Eva Longoria made it a priority to hire women and people of color in her latest TV series, "Grand Hotel," on ABC.
Half of the writers and directors on the show are women or people of color and the show's director of photography (DP) is a woman.
"We want the lens in which the show is shot to be from different storytellers and different perspectives," Longoria said Monday on "Good Morning America." "It was important to me."
Longoria executive produces, directs and acts in "Grand Hotel," a drama set at the last family-owned hotel in Miami Beach.
Because the show is based in Miami, Longoria said it was "organic" that the show would star Latinos. The diversity behind the scenes though was something Longoria did very purposefully.
(MORE: No female directors were nominated for a 2019 Oscar; here's what groups like Time's Up and Women In Film are doing about it)"Once we started to hire directors, I knew I wanted female directors so we gave all the slots to women first which is never [done]," she said. "It just trickles down when you operate from a conscious bias, where most people operate from an unconscious bias, like, ‘Oh, I hired Tom and Dick and Harry.’"
"People just don’t even think of women," Longoria added.
Longoria has been a leading supporter of the #TimesUp movement, an initiative started by women in the entertainment industry to fight sexual harassment and gender disparity in workplaces across the country.
Time's Up and the Annenberg Inclusion Initiative earlier this year announced a challenge to members of Hollywood to commit to a project with one female director in the next 18 months.
(MORE: Speaking roles for women on TV decline, but Latina roles hit new all-time high, study says)The groups posed the challenge after finding that only 4% of the top 1,200 highest earning studio films were directed by women over the last decade.
“Because only 4% of the top 100 studio films over the last DECADE have been directed by women, #TIMESUP is initiating a challenge, the 4% challenge, and I intend to take it: I commit to working with a female director in the next 18 months.” -@TessaThompson_x #TIMESUPX2 pic.twitter.com/GjsuqeryKj
— TIME'S UP (@TIMESUPNOW) January 26, 2019
With "Grand Hotel," Longoria not only included more women in the process but set a precedent as a working mom on the set. She shot the pilot while eight months pregnant with her son, Santi, and then began filming and directing the show just months later.
"Grand Hotel" premieres Monday on ABC at 10 p.m. ET/9 p.m. CST.