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The Cast of Netflix’s Dear White People Reflect on the Impact of the Series and the Legacy It Leaves Behind for Future Black Creators

The fourth and final season of Netflix's Dear White People premieres on Sept. 22.

Itโ€™s been a long, grueling wait thanks to the COVID-19 pandemic, but Netflixโ€™s Dear White Peopleโ€”the brainchild of creative force Justin Simienโ€”has finally returned for its fourth and final season.

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After years of exploring life at Winchester through the lens of rocky relationships, explorations of sexual identity, social justice advocacy, the trauma of police brutality, and the divergent ambitions of its ensemble cast, season four deploys an entirely new approach to life on campus by transforming the popular series intoโ€”of all thingsโ€”a 90s-inspired musical. Why exactly? Because with the Armstrong-Parker House producing the schoolโ€™s Varsity Show for the first time ever, itโ€™s the perfect opportunity to sprinkle some much-needed seasoning into a production thatโ€™s historically been about as white as Candace Owensโ€™ values.

So with the show drawing to a close, prior to the premiere of its fourth and final season on Netflix, The Root sat down with Simien and other cast members to reflect on the cultural impact of the show and the legacy it leaves behind for future Black creators.

โ€œThis show is an exploration in Black creativity,โ€ Logan Browning, who plays Samantha โ€œSamโ€ White, told The Root. โ€œThereโ€™s something we allude to a lot in Dear White People, which is you fight and you claw so hard to break the status quo, and then you elevate and reach a point in which you become it. How do you navigate once you become it?โ€

โ€œCreating that space for people of color, and also queer people and queer people of color, in the industry thereโ€™s a ricochet effect to that, too,โ€ Simien said. โ€œBecause we often donโ€™t get that space. We donโ€™t really get chances to tell personal stories. When I bring in filmmakers, I donโ€™t want them to mimic me. I want them to do them. Because a lot of people have been able to come into our space and do that, I think a lot of Black storytellers and queer storytellers have been able to show the industry what they can do in a way that I donโ€™t think they wouldโ€™ve gotten that chance. That was really important for me to create that space for other people, too.โ€

Dear White People is available on Netflix.

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