Skip to content Skip to search

Republish This Story

* Please read before republishing *

We’re happy to make this story available to republish for free under an Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives Creative Commons license as long as you follow our republishing guidelines, which require that you credit The 19th and retain our pixel. See our full guidelines for more information.

To republish, simply copy the HTML at right, which includes our tracking pixel, all paragraph styles and hyperlinks, the author byline and credit to The 19th. Have questions? Please email partnerships@19thnews.org.

— The Editors

Loading...

Modal Gallery

/
Sign up for our newsletter

Menu

Topics

  • Abortion
  • Election 2024
  • Education
  • LGBTQ+
  • Caregiving
  • Environment & Climate
  • Business & Economy
View all topics

The 19th News(letter)

News that represents you, in your inbox every weekday.

You have been subscribed!

Please complete the following CAPTCHA to be confirmed. If you have any difficulty, contact community@19thnews.org for help.

Submitting...

Uh-oh! Something went wrong. Please email community@19thnews.org to subscribe.

This email address might not be capable of receiving emails (according to Bouncer). You should try again with a different email address. If you have any questions, contact us at community@19thnews.org.

  • Latest Stories
  • Our Mission
  • Our Team
  • Ways to Give
  • Search
  • Contact
Donate
Home

We’re an independent, nonprofit newsroom reporting on gender, politics and policy. Read our story.

Topics

  • Abortion
  • Election 2024
  • Education
  • LGBTQ+
  • Caregiving
  • Environment & Climate
  • Business & Economy
View all topics

The 19th News(letter)

News that represents you, in your inbox every weekday.

You have been subscribed!

Please complete the following CAPTCHA to be confirmed. If you have any difficulty, contact community@19thnews.org for help.

Submitting...

Uh-oh! Something went wrong. Please email community@19thnews.org to subscribe.

This email address might not be capable of receiving emails (according to Bouncer). You should try again with a different email address. If you have any questions, contact us at community@19thnews.org.

  • Latest Stories
  • Our Mission
  • Our Team
  • Ways to Give
  • Search
  • Contact

We’re an independent, nonprofit newsroom reporting on gender, politics and policy. Read our story.

The 19th News(letter)

News that represents you, in your inbox every weekday.

You have been subscribed!

Please complete the following CAPTCHA to be confirmed. If you have any difficulty, contact community@19thnews.org for help.

Submitting...

Uh-oh! Something went wrong. Please email community@19thnews.org to subscribe.

This email address might not be capable of receiving emails (according to Bouncer). You should try again with a different email address. If you have any questions, contact us at community@19thnews.org.

Become a member

The 19th thanks our sponsors. Become one.

LGBTQ+

Netflix employees and their allies walk out over company’s handling of anti-trans Chappelle special

Workers walked off the job at 10:30 a.m. and were joined by LGBTQ+ protesters and allies in front of the building.

Ashlee Marie Preston dressed in a white cape and a white turban holds a microphone as people and press surround her.
Ashlee Marie Preston, a trans activist, said the demonstration did not seek to "cancel" Dave Chappelle but invite accountability for the real world harm from the special and the ideas it amplified. (Photo by Kate Sosin for The 19th)

Kate Sosin

LGBTQ+ reporter

Published

2021-10-20 15:06
3:06
October 20, 2021
pm

Updated

2021-10-20 17:51:14.000000
America/New_York

Republish this story

Share

  • Bluesky
  • Facebook
  • Email

Republish this story

LOS ANGELES — On Wednesday, the head of queer editorial at Netflix reported to work in person for the first time, just to walk out. 

Gabrielle Korn, who heads up Netflix’s LGBTQ+ hub “Most,” is among a string of employees who vowed to walk out of the company Wednesday morning after Netflix stood by its decision to platform the anti-transgender comedy special “The Closer” by Dave Chappelle for two weeks. The company has since started to backtrack support for the special. Korn is among those who Monday tweeted plans to leave the office amid growing discontent over the company’s defense of Chappelle and retaliation against transgender employees who have raised concerns. 

More than a hundred members of the media lined Vine Street, home to a Netflix office where workers walked off the job at 10:30 a.m. They were led by the trans activist Ashlee Marie Preston, who does not work at the company but has conducted trainings at Netflix, she said.

The 19th thanks our sponsors. Become one.

“It isn’t just about Netflix,” Preston told the crowd. “It’s about a corporate culture that manipulates the algorithmic sciences to distort the way that we perceive ourselves and one another. It is the emergence of a hate economy, of corporations profiting and making money off of us getting at one another’s throats.”

Preston said that she and others had asked Chappelle to engage in a conversation about the special but that he had declined. She said Wednesday’s demonstration did not seek to “cancel” the comedian but invite accountability for the real-world harm he caused against a backdrop of what is expected to be the deadliest year on record for Black transgender women.

Throngs of LGBTQ+ protesters and allies flooded the plaza in front of the building, chanting, “Trans lives matter” as security circled the perimeter and police helicopters circled overhead. The crowd was met with forceful counter-demonstrators demanding that the Chappelle special be allowed to remain on Netflix. Two men nearly consumed the demonstration with chants of, “Jokes are funny.” At moments, the duo tangled physically with trans activists who tried to separate them from the larger crowd.

Sign up for more news and context delivered to your inbox, daily

You have been subscribed!

Please complete the following CAPTCHA to be confirmed. If you have any difficulty, contact community@19thnews.org for help.

Submitting…

Uh-oh! Something went wrong. Please email community@19thnews.org to subscribe.

