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    There’s no denying it. We’re seeing more Black British stories on screen than ever before.

    Complex characters. Layered storytelling. Leads that feel real, not reduced.

    On the surface, it looks like progress. And it is. But the real question sits behind the camera.

    Who is shaping these stories?

    Because representation without control can still miss the mark. When stories are filtered through perspectives that don’t fully understand the nuance, something gets lost. Tone. Detail. Authenticity.

    Audiences are sharper now. We can feel the difference between something that’s been lived and something that’s been observed.

    And increasingly, we’re paying attention to credits, not just cast.

    Writers. Directors. Producers. The people making decisions about what stories get told, and how.

    The real shift happens when ownership matches visibility. When the stories aren’t just about us, but created by us.

    That’s when representation becomes power, not just presence.

    Because being seen is one thing.

    Being understood, accurately and fully, is something else entirely.

    And that’s the standard we’re moving toward.

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