Listen Live
Black America Web Featured Video
CLOSE

LOS ANGELES (AP) — The head of ABC entertainment is exiting amid low ratings, to be replaced by the first African-American to head a broadcast TV network.

ABC Entertainment Group President Paul Lee has decided to leave, the network announced Wednesday.

His successor is Channing Dungey, who has been ABC Entertainment Group’s executive vice president for drama development, movies and miniseries, overseeing drama pilots and series’ launches.

Dungey shepherded ABC hits including “Scandal,” ”How to Get Away with Murder” and “Quantico.”

The changeover comes a year after Ben Sherwood became president of the Disney-ABC TV Group, and after Lee’s nearly six years as programming chief.

“Channing is a gifted leader and a proven magnet for top creative talent, with an impressive record” of helping to create compelling and popular series, Sherwood said in a statement.

Dungey is both the first black network programming chief and a rare female executive. While other women have served in top network jobs, similar positions at major networks CBS, NBC and Fox currently are held by men.

At Fox, Dana Walden serves with Gary Newman as the chairs and CEOs of Fox Television, overseeing the network and 20th Century Fox Television studio.

Dungey’s appointment as ABC Entertainment president comes at a time of increased scrutiny of Hollywood’s lack of diversity on- and off-camera, with attention focused recently on the Oscars’ all-white slate of nominees for this month’s awards.

Dungey said in a statement that she is “thrilled and humbled” by the opportunity.

Lee, in a statement issued by ABC, said he was proud of the team he built at the network and wished Dungey well. He did not say why he was leaving or what his next job would be.

The British-born Lee can claim credit for bringing notable diversity to ABC with shows including “black-ish” and “Fresh Off the Boat.” The network also became home to megaproducer Shonda Rhimes’ series that feature multi-ethnic casts and black stars.

They include Viola Davis in “How to Get Away with Murder” and Kerry Washington in “Scandal.”

“It is a mission statement to reflect America,” Lee told a 2014 meeting of the Television Critics Association. “That’s not so much diversity as authenticity when you reflect America.”

Lee’s schedule earned strong ratings in the 2014-15 season and still has impressive performers, especially Rhimes’ Thursday night block of series.

But the network’s numbers currently are in the doldrums, averaging 6.6 million viewers in prime time season-to-date. The network ranks third behind NBC and CBS, the leader with 11.7 million viewers. Last season, ABC averaged 8 million viewers.

Dungey, a graduate of UCLA’s School of Theater, Film and Television, has been in the ABC family since 2004, starting with ABC Studios. Previously, she worked at production companies and as a production executive at Warner Bros., handling films including “Bridges of Madison County” and “The Matrix.”

___

AP Television Writer Frazier Moore in New York contributed to this report.

Like BlackAmericaWeb.com on Facebook. Follow us on Twitter.