Netflix found itself immersed in a heated debate over freedom of expression in the United States after the airing of a show by famous comedian Dave Chappelle deemed transphobic by some, including employees within the streaming company.
In his show “The Closer”, the stand-up star responds to critics who have accused him in the past of making fun of transgender people, saying that “gender is a fact” and that his detractors are ” too sensitive ”.
“In our country, you can shoot and kill ‘a black man,’ but don’t you dare offend a gay person,” says Dave Chappelle, who is himself black.
The show was condemned by some LGBTQ (lesbian, gay, bisexual, trans, queer) groups such as GLAAD, which recalled the existence of studies showing that the dissemination of stereotypes about minorities had dire consequences in the real world. .
Netflix is defending the comedian for the moment, and has refused to remove the show from the platform.
But the streaming giant finds itself unwillingly caught up in what is arguably the biggest controversy that has rocked it so far.
Dave Chappelle remains very popular, an asset for Netflix against its competitors HBO and Disney. Price of “The Closer”: 24 million dollars, the artist having emphasized the attraction he represented for the subscribers of the service.
But the controversy raises a larger question about freedom of expression, and the role of entertainment giants like Netflix in this regard.
“Netflix is no longer the small company that sends DVDs, it is a vast producer of content,” which spends billions of dollars to feed its platform, underlines Stephen Galloway, of the film and media arts department of the Chapman University, California.
“This is the real first public test” for Netflix, he said. “And they planted their flag on the side of freedom of expression, rather than that of its regulation.”
Clutch planned
In “The Closer”, Dave Chappelle compares a transgender woman to someone blackening her face (the “blackface”), and jokes by threatening to kill a woman and then put her body in his car.
In a memo to employees, Ted Sarandos, co-executive director of Netflix responsible for content, said that what was shown “on the screen did not translate directly into harmful consequences in the real world”, and that the principle freedom of expression outweighed any perceived contempt – including by its own employees.
But a group of employees are planning a walkout this week to protest Netflix’s handling of the crisis.
An employee was fired for posting confidential information about the rate requested by Dave Chappelle.
“We understand that the gesture of this employee was motivated by a feeling of disappointment and sorrow against Netflix, but maintaining a culture of trust and transparency is at the heart of our company,” reacted the platform.
Ted Sarandos also argued for the dissemination of other content, such as that of Hannah Gadsby, whose show “Nanette” recounted her experience of homophobia as a lesbian woman.
The latter responded with a murderous publication on Instagram, addressed to the person in charge and denouncing his “cult of an amoral algorithm”.
Fracture lines
The case of Dave Chappelle is made complex by the interweaving of different struggles: he is accused of attacking one minority, but himself repeatedly emphasizes belonging to another.
“The show draws its energy from one of the most heated debates in pop culture, over competing claims of victimization,” journalist Helen Lewis wrote in the magazine. The Atlantic.
Some draw a parallel with the controversy surrounding the author ofHarry potter, JK Rowling, last year. She had been accused of transphobia by speaking of the erasure of “the concept of sex”. “If the sex is not real, the reality experienced by women around the world is erased,” she said.
If the writer emphasized the importance of protecting the safety of women, Dave Chappelle shares his experience as a black man.
According to him, white gay men “are part of a minority until the moment when they need to be white again”. And LGBTQ communities have made more progress in a few years than blacks in decades, he points out.
“There are a lot of fault lines here,” says Stephen Galloway. “Each could become gaping and create an earthquake.”