When Tyler Perry’s Netflix debut, A Fall From Grace, came out, only Tamron Hall had Tyler Perry and his stars Crystal Fox, Bresha Webb, Phylicia Rashad and the legendary Cicely Tyson all on one show. Having black women guests at all stages of their careers is commonplace for Tamron Hall. Chaka Khan, Dionne Warwick, Fantasia, Cynthia Bailey, Tracee Ellis Ross, Yara Shahidi, Kenya Moore, Ava DuVernay, Kim Fields, Kandi Burruss, Whoopi Goldberg, Tika Sumpter and Oprah are just a few names on Hall’s super-deep “Black Girl Magic” roster. And the best thing is, because Hall has a pretty great balance of guests from all backgrounds and walks of life, her black female guests don’t stand out for their race and gender. No quota is being met here. These black women are simply getting their due. Having them there comes naturally to Hall, whose show also draws a noticeable black female audience eager to support her.
“They did their research, and they saw the importance of my story to the audience,” Hall told an intimate group of black journalists back in July, during Essence Festival in New Orleans, a couple of months before her show launched. “Forty percent of daytime TV or something around there are African American women. I bring that journey, but I also bring that Southern experience, too. And I’ve lived in Chicago, Philadelphia, Texas, all over, and now New York, and that’s an interesting perspective.”
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