Netflix celebrates International Women’s Day and announces its investment in the next generation of female storytellers

March 8 of every year is International Women’s Day! On this day, we celebrate all women regardless of race, color, religion, educational attainment, job, economic status, or title.

In this light, Netflix is moving to invest in the next generation of female storyteller.  In her blog post, Netflix’s Global TV Head, Bela Bajaria, pointed out many firsts of women in the industry. She goes on to say that she wants to ensure that the next generation of female storytellers has more opportunities than those that came before her.

Bajaria recounts her own personal experience as an Indian woman growing up in the US. Despite the stereotype onscreen of a woman hero being a white woman, she said that in her mind, it wa always a “brown girl, with hopes and aspirations, strengths and talents just like her white counterparts.” Several years later, this dream became reality with Mindy Kaling in The Mindy Project, an American romantic comedy television series created by and starring Mindy Kaling, the daughter of Indian immigrants.

Since then, Netflix has had many firsts in front of, and behind, the cameras that involved women: the first Indigenous Mexican Academy Award actress nominee; the first Korean female stand-up special; the first Black woman to direct a superhero movie; and the first transgender woman to ink an overall deal with a studio.

Here is a  video put together by Netflix to celebrate women.

Netflix also announced a Netflix Fund for Creative Equity “which will invest $20 million a year for the next five years in building more inclusive pipelines behind the camera”. Some of the initial programs for women that Netflix will support around the world include:

  • Collectif 50/50, a year-long, national mentorship program for aspiring women creatives of various ages and backgrounds in France, including a series of masterclasses from 30 industry leaders.
  • Into the Wild, a one-year mentorship program for young female filmmakers from film schools across Germany, including a script writing camp and a final pitch at well-known German festivals including Filmfestival Munich and the Max Ophüls-Festival.
  • Women in Post, a new eight-month program that builds on the Netflix and Canadian Academy Directors Program for Women, will provide mentorship and training within post-production to women creatives from across Canada.
  • Narrative Short Film Incubator for Women of Color, an incubator program by the National Association of Latino Independent Producers for Latinx women and women of color to produce short film projects through dedicated funding, production support, and mentorship.

 

Today is International Women’s Day 2010

International Women’s Day (8 March) is a global day celebrating the economic, political and social achievements of women past, present and future.

In my world, there are many women achievers that I see, some of whom I personally know — women of all ages who are moving in different spheres of influence trying to make this world better for others, women climbing the corporate ladder just as fast as their male counterparts, women making marks in the fields of arts, science, government, industry, medicine and in many more areas.

But today, I want to honor the women who are not as visible to the world as we know it. These are the women in many countries who continue to be discriminated against; abused by their own culture, family and husbands; tortured as political prisoners; forced into heavy labor under abject conditions; and many other women who suffer in silence despite domestic violence for the sake of their children.

I truly feel blessed to be born a free woman — free to grow up under the care of a loving family, free to be educated as much as i wish to, free to choose who I love and marry, free to travel, free to express myself in any form (within reasonable bounds), free to be recognized for my God-given talents in a society that treats men and women equally.

How sad it is to see that even in world that has gone through centuries witnessing slavery, discrimination, abuse and the like, these have not been totally eradicated till now despite the technological and educational advancement that people living in this century have access to.

I fervently hope that it will not be long before women are accorded the dignity, respect and equality that we have a right to as human beings and children of a God that sees all men and women as equals. Equality not in the sense that men and women should have the same roles all the time (as women definitely have roles that are best served by our nurturing nature) but equality in the sense that a woman who chooses to stay home to take care of children should be accorded the same respect as one who chooses to pursue a career. After all, careers have office hours. Full-time mothers work 24/7.

I wish I live to see the day when societies with castes and social classes break these barriers down and afford women the same rights to dignity, education and work as men. I hope that I or my children will be able to witness a world where women are free to be the best they can be as citizens of this world with the same opportunity to make a contribution to mankind.

To all my women family and friends, here’s wishing ourselves a HAPPY INTERNATIONAL WOMEN’S DAY!