Despite recent strides to improve diversity, a new USC report condemns Hollywood as a white, straight man’s world.

Diversity in Hollywood is sorely lacking. (Duh.)

Every once in a while, we see evidence to the contrary. Ava DuVernay’s Queen Sugar series just premiered and is already killing it; Sulu is gay; both Marvel and DC have upcoming female-led superhero movies, and Black Panther is getting his own movie.

But don’t let a few examples out of hundreds of entertainment products fool you: Hollywood is still pretty terrible when it comes to representing minorities.

According to a new report by USC’s Annenberg School for Communication and Journalism (as reported by Variety), Hollywood is “the epicenter of cultural inequality.”

Out of the top 100 grossing films last year, only 31.4% of the speaking/named characters were women. Only 51 of the films had Asian or Asian-American actors in speaking roles, while 17/100 had no black or African-American characters.

From the study:

In 2015, 73.7% of characters were White, 12.2% Black, 5.3% Latino, 3.9% Asian,

Related: Hollywood is failing the LGBT community: GLAAD slams Disney, Paramount and Warner Bros.

45 films had no characters with disabilities and, most striking of all, only 18 out of the 100 films had lesbian, gay, bisexual or transgender characters.

So for all the grumbling about “gays everywhere,” it’s safe to say that gays are not, in fact, everywhere. Or anywhere.

You could be forgiven for assuming more steps towards inclusivity had been taken than is actually the case, however. Taking this summer’s Star Trek revelation as an example, for weeks all the Internet was talking about was the “gay Sulu controversy” — to the point where it was easy to be fooled into thinking that LGBT representation had officially entered mainstream nerd culture.

Yet Marvel’s continued insistence on ignoring the fact that non-straight sexualities exist, and big fantasy franchises like J.K. Rowling’s Wizarding World not faring much better (see last night’s immediate backlash to J.K. Rowling seemingly ‘outing’ Sirius Black as straight on Twitter), are just a few mainstream examples of how Hollywood continues to exclude LGBT narratives.

While other areas of representation may seem to score better on paper, the fact of the matter is that America is a diverse, multi-ethnic and multi-cultural place, but Hollywood continues to white-, straight- and gender-wash the population, taking only the smallest steps possible to avoid looking like total assholes.

Behind the scenes, it’s not much better. As reported by Variety, only 19% of last year’s top grossing film directors were women. Looking back at 800 films since 2007, less than 6% of the directors were black, and less than 3% were Asian.

So you can safely continue to call for more representation in Hollywood, ignoring those that try to shut you down by claiming the battle is won. There is still much work to be done.