Weâve already told you why fandom canât get enough of Sleepy Hollow, the hit âHeadless Horsemanâ update that was the first new fall show to get a second-season renewal. But even if youâre not watching the show, itâs difficult not to fall hard for Sleepy Hollow and its actors.Â
Here are 10 reasons why:Â
1) The show is committed to keeping a diverse castâŠ
If youâve heard one thing about Sleepy Hollow, itâs probably that two-thirds of the showâs main cast is black. The ensemble also features lots of diversity, and John Cho guest-starred in the pilot.Â
This doesnât make Sleepy Hollow a perfect show, but it does make it more appealing to lots of people than the average two-white-dudes-bickering proceduralâwhich is a big reason for Sleepy Hollowâs high ratings this fall. And not to be let off the hook are producers Alex Kurtzman and Robert Orci, who are responsible for bringing you what will be the yearâs most controversial blockbuster fantasy, Enderâs Game. Orci, in case you needed the reminder, hasnât exactly had the best track record for inclusivity. But if thereâs ever a show that could make up for lost female characters (and female agency) in Star Trek: Into Darkness, itâs probably this one.
GIF by everynineyearsandthirtyfourdays
Â
2) âŠand to killing off plenty of under-axed white dudes.
Not that weâre advocating a widespread Kill Bill or anything, but we all know that when the chips are down, the white men are never the first to go.Â
GIF by briennemaidoftarth
But in Sleepy Hollow, thatâs not a guarantee. As creator Len Wiseman commented to Buzzfeed:
I donât think itâs realistic for the whole cast to be white. I also think when you are developing a show and casting it mostly Caucasian and you get down to the bad guy and the network is like, âYou have to have some diversity,â then all of the suddenâŠthatâs why the person of color is always killed. And because we have so much diversity in our cast and weâve had the freedom to cast our villains and victims however we want, so we can kill as many white people as we want.
GIF via a-sweetmadness
3) That time Orlando Jones put a halt to fanshamingÂ
Orlando Jones, who plays Detective Irving on the show, is a one-man PR vehicle all by himself. Not only does he seem to innately understand fan culture, but heâs wholeheartedly embraced it, and probably spends more time interacting with fans on Tumblr and Twitter than the showâs actual PR staff.Â
More importantly, he knows how to encourage fans to do their thing. At New York Comic Con, the packed Sleepy Hollow panel was full of excited Ichabod/Abbie shippers who really wanted to talk about the romantic potential between Sleepy Hollowâs reborn Ichabod Crane and Detective Abbie Mills. When questions about shipping âIchabbieâ arose, Nicole Beharie, who plays Abbie, commented on fanart: âIâve seen some of these pictures online as well by the way, yâall. Not cool.â
The moment could have been a potentially alienating one, but Jones immediately jumped in with, âFan art rocks! Who ships Ichabbie?â immediately turning the crowdâs mood from angst to joy.Â
GIF by burningspooks
Â
We should note that for her own part, Beharie does embrace the fanart, too. We know because she retweetedâŠ
4) That time the Sleepy Hollow writers put up a giant wall of fanart in their writing room
Â
Loving the fan-art in the writers room! #SleepyFridays @sleepywriters pic.twitter.com/yuvoTYdNO2
â Katia Winter (@katia_winter) October 19, 2013
Â
Celebrating fanwork isnât always easy to do when youâre the object of the work in question, but the Sleepy Hollow creative team and its cast members know their fandom well, and generally seem to love it. For Jones, itâs a no-brainerâas the next item on the list reveals.
5) That time Orlando Jones told fans that a good creative team should always respect them
After reading a discussion on the recent PR setbacks Teen Wolf fandom has suffered, Jones shared his own thoughts on fandomâs interaction with creators. You guys, this is basically poetry:Â
There are seriously no words.
