Skip navigation
sponsored by 

Families swap race on ‘Black.White.’

New reality show hopes to show the subtleties of racism

AP
This photo, released by FX Networks, shows one of two families who switch ethnic identities with the help of theatrical makeup in the FX reality series "Black.White." to explore racial attitudes. The participants include Carmen Wurgel, right, her husband, Bruno Marcotulli, and their daughter, Rose, a white family from Santa Monica, Calif.
updated 10:11 p.m. ET Feb. 27, 2006

LOS ANGELES - When writer John Howard Griffin turned his skin from white to dark and traveled the South in 1959 for a firsthand look at the depths of racism, he relied on a simple medical treatment and his wits.

In the 21st century, such a journey requires Hollywood makeup wizardry, the well-honed conventions of both reality TV and documentary filmmaking, and two families, one black, one white, acting as undercover race detectives in Southern California.

As superficially different as FX’s “Black.White.” (premiering March 8, 10 p.m. ET) and Griffin’s landmark book “Black Like Me” appear to be, they are brothers under the skin.

Story continues below ↓
advertisement

“Black.White.” proceeds with open-minded seriousness as it leads viewers to a conclusion both obvious and powerful: race counts, for better and worse. Expressions of racism and racial identity change, but that bedrock truth remains.

“I didn’t realize, more than anything, how hard it was going to be for whites and blacks to see the world through each other’s eyes,” said executive producer R.J. Cutler. “I didn’t realize how genuinely different an experience it is to be a white American and a black American.”

Cutler insisted the six-episode show, which begins March 8 on FX, doesn’t “aspire in any way to say definitive things about race.” But the participants and their actions do.

The subtleties of racism
In a Los Angeles-area house, “Black.White.” brings together Bruno Marcotulli, 47, his wife, Carmen Wurgel, 48, and her daughter Rose Bloomfield, 18, a white family from Santa Monica, and Brian Sparks, 41, wife Renee, 38, and their son, Nick, 17, a black Atlanta family.

Through artful makeup they swap races, if not perspectives.

TV BLACK AND WHITE
AP
"Black.White." participants include Renee and Brian Sparks and their son, Nick, a black family from Atlanta.

“You see what you want to see,” Marcotulli says at one point to Brian Sparks, dismissing Sparks’ experiences with prejudice.

“And you don’t see what you don’t want to see,” a frustrated Sparks replies.

Cutler, whose documentary films and TV series include the acclaimed “The War Room” and “American High,” was joined by Ice Cube, the rapper, actor and producer, on the project proposed by FX Networks President John Landgraf.

“Don’t believe the hype, everything in the world ain’t black and white. Everybody ain’t a stereotype. Just because I look wrong I’m about to do right,” Cube sings in the title song, which also includes his sharp rejection of an oft-cited phrase: “Did you get your race card? Yo, what the hell is a race card?”

His hope for the project was to “expose the subtleties of racism, the layers of racism,” the musician told The Associated Press. “Everybody thinks of a Klan man standing with a shotgun, yelling, ‘Keep it white.’

“Everybody is worried about the guy with the black power, leather jacket on, Afro ... worried about those kind of people and not really knowing that racism is not just the obvious,” Cube said.

The series’ timing is notable, with race brought into renewed focus by Katrina and the disproportionate suffering it caused for blacks in New Orleans. But “Black.White.” was conceived before the hurricane, Landgraf said.

Not ‘some kind of makeup-driven freak show’
He brought the idea of having two families trade races to Cutler, stressing that he wasn’t looking for cheap conflict.

“I said, ‘This is not cheesy, this is not about putting a white bigot ... in with black people and watching them beat the crap out of each other and watching sparks fly,” Landgraf recalled. “And it certainly wasn’t about some kind of makeup-driven freak show.”

The families in “Black.White.” are middle-class, the adults all college-educated. They received a modest fee for their participation, an FX spokesman said.

With special-effects makeup by Keith Vanderlaan and Brian Sipe that artfully used wigs, airbrushed skin paint and other elements, the families were transformed to a new ethnicity that could pass muster in varied settings.

Teenager Rose joined a poetry group with young blacks; Brian Sparks became a bartender at a place drawing white customers. The families also, in the best tradition of reality TV, shared a house in 2005 for the six weeks of production.

Cutler “wanted the families to live together, because a lot of discussion would be generated in each family coaching the other family on what it is to be white or to be black, and to pass or behave or act as white or black,” Landgraf said.

Wurgel makes what she considers a black fashion statement, buying a dashiki for church, while Renee Sparks looks askance.


Sponsored links

Resource guide

Get Your 2008 Credit Score

Search Jobs

Find your next car

Find Your Dream Home

Find a business to start

$7 trades, no fee IRAs