Quinta Brunson is once again defending her decision not to broach the ever-important reality of school shootings in her hit ABC series, Abbott Elementary.
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Speaking in a new interview for Glamour Magazineโs Woman of the Year cover issue, Brunson explained that her reasoning stems from her perspective that thereโs two realities of the classroom: one where teachers are just trying to make it through the specific day-to-day challenges and one where the general public views the broader challenges (like school shootings) that affect the educational system at-large through the news.
While she acknowledged that school shootings happen โall the time,โ Brunson said:
โTo us, these school shootings are the biggest thing happening, but when I talk to my friends who are teachers, yes, thatโs huge, but today theyโre just trying to get through this lesson. Theyโre just trying to get the reading scores up. Theyโre just trying to do this job. If anything, the school shooting thing is in the background, like, โFuck.โ Itโs kind of like, โWe got to deal with that too?โ
โI donโt want to open up my show to that political violence,โ she further shared. โI consider it that at this pointโeven the discourse of it is violent. And although I participate in it outside of my show, and Iโm a huge advocate for eradicating gun violence in this country โฆ I donโt think my show has to carry that.โ
Additionally, speaking to why Abbott doesnโt take such an explicit โrace-firstโ approach and focus in their storylines despite it being a Black leading and Black-centric show, Brunson explained:
With Abbott, I really wanted to lead with everyday story first, and let everything fold into that. So I wanted to talk about, instead of โJanine confronts her Blackness,โ or โJanine deals with this race issue,โ itโs really just like, โJanine is trying to change a light bulb.โ
I think thatโs the way the majority of the people that I [know are]. Like my family, theyโre very working class. When theyโre at work, the issue at work is just the task at hand. And when youโre working in a predominantly Black environment, the issues just donโt come up as much. So for me, with Abbott, itโs like, well, this is a predominantly Black environment. These are characters that arenโt going to spend their days talking about race. And as you can see on the show, itโs not like race never comes up. It does.
I donโt know about you, but Iโm glad Quinta is sticking to her convictions on not having the school shooting episode. Yes, we all know those are an unfortunate reality in the U.S. but the show is a workplace COMEDY, taking place in a predominately Black, low-income area school.
We already donโt get to see that sort of positive representation on television, regular working-class Black folks and children just existing and living normal lives with not as heavy trauma, as it is. What message would it send, what would the optics look like to have a school shooting episodeโsomething with such weight and gravityโtake place in that setting? Why bring so much trauma to a show thatโs been consistently lauded as a breath of fresh air, positive, and a distraction from the real-life issues as it is? One of the reasons Abbott works and continues to break the mold (and rack up awards) is because of its freshness and much needed levityโand audiences love it for that. Letโs not go switching up on it now.
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