Yesterday, Lucasfilm announced that a new Star Wars trilogy is being developed by Game of Thrones creators David Benioff and D.B. Weiss. In many ways, Benioff and Weiss are an obvious choice to rule a new sector of the galaxy far, far away. Their HBO megahit has shown their proficiency in building rich fictional worlds, juggling dozens of character arcs, and turning the politics of a fantasy realm into high-stakes drama (just as George Lucas attempted to do in his prequel trilogy). “David and Dan are some of the best storytellers working today,” Lucasfilm president Kathleen Kennedy said in her press statement, and many would agree. But it’s exactly because Benioff and Weiss are the obvious choice that Kennedy’s pick is so disappointing.

When the Star Wars cinematic universe was relaunched with 2015’s The Force Awakens, it came with the promise of a new future for Hollywood blockbusters. The protagonist was a woman. Her co-star and potential love interest was a black man. This new Star Wars had female stormtroopers and a Resistance army diverse enough to look like the present-day U.S. Army, rather than the cast of a 1940s dogfighting movie. Those casting and character decisions sent a clear, bold message: Star Wars was not just going to pander to its original fans; it was going to win new fans, fans who hadn’t yet seen themselves in a Star Wars film. Lucasfilm had its eyes on the future.

But as the studio has rolled out more sequels, and more plans for expanding the franchise, one thing has remained exactly the same as it has since 1977: The writers and directors are all men. Specifically, they’re white men. The only contribution by a woman was Leigh Brackett’s original script for The Empire Strikes Back (which was rewritten by Lawrence Kasdan after Brackett’s death in 1978). That means, according to Variety’s math, 96 percent of the Star Wars film universe has been written and directed by white men. That includes The Force Awakens and Episode IX director J.J. Abrams, The Last Jedi director (and creator of another planned Star Wars trilogy) Rian Johnson, Rogue One director Gareth Edwards, Solo: A Star Wars Story director Ron Howard, and now Benioff and Weiss. It also includes all the writer-directors who were hired and replaced on the aforementioned films: Colin Trevorrow, Phil Lord, and Christopher Miller. At no point has a female director or a director of color been offered a Star Wars gig.

What does this mean for audiences? It means that the vision of the Star Wars universe is ultimately limited to one perspective. It means that female heroines are created in male imaginations and characters of color are seen through the lens of white experience. It means that for all their forward-thinking casting, Lucasfilm is playing it safe, just like every other Hollywood studio. And “safe,” in this case, means hiring the same white, male directors who already helm around 90 percent of Hollywood films.

This is particularly outrageous considering that Lucasfilm is one of the few major studios with a female CEO. Time and again, Kennedy has affirmed her commitment to putting “really strong women” front and center. She has said that diversity is “incredibly important to Star Wars” and “important to the film industry in general.” Lucasfilm’s story group, the team of 11 writers and artists who shape and guide the Star Wars canon, reflects these ideals: The team has four women and seven men, and five of its members are people of color. Onscreen, the new films appear admirably diverse. However, the direction and story of each individual Star Wars film ultimately comes down to the writer and director. It sends a message when the people behind the camera are as monochromatic as a stormtrooper in a Hoth snowstorm.

It’s not just principle that makes Benioff’s and Weiss’s hiring seem like an ominous sign. For all of their accomplishments, these two showrunners have exhibited a blind spot when it comes to women and minorities. On Game of Thrones, they have repeatedly (and notoriously) relied on graphic sexual assault as a plot device, leaving few female characters spared. A female writer or director might have helped steer the story away from this — but in eight years of Game of Thrones, Benioff and Weiss have hired only one woman director (out of 19) and two female writers (neither of whom worked on the last three seasons).