🐱 Netflix trans employees and allies release a list of demands ahead of the walkout - TL;DR how they would tank the company

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The trans employee resource group at Netflix has released a list of demands for the company ahead of Wednesday’s walkout. “We want the company to adopt measures in the areas of content investment, employee relations and safety, and harm reduction, all of which are necessary to avoid future instances of platforming transphobia and hate speech,” employees wrote in a press release, which has not yet been made public but was supplied to The Verge.


The news comes after weeks of controversy due to Netflix executives continuing to support Dave Chappelle and his comedy special The Closer, which many LGBTQ people and allies have criticized as transphobic.

Last week, Netflix fired a leader of the trans ERGwho was helping to organize the walkout. The company said this worker had leaked confidential information. Internally, that reasoning has been disputed.

While the conversation has become mired in a “culture wars” dispute over censorship and hate speech, none of the demands involve taking down the comedy special. Employees want Netflix to allow the trans ERG to take on a bigger role in internal conversations surrounding potentially harmful content, hire trans and nonbinary executives, and eliminate imagery of transphobic content in the office.

Read the full letter from Netflix employees below:


Over the past few weeks, it has become clear that there are many places where Netflix

still has to grow when it comes to content relating to the trans and non-binary

community. The Trans* Employee Resource Group, which includes trans and

non-binary colleagues as well as our numerous allies, wants Netflix to immediately take

the steps below to begin to repair the relationship between the Company, our

colleagues, and our audience. Specifically, we want the Company to adopt measures

in the areas of Content Investment, Employee Relations and Safety, and Harm

Reduction, all of which are necessary to avoid future instances of platforming

transphobia and hate speech, and to account for the harm we have caused and will

continue to cause until the below measures are put in place.

Content Investment

  • Create a new fund to specifically develop trans and non-binary talent
○ This fund should support both above-the-line (ATL) and below-the-line

(BTL) talent;

○ This fund should exist in addition to the existing Creative Equity Fund;

  • Increase investment in trans and non-binary content on Netflix comparable to
our total investment in transphobic content, including marketing and

promotion;

  • Invest in multiple trans creators to make both scripted and unscripted programs
across genres;

  • Revise internal processes on commissioning and releasing potential harmful
(“sensitive”) content, including but not limited to involving parties who are a

part of the subject community and can speak to potential harm, or consulting

with 3rd party experts/vendors;

  • Increase the ERG role in conversations around potentially harmful content and
ensure we have best in class regional support on complicated intersectional

diversity issues;

  • Hire trans and non-binary content executives, especially BIPOC, in leading
positions;

Employee Relations and Safety

  • Recruit trans people, especially BIPOC, for leadership roles in the company
(Director, VP, etc.) and promote an inclusive environment for them;

  • Allow employees to remove themselves from previous company promotional
content (e.g. allyship and diversity videos, etc.);

  • Eliminate references/imagery of transphobic titles or talent inside of the
workplace, including but not limited to murals, posters, room names, swag;

Harm Reduction

  • Acknowledge the harm and Netflix’s responsibility for this harm from
transphobic content, and in particular harm to the Black trans community;

  • Add a disclaimer before transphobic titles that specifically flag transphobic
language, misogyny, homophobia, hate speech, etc. as required;

  • Boost promotion for Disclosure and other trans-affirming titles in the platform;
  • Suggest trans-affirming content alongside and after content flagged as
anti-trans.

We are employees, but we are members, too. We believe that this Company can and

must do better in our quest to entertain the world, and that the way forward must

include more diverse voices in order to avoid causing more harm. The Trans* ERG

looks forward to working with the Company to make this a better, more entertaining

place for us all.

Sincerely-

Trans* Netflix
 
Allow employees to remove themselves from previous company promotional
content (e.g. allyship and diversity videos, etc.);

That one is good. Their complaint is that the company wants to make them visible to make themselves look woke, but is now refusing to give in to their demands, and no matter what has happened previously, if you refuse a single demand, you are now public enemy #1, and should not “benefit” from the use of their likenesses as evidence of wokeness. Company should be proactive, though...just go ahead and remove the troons from everything.

Anyway, all Netflix has to do is ignore lol. They’re all WFH, and so yes, unless Netflix has been stupid enough to allow some of them with actual technical skills the access needed to sabotage them, how would anyone even know they walked out, as opposed to stepped out to walk their dog? People are barely even talking about the Chappelle thing anymore they should’ve done this 3 weeks ago.
 
the compulsive focus on black troons in particular is bizarre, even coming from a 'community' already up to its neck in inexplicable behavior. how many black troons does nexflix employ? how many black troons are running around out there in general? it's gotta be a vanishingly small number of individuals in absolute terms
13% of the population, 1% of that, carry the 1...

