relationships, punishment or nurturing could fix that. Thatโ€™s the entire point. And thatโ€™s OK.

You want to know why itโ€™s OK? Because itโ€™s all entertainment at the end of the day. Yes, I know itโ€™s a dig at real-life, online stans and fandoms. But when you really look at it, itโ€™s a fictionalized series about a fictional girl from Houston, obsessed with another fictional famous girl from Houston, that was created by a real-life girl from Houston. And it was created for one over-aching purpose: to entertain.

Behind the deep dives and perceived social commentary, at its core, this show is meant to entertain. And I believe that purpose often gets buried under yet another need from viewers: the need to derive meaning and message deeper from Black art thatโ€™s deeper or more profound than whatโ€™s presented. Itโ€™s a need that stems from the age-old question of whether or not Black artists can create โ€œart for artโ€™s sake.โ€ Because for the Black artist, the purpose of our work is to โ€œfunction within [oneโ€™s] race as a purposeful agentโ€โ€”just ask Richard Wright. And to function outside of that is deemed irresponsible and irreverent.

But I canโ€™t help but wonder if our expectation of an artist to put out work that always speaks to a larger conversationโ€”and our expectation to always read between the linesโ€”limits both how our art is produced and how its ingested. Can Black art and entertainment ever have the freedom to be just thatโ€”art and entertainment? Does it always have to be some deep commentary on an -ism, an ideology, or an integral part of society? Can it ever be free to exist in the space where the creator intended without it being torn apart by the audienceโ€™s own implicit perceptions and preconceived notions?

To be clear, Iโ€™m not saying artists should create irrespective of their audience. Iโ€™m also not against critical thinking and analysis. In fact, I would argue that we donโ€™t do it anywhere near enough. Iโ€™m also not even saying we all have to like this show. But what I am saying is that maybe, just maybe, we ought to question our own obsession to find the message, what itโ€™s trying to say, what it didnโ€™t say, or what it shouldโ€™ve said so that we donโ€™t miss whatโ€™s actually being saidโ€”whether we agree with it or not.

Swarm, starring Dominique Fishback, Chloe Bailey, and Damson Idris, is available to stream now on Prime Video.

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