From Deseret News archives:
ABC withdraws 'Welcome' mat
In the face of pressure from various groups, the network has pulled the reality series "Welcome to the Neighborhood" before it even got on the air.
Gee, can't imagine why unless, maybe, it was the bigotry spewed by a bunch of the participants.
The premise of the show (which has already completed taping) sounds fairly simple. Three families who live in suburban Austin, Texas, met and interacted with seven other families who were hoping to win a lovely home in this lovely neighborhood. Every week, the residents eliminated one of the families until a winner was chosen.
This being reality TV, however, things weren't that simple. The three families already living in the neighborhood are white, Republican and religious; the families hoping to move in included African-Americans; Asian-Americans; Latinos; a white, gay couple and their adopted African-American child; Wiccans; a couple covered in tattoos (who turned out to be staunch Republicans); a poor white family; and a seemingly conservative white family whose mom is a stripper.
The first two episodes drew protests from groups ranging from the Gay & Lesbian Alliance Against Defamation to the National Fair Housing Alliance. The NFHA raised questions about whether "Welcome" violated the Fair Housing Act, which makes it illegal to deny housing or otherwise make it unavailable because of race, color, religion, sex, national origin, disability or family status.
Lest you think this is a bunch of left-wing organizations caught up in a frenzy of political correctness, the group that comes off the worst in the first couple of episodes of "Welcome to the Neighborhood" is the white, religious, Republican residents. As a matter of fact, the conservative Family Research Council also expressed concerns about the show, fearing it would make the religious folks look bad.
Which it does.
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