By my calculation, there should be exactly 428,350 black troons in the US at this exact moment.

Language/speech is never equivalent in any sense to "punching" in any direction.

Also, fuck troons.
Punch them WITH MY DICK.
 


Transgender employees at the streaming giant are planning to stage a walkout in protest of the comedian's recent comedy special, which included statements about the LGBTQ+ community that have been criticized as transphobic.

Field, a senior software engineer who identifies as trans and queer went viral last week after she criticized Chappelle's special, The Closer, on Twitter.

She was subsequently suspended after crashing an executive meeting to protest at the content in The Closer before being reinstated.


Netflix has continued to back Chappelle with CEO Ted Sarandos telling staff, "we work hard to support their [talent's] creative freedom."

Now Field has penned an essay about the fallout from the Chappelle situation and revealed that she is receiving threats of violence.

"The past nine days have been an absolute whirlwind for myself, my family, the Trans* ERG and our allies, and the Trans community as a whole," Field wrote on Medium.

"I've personally received threats of violence, an enormous amount of transphobic vitriol, and an incredible and heartening amount of support from people I know, people I've worked with at Netflix, and people I've never met.

"If we hadn't made judicious use of Block Party (with help from my partners in reviewing the cesspool that my mentions had become) and some custom tooling my partner wrote, I don't think I could have made it through this week."

Field addressed concerns from people who have accused her of trying to "cancel" Chappelle.

"Dave is not, and has never been, the cause of this problem—he is a symptom of it," she wrote.

"That Dave believes the things he says and can say them with relative impunity is a result of the culture we live in: a culture that marginalizes and devalues trans people. He contributes to that culture in a very real way, but at least he isn't out there bragging about how many LGBTQ+ allyship awards he has won while he is doing it."

Last week, Netflix fired a leader of the trans employee resource group that was organizing the walkout which is scheduled to take place on October 20.

Netflix said this employee had leaked confidential information. This has been disputed by staff.

"We have let go of an employee for sharing confidential, commercially sensitive information outside the company," a Netflix spokesperson said in a statement. "We understand this employee may have been motivated by disappointment and hurt with Netflix, but maintaining a culture of trust and transparency is core to our company."

A rally in support of the trans employees' walkout has been scheduled for Wednesday and is to take place in front of Netflix's EPIC building in Hollywood, Variety has reported.

Several famous faces from Netflix shows are expected to show their support, including Angelica Ross, Jonathan Van Ness, Jameela Jamil, Eureka O'Hara and Colton Haynes.
 
Several famous faces from Netflix shows are expected to show their support, including Angelica Ross, Jonathan Van Ness, Jameela Jamil, Eureka O'Hara and Colton Haynes.
I have never heard of any of them. Ah well. I have absolutely zero sympathy for the company who do the corporate version of sticking your dick in crazy. This is what your hired, enjoy them shrieking as they damage your business.
 
  • Add a disclaimer before transphobic titles that specifically flag transphobic
language, misogyny, homophobia, hate speech, etc. as required;
To be fair, this would be helpful, as any movies they would want this disclaimer in front of would almost certainly be a great movie.

I mean - all the Rambos, Terminator, rhe Die Hard trilogy, The Warriors, Empire Strikes Back, The Outsiders, The Muppet Movie, etc etc .
 
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Imagine making "tranny improv" the 3rd or 4th bulletpoint on your list of demands. Comedy of the absurd. Or maybe they mean documentaries, but that's just as unwatchable and illogical.
I can imagine tranny improv failing. They get offended when normal people laugh at them in real life. Why give them a platform where they’ll still get offended if normal people laugh at them, but also if they don’t?
 
I can imagine tranny improv failing. They get offended when normal people laugh at them in real life. Why give them a platform where they’ll still get offended if normal people laugh at them, but also if they don’t?
We have a thread on an awful troon comedian who does a daily show ripoff. It’s the worst
 
Since Netflix doesnt seem to mind what little pushback they’ve received (incredible how just shrugging and saying ok to each their own works so well), I’m just amused by the fact that these people think they have any leverage. Social media terrorism is the only leverage they have against a company, they can’t IRL terrorize them like they do with women’s groups who say no. A population of easily-replaced troublemakers and D-listers that everyone at Netflix who isn’t them wishes would disappear? Lol.
 
"The past nine days have been an absolute whirlwind for myself, my family, the Trans* ERG and our allies, and the Trans community as a whole," Field wrote on Medium.
I looked for annotations in both these articles and got nothing!
 
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