Shows like little people big world
Center for Disability Rights
Emily Ladau
Reality Shows Need a Little More Diversity
I watch The Little Couple on TLC like it’s my employment. I once hung out with Matt Roloff from Little People, Big World in his emerald room so I could interview him before he did a presentation at my college. I’m all about featuring people who are actually disabled in the media. And for the most part, I believe TLC does justice to the disability exposure. The problem, though, is that little people seem to be the only disabled people routinely shown on television, especially life shows, with very few exceptions.
Proving my point is the evidence that in February, yet another show about a family with dwarfism, Our Little Family, premiered on TLC. The show features the Hamills, a lovely family who all have the identical type of genetic dwarfism called achondroplasia. Certainly, their story is unique in that it’s exceptional for an entire family to be disabled, let alone to have the same disability. As such, this makes them perfect for the human-interest aspect TLC is trying to capture.
I can’t help but wonder, though, why mainstream media almost completely neglects featuring people with oth
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About Little People, Big World
The Roloffs distribute their lives as they tackle the pressure of being brief in an average-sized world. They are determined to succeed in a world that isn't always accepting of differences.
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The Slaton sisters, tipping the scales at over 1,000 pounds combined, have always depended on each other for back. Now in their 30s, Amy wants to have children, but cannot due to her weight, while her elder sister Tammy is nearly bedridden. The two are on their journey to lose weight and things sometimes
Dwarf Stars
By coincidence, I beg the attention of Skokie, Ill., at the start of the High Holidays. On Sept. 26, Matt Roloff, the star of Little People, Big World (TLC, season premiere on Monday at 8 p.m. ET), will appear at the Illinois Holocaust Museum & Education Center (9603 Woods Dr.) in connection with its current exhibit on the pseudoscience of the Nazi leadership (degeneration). Roloff will discuss his advocacy for little people’s rights. A question-and-answer session follows.
Until last week, Roloff—a family man from Oregon and a six-season veteran of reality TV—had flown beneath my radar. Then I caught the news that this coming season of Little People, Big World would be its last and witnessed each fan trying to say goodbye in her own way. For instance, a commenter at EW.com calling himself “Sam” greeted the news with sangfroid: “the midge show had to end sometime.” Scarcely an hour later, one “teresa” offered an indignant retort: “Yeah Sam, you learned a lot from watching the show,” she scolded. “Like how little people are the same as you and me…. Way to grow as a human.” A third commenter, “Hey Sam,” also took offense at the incorrect language of the OP: “Sa
Shows like Little People, Big World
Little People, Big World
In the most in-depth television documentation of the lives of Little People, the series follows the Roloffs - an extraordinary family composed of both little and average-sized people. Over six months and for 10 hours per day, the series captured the family's everyday successes and struggles. The consequence is an intimate view of life as a Little Person. Parents Matt and Amy Roloff are both little people - 4 feet tall - but they are determined to prevail in a world that isn't always accepting of differences. Matt has risen through the ranks of the business world, closing deals with some of Silicon Valley's most well-known companies. After being laid off, Matt decided to pursue his dream of owning his own business. Originally a stay-at-home mom but now holding down two jobs, Amy has raised four children: 15-year-old twins, Jeremy and Zach (Jeremy is average height and Zach is a little person), 12-year-old Molly and 8-year-old Jacob. Together they own and operate Roloff Farms, a sprawling 34-acre farm in Oregon. The Roloffs' accomplishments belie a hard truth: for little people, every day is a challenge. Driving a vehicle, seei