Lena Waithe takes you behind Chicago's violent headlines in 'The Chi'

The series from the Emmy Award winner premieres Sunday.

The Emmy Award-winning writer loves her native city so much that she refuses to let it be defined by the violence that has plagued it.

Chicago was home to nearly 600 homicides in 2017, according to the Chicago Tribune. The year before that saw 681 homicides.

Waithe's "The Chi" takes viewers behind the headlines to show what it's truly like when a community deals with the aftermath of a homicide.

"I wanted to humanize them and show that their lives are valid," the 33-year-old scribe told the New York Times.

In an era of "black girl magic," the oft-heard rallying cry of black women's accomplishments on social media, Waithe's "The Chi" shows there's still space for black men and boys.

"All the characters are from different walks of life, all in the same city, all black, and then they sort of bump into each other and they become interconnected," Waithe told the Chicago Tribune of the series.

The show's writers -- who were all black, which is rare in television -- included Chicago native and former journalist Sylvia Jones.

"Having been raised on the South Side of Chicago, I know it from the insider’s perspective," she told the Tribune. "It is a tapestry of many neighborhoods."

Jones continued, "I tell people, despite what you may see on the news and think the South Side is one big ghetto, you know President Obama lived on the South Side. He and Michelle got married on the South Side. This is a big thing for us, so don’t just paint us with one brush as, ‘This is all it is -- guns, gangs, whatever.' So I have made a conscious effort to say, Yes, those things exist. The numbers are the numbers. But there is so much more, and I’m proud to say that’s reflected in the show."

And although Common, another Chicago native connected to the project as an executive producer, makes a guest appearance, don't expect Waithe to drop in.

"The Chi" creator and writer stays behind the lens on this project -- and for good reason. Waithe, who plans to live tweet the series on Sunday nights, is already hard at work on a second season, should it get picked up.

"Because we want to come back for the second season equipped with information, with things you think we missed or didn’t lean into hard enough," she told the Chicago Tribune.