‘Black-ish’ Episode ‘Please, Baby, Please’ Released on Hulu After Being Shelved by ABC

The “Please, Baby, Please” episode of “Black-ish,” which was shelved before airing by ABC due to its political content back in 2018, will finally make it to air on Hulu.

“Black-ish” creator Kenya Barris shared the news in a statement Monday.

“We were one year post-election and coming to the end of a year that left us, like many Americans, grappling with the state of our country and anxious about its future. Those feelings poured onto the page, becoming 22 minutes of television that I was, and still am, incredibly proud of,” Barris said. “’Please, Baby, Please’ didn’t make it to air that season and, while much has been speculated about its contents, the episode has never been seen publicly… until now.”

“I cannot wait for everyone to finally see the episode for themselves and, as was the case nearly three years ago, we hope it inspires some much-needed conversation — not only about what we were grappling with then or how it led to where we are now, but conversations about where we want our country to go moving forward and, most importantly, how we get there together,” he added.

At the time, ABC attributed its decision not to air the episode, which was reported exclusively by Variety, to “creative differences” with Barris and the producers that they “were unable to resolve.”

Barris used the same “creative differences” term, however, the argument over the episode was allegedly a significant facotr behind his departure for a mega overall deal at Netflix later that same year.

Directed by Barris, the episode features Anthony Anderson’s patriarch Dre caring for his infant son on the night of an intense thunderstorm that keeps the whole household awake. Dre attempts to read the baby a bedtime story, but abandons that plan when the child continues to cry. He instead improvises a bedtime story that, over the course of the episode, conveys many of Dre’s concerns about the current state of the country.

The episode covers multiple political and social issues. In one scene, Dre and oldest son Junior (Marcus Scribner) argue over the rights of athletes to kneel during the performance of the national anthem at football games.

 


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