Six black Britons from different backgrounds come together. Each shares a deeply personal story, raising tough questions about being black and British in search of answers.

Episode 1:
Six black Britons from very different backgrounds and viewpoints are coming together under one roof at a time when race and racism in the UK have sparked a nationwide discussion about what needs to change. They grapple with tough, unsettling and emotional questions about being black and British in search of a way forward. Each of them has a deeply personal story to share about an event that proved to be a seismic moment in their life. They confront their differences, hoping to find answers from each other and from those who are trying to change Britain.
Kicking off the discussions is 23-year-old political commentator Dominique from Manchester. Her experience of being excluded from school prompts a heated discussion about whether or not it’s the school’s fault when black children fail. Black children are one of the groups most likely to be excluded, and in GCSEs they perform below the national average. To find out more, the group visit a south London school which puts race and racism at the heart of the curriculum.
Security guard and mum of two Michelle raises the issue of stop and search after her teenage son was searched when he was knocked off his scooter by a car. With young black men in London 18 times more likely to be stopped and searched than white people, the group look for a way forward to resolve long-standing tensions between the police and black communities. They also meet a controversial community action group who are taking matters into their own hands when it comes to keeping their local neighbourhood safe.
Finally, 22-year-old drill rapper Mista Strange wants to confront one of the black community’s biggest taboos. His experience of coming out as gay led to online abuse. He asks the group why it’s particularly hard to come out as a gay black man, a question that proves explosive and emotional, and pushes relationships to the brink.

Episode 2:
Six black Britons from very different backgrounds and viewpoints are coming together under one roof at a time when race and racism in the UK have sparked a nationwide discussion about what needs to change. They grapple with tough, unsettling and emotional questions about being black and British in search of a way forward. Each of them has a deeply personal story to share about an event that proved to be a seismic moment in their life. They confront their differences, hoping to find answers from each other and from those who are trying to change Britain.
The most radical of the group, university professor Kehinde, set up Britain’s first black studies degree. He believes it’s time for a fundamental change to Britain. He has a revolutionary idea to reveal to the group which could prove divisive – black-only workplaces. Although recent years have seen black leaders taking the top jobs at some big companies, at the latest count, there wasn’t a single black CEO in a FTSE 100 company. At the other end of the pay scale, however, black people are overrepresented in lower-paying jobs. The group meet someone who won one of the UK’s biggest race discrimination payouts in recent years and debate whether taking companies to task or race-based quotas could be the way forward. One of the panel from last year’s controversial race commission report also drops in to discuss whether or not racism is still the most significant barrier holding back progression for black people in Britain.
29-year-old NHS doctor Raphel has matters of the heart on his mind. He’s at a stage in life where he’s looking to settle down and feeling the pressure to marry within the black community, so he wants to ask the group whether race should matter when it comes to love. Black men in Britain marry outside their race far more than white and Asian men, but black women are statistically more likely than black men to be in same-race relationships. To find out more, some of the group head off for a night out at a diverse dating event in the West Midlands to meet other single people dealing with the same dilemma.
Last to reveal her story is 34-year-old property and litigation contractor Lin with an extremely personal experience that is born from her mixed heritage. 1.2 million people in the UK are mixed-race, and the numbers are growing. Lin’s experience of racism from both sides of her extended family has led her to question where mixed race people fit in when it comes to being black. It strikes a chord with many in the group, raising fundamental questions about what it means to be black.

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