Rowling Derangement Syndrome - "TERF/Woke Author Bad!!1"

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Hasbro’s CEO has an AI Peppa Pig help design toys (The Verge)

Big interview of Hasbro CEO Chris Cocks. (Dunno why they gave it that Peppa Pig headline when "Playing With Cocks" was right there.)

Here is the obligatory bit about his part in the Trans Genocide ®

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I’m also very curious about fandoms and IPs, how they live and die, how they persist, and how they find new audiences. Actually, Harry Potter is a good example of this. You have a big deal upcoming with Harry Potter. That fandom, I can’t tell if it’s reaching younger people, or if it’s just the particular audience of Harry Potter from its height, getting older and having more money to spend. You know what I mean? And I can’t tell if there’s new fan creations happening that would sustain Harry Potter in a way that you might need that to sustain IP now.

I think going back to that acronym, GEM Squared: gamified, entertainment-driven, multipurchase, and multi-generational. I think Harry Potter is a power brand that exemplifies all four of those aspects. I can’t share the research data we have, but certainly, it’s a very powerful multigenerational brand. It’s almost like a rite of passage for a lot of kids to read the stories or watch the movies. I know with my kids, we spent three years for each of them reading the stories at bedtime, and it was probably one of the nicest memories I have with them. I go to theme parks... I probably go to three or four theme parks every year. I’m a huge theme park fan, and I don’t do it professionally; I do it because I’m a big nerd. When you go to the Harry Potter world inside of Universal Studios, A, they’re some of the best theme parks ever imagined, and B, it’s all ages.

It’s little kids holding stuffed Hedwig owls, to adults who have the Harry Potter glasses and showing their school colors, “Go Slytherin,” I suppose, in my case. I just think it’s something that is really powerful. And to that prior question about AI and user-generated content, when you have a brand that has an authentic connection with people and has a powerful core of lore and an authenticity associated with that, I think fans respect that. They might make other stuff. I saw a pretty cool Dinobots movie, probably made with Seedance 2.0, over the weekend. It was pretty neat, but people know what the authentic Michael Bay movies are, and people know what the authentic toys are.

And I think when you have that and you have that power center like a Marvel does, like a Star Wars does, like a Harry Potter does, yeah, you need to protect it, you need to make sure people are using it responsibly, but I think you also need to have confidence in it that it will help drive you through these sea changes. And that’s certainly kind of what I think.

This is why I’m asking about Harry Potter specifically. I know what a Michael Bay movie is, because Michael Bay made those movies, he’s the author of those movies, and I think Michael Bay’s entire worldview is explosions. I know what his politics are, and it’s like, “Stuff should blow up more.” J.K. Rowling has very loud politics that are turning off a lot of younger consumers. Her transphobia is turning off a lot of younger consumers; this is why I’m talking about fandoms coming to an end.

I can see in the feedback we get when we write about Harry Potter, with younger people saying, “Why would I support this fandom? Why would I support this IP?” And maybe she should just shut up, and it would be fine, and it would become the power center that it is.

But you’ve got creatives on your team. The last time you were on the show, you talked about being stewards of inclusion. How do you make this decision when the creator of the property is sort of actively reducing the fandom, and in fact, hurting a lot of people in that fandom?

For me, it’s separating the art from the artist and going to what the core fans want. And I’m not going to get into the politics around it other than to say we very strongly support diversity and inclusion inside of Hasbro, we’re very proud of it. We’re very proud of the diversity of viewpoints and backgrounds that we have in our employee base. I think Harry Potter is a wonderful franchise. I think it’s done a great job of bringing joy to the world, and I’m looking forward to being part of that, just like I am with all the other brands we support.

TL;DR: "meh, we don't care - people love her stuff more than ever".
 
The Chinese truly are a mad people. This New Year shall be the New Year of Draco Malfoy because he kind of sounds like "fortunate horse"
It's a language that really lends itself to maximum dad punning. People bitch about her choice of "Cho Chang" but I've always thought that if Rowling were a native Chinese speaker the goofy name puns would have been off the charts.
 
Here's someone on Bluesky seething about this.
Is there any other creator who spends all their time looking in cameras and going 'I will use all the money I make from this thing to brutalize the most marginalized people in the world'
Fuck these narcissists. "Baaawwwwww I can't piss in the bathroom I want! I can't put the wrong sex marker on my ID! I'm LITERALLY being genocided!" And they wonder why support for trannies is in free fall.
 