This email address might not be capable of receiving emails (according to Bouncer). You should try again with a different email address. If you have any questions, contact us at community@19thnews.org.

Noticeably absent from the action were Netflix employees themselves who did walk out but stood silently in literal shadow declining to speak to media, even off the record. Their silence comes in the wake of the firing of a Black transgender staffer who organized a smaller walkout last week after Netflix alleged the employee leaked internal metrics on the Chappelle special to reporters.

Amid preparations for the walkout, a Twitter account backing trans employees within the company released on Monday a bulleted list of demands for Netflix leadership that included an increase in investment in transgender content on the platform to greater control over editorial decisions for LGBTQ+ employees. 

The demands come in the wake of a protracted battle between Netflix, its own employees and the wider trans community over the release of Chappelle’s latest special, during which he misgenders a former friend who died by suicide after defending him, complains that transgender people accuse him of “punching down” and suggests that only White people are queer. 

A participant wearing a red suit, a top hat and white gloves takes a photo on their phone.
Throngs of LGBTQ+ protesters and allies flooded the plaza in front of the building, chanting, “trans lives matter” as security circled the perimeter. (Photo by Kate Sosin for The 19th)

“Dave Chappelle represents a segment of society (along with white supremacists, hoteps [a person who is pro-Black but not progressive], incels, and others) that is anxious about the waning power of cisheteronormativity and the patriarchy,” the transgender activist Raquel Willis tweeted.“People like him know that their outdated, limited view of the world is obsolete, and instead of transforming in the name of empathy and humility, they lean into toxicity.”

Trans employees within Netflix accuse the company of ignoring years of concerns raised by Black and trans employees, dating back to Chappelle’s 2019 film “Sticks & Stones.” 

Variety reported that the company’s CEO, Ted Sarandos, sent employees an internal memo reminding staff that the company had a policy against platforming content that incites violence. 

“And we don’t believe ‘The Closer’ crosses that line,” he reportedly wrote. 

  • More from The 19th
    Dallas Ducar smiles at the entrance of the clinic. Behind her is a banner that reads
  • In Western Massachusetts, a clinic by and for transgender people seeks to revolutionize health care
  • LGBTQ+ seniors fear having to go back in closet for the care they need
  • Country music has a gender issue. Kacey Musgraves is the latest woman to be shut out.

In a terse response, LGBTQ+ media organization GLAAD pointed out that its entire founding was based on the premise that cultural representations of queer people have real-life consequences. 

“Authentic media stories about LGBTQ lives have been cited as directly responsible for increasing public support for issues like marriage equality,” the group said in a statement. “Film and TV have also been filled with stereotypes and misinformation about us for decades, leading to real world harm, especially for trans people and LGBTQ people of color. Ironically, the documentary Disclosure on Netflix demonstrates this quite clearly.”

Sarandos said in an interview Tuesday night with The Wall Street Journal that his remarks had been an oversimplification of the situation and that they had been lacking in humanity.

“I should have recognized the fact that a group of our employees was really hurting,” he told the Journal.

Adding to that the next day, a company spokesperson said in an emailed statement to The 19th that Netflix supported the walkout.

“We value our trans colleagues and allies, and understand the deep hurt that’s been caused,” the statement read. “We respect the decision of any employee who chooses to walk out, and recognize we have much more work to do both within Netflix and in our content.”

In a blog post, Terra Field, the Netflix senior software engineer who first complained about the special via a viral Twitter post, said an employee resource group voiced serious concerns about both specials only to be written off by executives. 

“So when a company like Netflix says something like, ‘we do not believe this content is harmful to the transgender community,’ you can be virtually certain that not a single trans person was involved in that decision,” Field wrote. 

Correction: An earlier version of this article misspelled Dave Chappelle's name.

Republish this story

Share

  • Bluesky
  • Facebook
  • Email

Recommended for you

A person speaks in the midst of a walkout as protesters hold signs.
Before the Chappelle special, trans employees at Netflix say they were doing the work of HR
People gather to remember Ashanti Camron at a candle light vigil.
Against backdrop of anti-trans bills, transgender homicides double
Kamala Harris waves to a crowd while in a car that is part of a Pride parade.
They’re part of a community ‘who have the most to lose.’ So they’re showing up for Harris.
Photo illustration of trump holding an Executive Order over a trans flag.
All the ways Trump wants to exclude trans people from public life

The 19th News(letter)

News that represents you, in your inbox every weekday.

You have been subscribed!

Please complete the following CAPTCHA to be confirmed. If you have any difficulty, contact community@19thnews.org for help.

Submitting...

Uh-oh! Something went wrong. Please email community@19thnews.org to subscribe.

This email address might not be capable of receiving emails (according to Bouncer). You should try again with a different email address. If you have any questions, contact us at community@19thnews.org.

Become a member

Explore more coverage from The 19th
Abortion Election 2024 Education LGBTQ+ Caregiving
View all topics

Support representative journalism today.

Learn more about membership.

  • Transparency
    • About
    • Team
    • Contact
    • Privacy Policy
    • Community Guidelines
  • Newsroom
    • Latest Stories
    • 19th News Network
    • Podcast
    • Events
    • Careers
    • Fellowships
  • Newsletters
    • Daily
    • Weekly
    • The Amendment
    • Event Invites
  • Support
    • Ways to Give
    • Sponsorship
    • Republishing
    • Volunteer

The 19th is a reader-supported nonprofit news organization. Our stories are free to republish with these guidelines.