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A grantmaker is betting a TV show for teen girls can help narrow the STEM gender gap

Dallas philanthropist Lyda Hill has devoted much of her giving to tackling social problems through science. Her Lyda Hill Philanthropies supports museums, basic research, and programs like National Geographic Explorers.
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FILE - Lyda Hill poses for a picture before the Carnegie Medal of Philanthropy Ceremony at Gotham Hall on Thursday, Oct. 13, 2022, in New York. Hill has devoted much of her giving to tackling social problems through science. She is now venturing into financing and developing a TV series, 鈥淢ission Unstoppable,鈥 aimed at teenage girls to encourage careers in science, technology, engineering, and math careers. (AP Photo/Andres Kudacki, File)

Dallas philanthropist Lyda Hill has devoted much of her giving to tackling social problems through science. Her Lyda Hill Philanthropies supports museums, basic research, and programs like National Geographic Explorers.

Over the last few years, the grantmaker also has ventured into media production: financing and helping develop a TV series, 鈥淢ission Unstoppable,鈥 aimed at girls aged 13 to 17, which features women succeeding in science, technology, engineering, and math, or STEM, careers.

The CBS series 鈥 which is one part entertainment and one part feminist career inspiration 鈥 has averaged a million broadcast viewers in its first two seasons and has been nominated for multiple Emmy awards. It鈥檚 also part of a growing recognition in the philanthropic community that TV shows, feature films, podcasts, and other media projects are powerful tools to reach new audiences and shift entrenched narratives, what insiders call 鈥渘arrative change.鈥 Since 2009, grantmakers have given at least $2.1 billion to television-related projects, according to data from Candid and Media Impact Funders, a network of grantmakers.

Narrative change draws on disciplines like communications and movement organizing to help people rethink the stories that define their worldview. Over the past decade, writers, filmmakers, marketing executives, nonprofits and philanthropies, scholars, and advocates have increasingly collaborated on strategies to tell stories that shape attitudes or beliefs and motivate people to act. Those might include projects to strengthen grass-roots news outlets, help advocates and organizers identify the most effective ways to frame their messages, and boost representation both in front of the camera and behind the scenes.

鈥淚t was completely new territory for us,鈥 said Nicole Small, CEO and president of Lyda Hill Philanthropies, of making 鈥淢ission Unstoppable.鈥

The show, which premiered in 2019, presents scientists working in fields like coding, biology, and veterinary science as relatable role models. The fifth season premiered in October with an episode featuring a chemical engineer who makes fuel out of soybean oil, a mathematician whose work became the foundation of GPS technology, and a biomedical engineer using seashells to help grow human bones.

鈥淲e鈥檙e looking to create a culture shift in how girls see themselves in the world,鈥 Small said. 鈥淲hether or not viewers pursue a career in STEM, we hope that they see themselves as meaningful contributors to change in the world and understand how important science is to the world around them.鈥

Changing culture is a long game, and measuring progress can be tricky. But early signs suggest 鈥淢ission Unstoppable鈥 is succeeding, according to survey data from girls ages 10 to 15 and parents of girls of the same age who watched the show. A white paper produced last year by the Raben Group found 17% increased interest in STEM among viewers and 16% increased interest in STEM courses in high school or university. After watching the show, 20% more viewers described STEM careers as 鈥渁ppealing,鈥 while 19% more said they perceived STEM careers as 鈥渃reative.鈥

鈥淢ission Unstoppable鈥 is an outgrowth of a Lyda Hill Philanthropies initiative called IF/THEN, which works to help advance women in STEM and inspire the next generation to pursue these career paths. The initiative鈥檚 name is inspired by the idea 鈥渋f you can see it, then you can be it,鈥 Small said.

According to the American Association of University Women, women make up only 34% of the STEM workforce, and by college graduation, men greatly outnumber women in every engineering and computing discipline.