If you're gonna get a HP tattoo the deathly hallows symbol is right there it's even real easy to incorporate into another tattoo. I'm unfortunately forgetting that fan fic has made draco a super sexy character. Wizard Hitler did nothing wrong because Aryan posterboy had redeeming qualities in my favorite gay smut.
 
It's a language that really lends itself to maximum dad punning. People bitch about her choice of "Cho Chang" but I've always thought that if Rowling were a native Chinese speaker the goofy name puns would have been off the charts.
If Dickens knew how chinese worked he would have absolutely loved it for his character names.

I can't help but laugh at the fact that when trannies and their girlcock-suckers bitch and moan about how racist, fatphobic, yada yada JK Rowling's character descriptions are, they're just missing the very obvious Dickens influence she has when describing and naming characters. Despite how much they hate her, they've still only read one book, and its hers.
 
Speaking of Harry Potter’s enduring popularity, I just discovered that there’s a Harry Potter themed bar in San Francisco.
I assume unlicensed, but I thought it was interesting. I was very surprised to find out it was a bar, I was hoping for a game shop.
Yeah, it's most likely unlicensed as I doubt that the owners could afford it.

But unlicensed or not, I'm honestly surprised that they haven't gotten review bombed by angry troons.
 
I recently started listening to the new Harry Potter audiobooks at work, and I've gotta ask. Is the actor for Pomfrey a fucking dude? The voice is distracting and pulls me out of the moment every time.
 
I recently started listening to the new Harry Potter audiobooks at work, and I've gotta ask. Is the actor for Pomfrey a fucking dude? The voice is distracting and pulls me out of the moment every time.
It's the same guy that played the innkeep in Hogwarts Legacy. Unfortunately, it isn't a simple thing to mod him out of the audiobook too.
 
SNL decided to jump on the anti-Tourette's train. It's basically a sketch where a bunch of canceled celebrities use Tourette's to justify their vile behavior.
This joke doesn’t work at all in her case because she’s never tried to keep those views secret, nor is she embarrassed by them. She wrote a fucking essay about it, she didn’t let her opinions on troons slip in a drunken tirade or a leaked email.

She’s standing on business, as the kids say.
 
In a background article for the theater section of a dutch newspaper there was some Rowling seethe. Honestly the arguments and examples of hate are nothing new for the average follower of this thread. But if you want a scoop of (impotent!) tranny seethe you can't go wrong with this piece. (archive) Some highlights
She also founded a center for women who have been victims of sexual violence, but trans women are not welcome there.
In the publication Theaterkrant, reviewer Jeroen van Wijhe wrote last week that the stage production Harry Potter and the Cursed Child is directly connected to discrimination against trans people.
Mare de Vries, spokesperson for the advocacy organization Transgender Netwerk Nederland (TNN), responded by email to questions from the newspaper NRC.
“Like all projects by J.K. Rowling, this production is inseparably connected with transphobia,” she writes about the play. “Like many people, I grew up with Harry Potter, so it’s painful to say that. It’s not as simple as ‘separating the art from the artist,’ because a significant percentage of the income goes to Rowling. In doing so, she directly finances the dismantling of trans rights.”
Research by the The New York Times in 2018, [..] found that Rowling receives about 41 percent of the profits, in addition to the income she received as a producer of the play. [no, i did not boldface that percentage]
Stage Entertainment, the company that brought the production to the Netherlands, says it cannot comment on the financial agreements made with the rights holders of the play. A spokesperson for Stage Entertainment did say by phone that Harry Potter and the Cursed Child is so far the company’s best-selling production ever. According to the spokesperson, more than 150,000 tickets have already been sold.
“In the United Kingdom she has played a major role in normalizing transphobia. Partly because of her efforts, media and politicians have become afraid to speak out against anti-trans hatred.”

“Many people don’t realize how much influence J.K. Rowling has on restricting trans rights”​


Transphobia — Starting this week, the stage production Harry Potter and the Cursed Child will be shown in the Netherlands. The creator of this wizarding world, J.K. Rowling, is nowadays mostly in the news because of her offensive statements about trans people. “Rowling uses her income to directly finance the dismantling of trans rights.”

