Professor: Stop Casting Black Brits Who Disrespect Black Americans - Black Therapy Today
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Professor: Stop Casting Black Brits Who Disrespect Black Americans

Professor: Stop Casting Black Brits Who Disrespect Black Americans

David Oyelowo’s recent comments were supposedly intended as a call for Black unity. I think. Instead, they sounded like a lecture aimed at Black Americans from a Black British actor who has made millions of dollars portraying an iconic Black American on screen.

Oyelowo appeared on the One54 Africa podcast, where the topic of Black British actors taking roles from Black Americans came up. Responding to Druski’s viral skit about Black Brits playing Black Americans, he attempted to redirect the conversation, saying, “We’re not talking about the art of acting. We’re talking about scarcity. We’re talking about the fact that there’s not much pie.”

Now, we gotta be honest. He’s right.

The scarcity of quality roles for Black actors in mainstream films is real. But just because he’s correct doesn’t mean his comments don’t deserve criticism. What set the internet on fire is that a man who became famous playing Martin Luther King Jr. is now telling Black Americans they’re imagining things when they ask why so many iconic Black American roles keep going to Black actors who are not American.

Related: Even More Black Films To Look Forward to in 2026

As they say in the Black church, let’s call the roll.

Cynthia Erivo played Harriet Tubman in “Harriet.” Daniel Kaluuya played Fred Hampton in “Judas and the Black Messiah.” Idris Elba became a household name playing Stringer Bell on “The Wire.”

LONDON, ENGLAND – FEBRUARY 01: Cynthia Erivo accepts The Derek Malcolm Award for Innovation at the 46th Critics’ Circle Film Awards Ceremony at The May Fair Hotel on February 1, 2026 in London, England. (Photo by Dave Benett/Getty Images)

But here’s the thing. Erivo and Oyelowo have both said things that raise the eyebrows of Black folks who are descendants of slaves in this country.

“If you take the Nigerian accent like this, and you slow it down, you put a lot of slavery in there,” Oyelowo said on the podcast. “Then you start to put a little bit of subservience in it.”

https://www.youtube.com/shorts/E522uk1ISnk

He is suggesting that Black American dialect emerged when West African speech styles were altered under the pressures of slavery and subservience. But that’s not true. Southern Black English is not the language of submission. It is a distinct cultural inheritance forged through resilience, creativity, community, and survival.

But he is not the only Black Brit to say something like that. In 2013, Erivo did not hesitate to tweet that she would do something in a “ghetto American accent.” And her dismissiveness toward Black Americans who had an issue with that tweet inspired many on Black Twitter to create the #NotMyHarriet hashtag.

There is an easy solution to all of this. If they do not show that they understand and appreciate Black American culture, we need to stop letting Black Brits portray Black folks born in America. Period.

Daniel Kaluuya, Damson Idris, Naomie Harris, and Gugu Mbatha Raw are good. They have not gone on Twitter or a podcast and said something problematic about Black Americans. But Erivo and Oyelowo? Nah.

Directors, producers, casting agents, and everyone else involved in deciding who gets what parts should make it a point not to cast actors to portray Black Americans if they do not understand the culture or if they have publicly said offensive things about our community.

The bottom line is that what older Black folks used to tell us is true. All skinfolk ain’t kinfolk.