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CBS explains why it passed on Nancy Drew series; discusses diversity in its lineup

By Karen Butler
"Doubt" star Laverne Cox speaks at the 4th annual Forbes Women's Summit at Pier 60 Chelsea Piers in New York City on May 12, 2016. Photo by John Angelillo/UPI
1 of 2 | "Doubt" star Laverne Cox speaks at the 4th annual Forbes Women's Summit at Pier 60 Chelsea Piers in New York City on May 12, 2016. Photo by John Angelillo/UPI | License Photo

NEW YORK, May 18 (UPI) -- CBS unveiled its 2016-17 slate of new shows Wednesday and its head of entertainment was immediately questioned about why only one of them focused on a female lead character.

"We are the network that has Madam Secretary and 2 Broke Girls and Mom. We have lots of big, female leads. We also have Doubt, that was mentioned, with Katherine Heigl. I think we have a great balance," Glenn Geller said in a teleconference with reporters.

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Pressed to address why the majority of its new shows centered on white males -- played by Kevin James, Joel McHale, Matt LeBlanc, Michael Weatherly, Lucas Till and Dermot Mulroney -- at a time when the country is talking about diversity in entertainment, Geller said: "Actually, our new series are more diverse this year than last year and when Doubt premieres -- I am really happy to say -- it's going to be the first broadcast series to feature a transgender series regular character played by a transgender actor. I think that's phenomenal and we are definitely moving in the right direction."

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Geller was also asked whether he objects to a media report claiming the network decided not to move forward on a contemporary Nancy Drew series starring Sarah Shahi as an adult version of the iconic girl sleuth because the pilot was "too female."

"Well, that's just not true. We have a number of pilots to choose from and we chose the best pilots," Geller said.

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