In partnership with the American Association for the Advancement of Science, Hill has supported a group of more than 120 scientists, or 鈥渁mbassadors,鈥 working across a wide range of fields. The women receive media and communications training to help boost awareness of their work. Around 40 of the IF/THEN 鈥渁mbassadors鈥 have been featured on 鈥淢ission Unstoppable.鈥

Lyda Hill Philanthropies has been the show鈥檚 primary funder, though Small declined to share how much the grantmaker has contributed.

It can cost 鈥渕illions of dollars to produce shows,鈥 she said, adding that the foundation鈥檚 significant investment has had a great return on investment. A 2021 report produced by Lyda Hill Philanthropies and the Geena Davis Institute on Gender in Media demonstrated that representation in film and television plays a 鈥減rofound role鈥 in how young girls think about their future career trajectories.

But production and entertainment value matter.

鈥淲hen you immerse a viewer in a story that has humor, that has excitement, that has all kinds of emotional currency, it tends to be so much more sticky than if they feel like they鈥檙e reading a textbook about that subject,鈥 says Bryan Curb, senior vice president and general manager of Educational & Informational Programming with Hearst Media Production Group, which worked alongside Lyda Hill Philanthropies to produce the series.

鈥淢issions, while they may be well-meaning, are not really going to be fulfilled if you don鈥檛 get people watching,鈥 he added. 鈥淥ur goal is to get eyeballs on the screen.鈥

Unlike a documentary or feature-length film that a viewer may watch just once, television series offer opportunities for repeat exposure to messages. That repetition can add up and be especially powerful.

The footprint of 鈥淢ission Unstoppable鈥 goes beyond the half-hour weekend TV show. Clips are repurposed in bite-size segments on TikTok and Instagram, where together the show has nearly a million followers. An additional web-only series, the STEM Loft, is shared on the show鈥檚 YouTube channel, which has more than 38,000 subscribers.

Other grantmakers, like the Alfred P. Sloan Foundation, have backed documentaries, books, television, and theater to help build public understanding about scientists.

鈥淭he more people think that scientists are people like them, living lives that they can relate to, with motivations they can relate to, the more progress we can make in healing that divide between science and the rest of society,鈥 says Adam Falk, the foundation鈥檚 president. 鈥淥ne way you do that is the arts, not just by beating people over the head and telling them what you think they should know.鈥

These lessons can apply to nearly any issue or cause.

鈥淚ndividual stories can move audiences in really profound ways,鈥 says Erica Lynn Rosenthal, director of research at the Norman Lear Center at the University of Southern California, which has studied the power of entertainment to change mindsets and culture for more than 20 years.

In recent years, Rosenthal and her colleagues tracked how TV shows and films affect audience attitudes about transgender people, immigrants, and health equity, among other issues.

鈥淲e know it鈥檚 working,鈥 Rosenthal says. 鈥淚t鈥檚 a definitive 鈥榶es鈥 if we understand it broadly. Narratives are always being bolstered, being changed, being shifted, being affected.鈥

It can be tough to attribute long-term changes to particular shows. Sometimes researchers look at incremental indicators, using proxies like changes in language that appear on social media to track how audience attitudes shift.

Small, with Lyda Hill Philanthropies, hopes to gather more data about the show鈥檚 impact as its viewers grow older and progress in their education and careers. For now, she hopes other donors with a passion for STEM back the project and influence more young women.

鈥淭he truth is, the needle hasn鈥檛 moved as much in women and STEM careers as we would like,鈥 she says. 鈥淲e鈥檙e going to have to get creative.鈥

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This article was provided to The Associated Press by the Chronicle of Philanthropy. Eden Stiffman is a senior editor at the Chronicle. Email: [email protected]. The AP and the Chronicle receive support from the Lilly Endowment for coverage of philanthropy and nonprofits. The AP and the Chronicle are solely responsible for all content. For all of AP鈥檚 philanthropy coverage, visit .

Eden Stiffman, The Chronicle Of Philanthropy, The Associated Press