Where are the Wheelchairs: Disability in Media

David Stehman ’17 / Emertainment Monthly Staff Writer
Steve Way opened NYCC’s Disability in Media panel on Friday by listing statistics of disability representation in television: “In the 2015-2016 television season, in the top 5 highest rated shows, twenty characters have a disability and only one of the characters are actually played by a person with a disability. On streaming shows, like Netflix, Hulu, Amazon, the top 5 most-watched shows have seventeen characters with a disability with only four of the actors actually having a disability.”
The reason why disabled actors cannot get disabled roles is rooted in assumptions and stereotypes. Maysoon Zayid gave some examples of the feedback she received when trying to act with cerebral palsy: “They don’t think we can handle it. They’d say ‘Where are we gonna find disabled actors?’ There are thousands of disabled actors in the union fighting to be seen. Some even say, ‘We need a big name.’ Well how are we gonna be a big name if we don’t get casted?”
Another reason for the misconception of people with disabilities is the actual portrayals in film and TV. Common tropes is the angry misanthrope, someone who is bitter and upset because of their disability, the villain, who hates the world because they are able-bodied, and as seen in Me Before You, the suicidal. Way opened up about the reality of suicidal thoughts in people with disabilities, and how movies like Million Dollar Baby perpetuate the stigma that people with disabilities shouldn’t be alive: “To some people, it may be a movie. To other people, it’s real life.”
Zayid mentioned how Speechless, the new show on ABC is being praised for its inclusion of a character with cerebral palsy being portrayed by an actual actor with the disability. She mentioned that this is not the first time ABC has put disability on screen, referencing a TV show from the 80s featuring people with disabilities, and how the media fails to remember this: “The number of disabled characters has gone down. It happens so infrequently, we often forget the history.”
Way concluded the panel by advising viewers to refuse watching shows that miscast characters with disabilities: “If the audience doesn’t want to back it up, it won’t happen.”