The Fictional Black Women Who Taught Us How to Boss Up Before We Had the Title
Before some Black women had mentors, boardrooms, business coaches, LinkedIn networks, or six-figure job titles, we had fictional women on television showing us what power could look like.
Why Black Women Should Be Watching Beyond the Gates
CBS’s Beyond the Gates is not just another soap opera. It is a cultural moment. The series centers on the Dupree family, a powerful and prestigious Black family living in a posh gated community in one of the most affluent African American areas in the country. CBS describes the Duprees as the definition of “Black royalty,” with secrets and scandals hiding behind luxury homes, manicured lawns, and polished public images.
For Black women, that matters.
The Death of the Bubbly Black Girl in Modern Culture
For years, television and film have had a complicated relationship with the “bubbly Black girl.” She is bright, expressive, talkative, ambitious, socially awkward, deeply emotional, and often painfully sincere. But instead of being treated as layered, charming, or fully human, she is too often framed as irritating, embarrassing, romantically undesirable, or socially out of step. Her joy becomes “too much.” Her intelligence becomes “white acting.” Her ambition becomes intimidating. Her awkwardness becomes a punchline. Her vulnerability becomes something everyone around her is allowed to mock.
“Beyond The Gates” Gets Its Flowers: NAACP Image Award Nominee!
Black excellence continues to shine, and Beyond the Gates is officially getting its flowers.
The groundbreaking CBS series has been nominated for an NAACP Image Award, marking a powerful moment not only for the show but for Black storytelling in television as a whole. The nomination recognizes the series’ cultural impact, compelling performances, and commitment to authentic representation—elements that continue to push the industry forward.