Weâre a mere 5 episodes into Sleepy Hollow and the level of discourse with this fandom is unlike anything Iâve ever experiencedâŠ. Although Iâm not a writer for Sleepy Hollow I understand and am sensitive to the importance of our role as stewards of these characters that we are fortunate enough to inhabit. Television enters our homes as an invited guest that can connect, promote and inspire just as easily as it can perpetuate tropes, idioms and stereotypes that marginalize those voices that deserve to be heard. I am so blessed to be a part of a creative enterprise that showcases representations of POCs, women and minorities in ways that defy the norm. Weâre far from perfect (as many of you have pointed out) but Iâm glad weâre doing our part to elevate the game.Â
Iâm loving this dialogue, even as I find irony in those who continue to lament my participation in the fandom because the foundational boundaries between audience and artist have been dismantled (4th Wall We Hardly Knew Ya). I think people sometimes misunderstand my intention and attention â
I would still be a rabid fan of Sleepy Hollow (and an active although more anonymous part of the fandom) even if I didnât have the ridiculous good fortune to be on the show.
I endeavor to continue being an active listener with all of you, to maintain my unapologetic silliness in terms of what I post on the Tumblrs and the Twitters and most importantly to be an on-going and passionate part of the creation and evolution of one of the most bat-shit crazy and absolutely awesome shows on television.
Thanks for teaching me, for sharing your creativity with me and my colleagues and for caring enough to keep coming back.
Excuse us while we reach for a box of Kleenex.
6) That time Nicole Beharie stood up to an offensive interviewer
In the unedited version of this interview with DJ Chuey Martinez, Beharie shuts down his attempts to turn the interview in an awkward attempt to hit on her, then calls him out when he accuses her of going red, noting that she canât be blushing, because, hello, sheâs black. Martinez has since edited the segment out, but since Tumblr exists, thereâs a GIFset of the uncomfortable interaction here.
Beharie also managed to get in a little geek feminism to boot, noting that sheâs a Marvel girl because Marvel has âbetter womenâ than DC.
GIF by kiarasnaps
Â
7) That time Orlando Jones tried to create his own fandom namesmush
A namesmush is fandom shorthand for a favorite relationship pairing, like âIchabbieâ for Ichabod and Abbie. Jones caught on to that and decided to launch a new ship of his own:Â
I admit to being fickle but Iâve switched my shipper allegiance. I now ship Crane & Yolanda from @OnStar. #Ichalonda or #Yolabod?
â Orlando Jones (@TheOrlandoJones) October 8, 2013
8) Everyone is waiting with bated breath to see if Ichabod Crane will ever change his clothes.
Gif by sleepys-hollow
Seriously. Even the costume designers are taking bets. Weâre just waiting for HasIchabodCraneChangedClothesYet.com to pop up and make this a spectator sport we can all can play along with at home.
9) Tom Misonâs Twitter account
The actor who plays Ichabod Crane could have a second career as a professional Twitterer.Â
Â
I donât wish to alarm anyone, but I may have just removed my trousers. #scorcher
â Tom Mison (@TomMison) July 7, 2013
How Greek will the Breaking Bad finale be on a scale of âstuck in a mazeâ to âchained to a rock with birds tearing at your flesh for everâ?
â Tom Mison (@TomMison) September 30, 2013
Eating Vietnamese. Theyâre playing Bees Gees. Iâve just got chilli in my eye & now everyone thinks Iâm crying to How Deep is Your Love. o_O
â Tom Mison (@TomMison) February 2, 2013
Â
Actually, maybe this should just generally be Tom Mison.
GIF via third-and-blue
10) Everyone is hot. Everyone.Â
Photo via into-dark
Â
Even the creator is hot.
Photo via Film School Rejects
So if youâre not watching Sleepy Hollow, you can still kick back and enjoy the benefits: A hot, pro-fan cast and crew advocating for fanworks and generally being delightful.
Waitâwhy arenât you watching this again?
Photo via silviya/deviantART