TechnologyLast

Zoe Kravitz’s furious dig at Hulu for lack of shows starring women of colour

Celebs

Zoe Kravitz launches furious dig at Hulu for lack of shows starring women of colour

The Big Little Lies star, 31, shared her thoughts on her most recent acting venture High Fidelity which Hulu recently axed after just one season

Video Loading

Video Unavailable

Click to play

Tap to play

The video will start in 8Cancel

Play now

Zoe Kravitz has slammed Hulu for its lack of shows starring women of colour in a dig on Instagram.

The Big Little Lies star, 31, shared her thoughts on her most recent acting venture High Fidelity, which was axed by the streaming service after just one season.

Sharing a post of the show's cast with her 5.8 million followers, Zoe penned: "I wanna give a shout out to my #highfidelity family. thank you for all the love and heart you put into this show.

"I'm in awe of all of you. and thank you to everyone who watched, loved and supported us. #breakupssuck."

Zoe's friend and Creed star Tessa Thompson commented: "I will miss you alllllllllllll so much."

To which Zoe - who is the daughter of singer Lenny Kravitz and actress Lisa Bonet - responded with: "@tessamaethompson it's cool, at least hulu has a ton of other shows starring women of color we can watch. oh wait."

Fellow celebs rushed to the comments section to console Zoe after the disappointing news.

Actress Lena Waithe wrote: "NOOOOOOO!!! I rarely find shows that genuinely impress me. This one did. I told you how much I loved this show. And I still do. This one definitely deserved another season."

Roots' drummer Questlove penned: "WHHHHHAAAAAAAAAAAATTTTTTT!!!?????????!!!!!!!!!!!??? Why do I always find out about tragic s**t this way?!"

Zoe replied to his comment, writing: "@questlove ugh. i'm sorry ! i was truly about to text you."

The series saw Zoe star as Rob, a New Yorker who is a major music fanatic who owns her own record store.

As she navigates her relationship woes, she discovered that her ex has returned.

She then explains her biggest breakups ever via a "top five" chart list.

Despite Hulu's surprise decision to axe it, the series gathered a lot of attention as it was based on the book written by Nick Hornby.

The series even racked up a respectable score 86% on Rotten Tomatoes and 7.7 on IMDb.