Ray Richmond is contributing to Deadline’s TCA coverage.
Given that a pair of its primary lead performers happen to be African American, it might seem logical to assume that the ethnicity of stars Meagan Good and Laz Alonso would be somehow interwoven into the storyline of the midseason NBC soap ensemble Deception
(formerly Infamous) that premieres tomorrow night at 10. But this assumption would be wrong, as showrunner Liz Heldens stressed during an afternoon TCA panel. Good portrays a police detective investigating a possible homicide, while Alonso plays an FBI agent and her former flame. “I guess the way it all shook out, (the ethnicity of Good and Alonso) is a way of sort of dealing with race without actually having to talk about it,” Heldens said. “But it’s not something we really talk about too much in the writers room…I just think it is sort of there. I’m not sure what we could put in the characters’ mouths that would speak louder than the fact of what you’re looking at on-screen.” Heldens pointed out that there certainly was no specific intent to cast African
Americans in the roles, but that when Good originally came in to read “she just walked in and owned it. It was fantastic.”
Related: NBC Orders Summer Camp Dramedy Series From ‘Deception’ Creator & BermanBraun
The fact that her character isn’t specified as to race was seen as a plus by Good when she read the original script. “I just thought it was really cool that it wasn’t listed as a ‘young black girl’,” she said. ” Added Alfonso: “To me, it’s just great to play a well-rounded human being regardless of color and ethnicity.” You can watch a trailer below:


All due respects to Good, et al, but I found the pilot episode, first episode boring.
Meagan Good is very well cast in this. Everybody questioned Emily Van Camps casting in Revenge and she turned out great.
Liz Heldens is awesome.
I worked with Laz Alonso on Breakout Kings. He is a great guy and super talented. A team player and an asset. He helps any show he is involved with.
Good to see an actor/actress cast because of their talent rather than to fill a quota. However the woman playing the wife is about as interesting and full of life as a six month old kitchen sponge. Couldn’t they have gotten an actual actress? Good to see Wes Brown working again though. This could have been good but the pilot is blah. I’m sure this’ll last about three episodes before getting yanked off the schedule.
Liz Heldens is a sharp lady with a distinct voice. Was curious to hear she’d developed Deception BEFORE Revenge but it wasn’t greenlit until the success of the latter.
How about we call attention to it being a total fucking rip-off of Revenge?
More of a Rip-off of Veronica Mars than Revenge. Revenge is about getting revenge on the people that wronged her father, Veronica Mars (and Deception) is about finding out who killed her best friend.
How is it a rip-off? That term is overused way too much.
Kudos to showrunner Liz Heldens and the other producers for not allowing fear or narrow mindedness to cloud their creativity!
Liz Heldens is very talented. I’m sure this will be a great show.
Mrs. Obama infiltrates Mitt Romney’s extended wealthy family to find the killer of her best friend, Joe Biden’s wife. Might work…
“I’m not sure what we could put in the characters’ mouths that would speak louder than the fact of what you’re looking at on-screen.” Excellent point. The story is what’s important, not race. Looking forward to this show.
I agree – forget race and focus on the storyline. Either it’s good or it’s not.
Recast the Mother and daughter, they are so boring it’s unbelievable.
“Given that a pair of its primary lead performers happen to be African American, it might seem logical to assume that the ethnicity of stars Meagan Good and Laz Alonso would be somehow interwoven into the storyline of the midseason NBC soap ensemble Deception”–So confused as to why would it seem logical to assume this?
It is about time we brought movies up to date with current scientific understanding. There is no such thing as race. There are no “races”. Anyone who says otherwise obligates themselves to define the”races”, i.e what characteristics do all the members of one”race” have that no members of the other “races” have. How the heck would we know who we are talking about? When a film maker casts a “young black woman”, what they heck does that mean? Does it mean the audience is required to bring their prejudices about what a “young black women” is in order to understand the plot and enjoy the movie? Does it mean the character has to meet some stereotype for the movie to be “credible? How is this different from “profiling”? Film makers commonly stretch the truth to tell a story and make a point. Why can’t we just stop perpetuating the lie of race in telling our stories.