This article investigates the box office performance of films defined as being ‘African American’, with respect to their cast and content material, against those which are not. Using a large sample of films released in the North American market from 1997 to 2007, the analysis shows that, in general, African American films earn higher revenues yet are typically produced on lower budgets. Regression results of revenues show that this difference is highly statistically significant. Further, the profit functions are also statistically different, leading to the conclusion that, ceteris paribus, African American films perform better at the box office.
Source: “Do ‘African American’ films perform better or worse at the box office? An empirical analysis of motion picture revenues and profits” from Applied Economics Letters
Interestingly, race doesn’t affect teamwork on the court in the NBA but it does influence MLB umpires.
I did a deeper dive on the subject of discrimination here.
I’m curious to read this book: Race: How Blacks and Whites Think and Feel About the American Obsession. It’s by Studs Terkel, author of the classic, Working.
Related posts:
Are minority kids really penalized by peers for “acting white”?
Does racism affect teamwork in the NBA?
Does fertility make women more racist?
Does the shade of an African-American woman’s skin have an important effect on her life?
Are anti-Semites more or less accurate at telling if someone is Jewish?
Does stereotyping increase with age?
Does race affect who gets voted off AMERICAN IDOL?
Is race less of a factor for African-Americans in getting a job than it was 15 years ago?
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