Winfrey sat down with The Hollywood Reporter along with filmmaker Ava DuVernay to discuss how important it is for more black men and women to be represented on screen. Which is why Winfrey brought DuVernay over to the network she founded, OWN, to create an upcoming new series, "Queen Sugar," about African American siblings who inherit a sugarcane farm in modern-day Louisiana. "I used to use the word 'diversity' all the time. 'We want more diverse stories, more diverse characters ...' Now I really eliminated it from my vocabulary," Winfrey said. "Because I've learned from [DuVernay] that the word that most articulates what we're looking for is what we want to be: included. It's to have a seat at the table where the decisions are being made." "We aren't sitting around talking about diversity," DuVernay said. "Just like we aren't sitting around talking about being black or being women. We're just being that." DuVernay, 43, started out as a publicist and then made her mark at the Sundance Film Festival in 2012 when she won Best Director for her film, "Middle of Nowhere." She went on to direct "Selma," for which she became the first black female director to be nominated for an Academy Award for Best Picture.
Source: CNN