There are authentic ways to create diversity, and inauthentic ways. Into the Spiderverse did it in an authentic way with Miles and Spider Gwen, but Captain Marvel? Not so much. I feel like DC did a good job with their 2000s Static Shock cartoon and with the Justice League cartoons Green Lantern. Diversity was present, but the audience didn't feel beat over the head with it, and it felt natural. If you had replaced Batman in Beyond with a Black teen, nobody would have cared either.
Part of Marvel's problem is that X-Men had their movie rights owned by Fox, and Sony has the movie rights to Spiderman. X-Men especially features a diverse cast, and I don't think consumers would have minded a Storm movie instead of another Wolverine film.
There are authentic ways to create diversity, and inauthentic ways. Into the Spiderverse did it in an authentic way with Miles and Spider Gwen, but Captain Marvel? Not so much. I feel like DC did a good job with their 2000s Static Shock cartoon and with the Justice League cartoons Green Lantern. Diversity was present, but the audience didn't feel beat over the head with it, and it felt natural. If you had replaced Batman in Beyond with a Black teen, nobody would have cared either.
Part of Marvel's problem is that X-Men had their movie rights owned by Fox, and Sony has the movie rights to Spiderman. X-Men especially features a diverse cast, and I don't think consumers would have minded a Storm movie instead of another Wolverine film.