Nine years after its premiere in London’s West End, the play Harry Potter and the Cursed Child will have its Dutch premiere this weekend at the AFAS Circustheater. Harry Potter continues to enchant audiences, but for many fans worldwide the author Rowling has fallen from grace. In recent years she has frequently been criticized for offensive remarks about trans people and for funding organizations that want to restrict the rights of trans people.

“There are no trans children. Children are not born in the wrong body,” Rowling said on the platform X. She often questions the existence of trans people on social media. The writer has since established her own fund to “protect” the rights of women who were born female (cis women). She also founded a center for women who have been victims of sexual violence, but trans women are not welcome there.

In the publication Theaterkrant, reviewer Jeroen van Wijhe wrote last week that the stage production Harry Potter and the Cursed Child is directly connected to discrimination against trans people. On social media and under the article, a lively debate among fans emerged about the issue.
“This production so clearly finances a reactionary agenda,” one response read. Someone else replied: “Hate the woman, not her work.”

Mare de Vries, spokesperson for the advocacy organization Transgender Netwerk Nederland (TNN), responded by email to questions from the newspaper NRC.
“Like all projects by J.K. Rowling, this production is inseparably connected with transphobia,” she writes about the play. “Like many people, I grew up with Harry Potter, so it’s painful to say that. It’s not as simple as ‘separating the art from the artist,’ because a significant percentage of the income goes to Rowling. In doing so, she directly finances the dismantling of trans rights.”

Research by the The New York Times in 2018, when the play was running on Broadway, found that Rowling receives about 41 percent of the profits, in addition to the income she received as a producer of the play.
Stage Entertainment, the company that brought the production to the Netherlands, says it cannot comment on the financial agreements made with the rights holders of the play. A spokesperson for Stage Entertainment did say by phone that Harry Potter and the Cursed Child is so far the company’s best-selling production ever. According to the spokesperson, more than 150,000 tickets have already been sold.

Stage Entertainment—like many companies that express solidarity with sexual minorities, including the trans community, on social media during Pride Month—did not want to respond to questions from this newspaper about Rowling and the controversy surrounding her campaigns and statements. The production company limited itself to a short statement, saying it attaches “great importance to diversity and inclusion” and refrains from “commenting on the personal views of the original creators of the play.”

Rowling’s legal battle​


In 2025, the Supreme Court of the United Kingdom ruled that the word “woman” in a Scottish equality law from 2010 refers only to people who were born female. The case had been brought by For Women Scotland, an organization partly funded by Rowling.

According to the human rights organization Human Rights Watch, the ruling “opens the door to discrimination and exclusion” of trans people. After the court’s decision was announced, Rowling posted a photo of herself on a luxury yacht holding a cocktail and a cigar. “I love it when a plan comes together,” she wrote with the post.

A month after the Supreme Court ruling, Rowling announced the creation of the J.K. Rowling Women’s Fund. The fund provides financial support to individuals and organizations that are “fighting to protect women’s sex-based rights.” One of the conditions for applying for financial support reads:
“Have you experienced discrimination or loss of employment because of your belief that someone’s biological sex is immutable?”

According to the American LGBTQI magazine Them, the fund primarily serves the writer’s anti-trans agenda. Rowling finances the fund out of her own pocket.

“She really doesn’t need this anymore, she’s a billionaire”​


Harry Potter fan Owen Egberink joined the debate about the new stage production on social media. The wizarding world was a major part of his childhood.
“It was a world you could go to and just fantasize,” he says.

He finds Rowling’s views “idiotic,” but he will still go see the play.
“Many more people work on the films and the play than just Rowling.”

He grew up with the films and only read the books later in life.
“When I read online about Rowling’s opinion on trans people, I did stop reading the books.”
But the 24-year-old does not believe a boycott would change anything.
“She really doesn’t need this anymore—she’s a billionaire.”

However, according to Mare de Vries, many people underestimate Rowling’s influence.
“In the United Kingdom she has played a major role in normalizing transphobia. Partly because of her efforts, media and politicians have become afraid to speak out against anti-trans hatred.”

She says that historically the rights of trans people in the Netherlands have had broad public support, but that they are now under pressure.

“The Netherlands was for a long time a frontrunner in the field of trans rights and trans healthcare. But populists now see that in the United Kingdom and the United States it has proven particularly effective to use trans people as a scapegoat.”
 
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