Culture Star Wars Has a Fandom Problem

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Wired (Archive) - June 3, 2022
by, Graeme McMillan

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Obi-Wan Kenobi is a Jedi, a member of an old order of beings known for their stoicism. Suffice it to say, if you’ve upset one of them, you’ve made a grievous error. Yet here is Ewan McGregor, the man inside Kenobi’s robes, looking directly at the camera—and he does not look happy. In the week after Disney+ released the first two episodes of Obi-Wan Kenobi, one of its stars, Moses Ingram, started receiving racist messages on social media, and McGregor is feeling “sickened.”

“I just want to say as the leading actor in the series, as the executive producer on the series, that we stand with Moses,” the actor said in a video posted to the official Star Wars Twitter account.
 “We love Moses, and if you’re sending her bullying messages, you’re no Star Wars fan in my mind.”

McGregor is just the latest—and most high-profile—figure to defend Ingram, who went public on Instagram to talk about the messages she’s received since her first appearance as Inquisitor Reva Sevander, the antagonist on the Disney+ series. (“Long story short, there are hundreds of those. Hundreds,” she said, after sharing screenshots of abusive DMs.) Not only had other people from the Star Wars franchise—including Ahmed Best, the Black actor who played derided character Jar-Jar Binks in the prequel trilogy—spoken out, but so had other celebrities, including Star Trek: Strange New World’s Anson Mount, who called Ingram “a singular talent [who has] been targeted by racists pretending to be fans because her mere existence threatens a skewed, dystopian fantasy.”

A day after Ingram went public about her experience, the Star Wars Twitter account posted a message reading, “If anyone intends to make her feel in any way unwelcome, we have only one thing to say: we resist.” It was followed by a second message: “There are more than 20 million sentient species in the Star Wars galaxy, don’t choose to be a racist.”

This isn’t anything new for Star Wars fandom—a fact Ingram herself underscored in an interview published ahead of Kenobi’s premiere. The potential for online abuse from racists was “something that Lucasfilm actually got in front of,” the actress said, adding that the studio told her, “this is a thing that, unfortunately, likely will happen. But we are here to help you; you can let us know when it happens.”

They had some experience to draw from. In 2018, Star Wars: The Last Jedi star Kelly Marie Tran deleted her social media after receiving racist and abusive messages; she would later describe the decision by saying, “It was basically me being like, ‘Oh, this isn’t good for my mental health. I’m obviously going to leave this.’”

Three years earlier, John Boyega was defending himself from similar attacks, telling an interviewer, “I’m in the movie, what are you going to do about it? You either enjoy it or you don’t. I’m not saying to get used to the future but what is already happening. People of color and women are increasingly being shown onscreen. For things to be whitewashed just doesn’t make sense.”

Yet even though the attacks are all too familiar, the reactions to them have evolved somewhat. Lucasfilm’s blunt response to abuse against Ingram was absent in both Tran and Boyega’s cases. Similarly, while two highly visible Star Wars figures—Luke Skywalker himself, Mark Hamill, and Last Jedi director Rian Johnson—spoke out when Tran left social media, both did so obliquely, not explicitly calling out the racism she had faced. (Hamill took to Twitter to post “#GetALifeNerds,” while Johnson responded by decrying “a few unhealthy people [who] cast a big shadow on the wall,” noting that the “VAST majority” were great and, I guess, not racist.)

But there’s also something instructive in Lucasfilm’s more straightforward response to the attacks, one that is, perhaps, a little blind to the franchise’s shortcomings.

The series is, to this day, predominantly white, with the original trilogy—which is still held up as the prime example of what the property can be—featuring exactly one non-white actor in an onscreen speaking role. (That the first movie has only one Black actor, who provides the voice for the movie’s villain, is a whole thing in and of itself.) Furthermore, this is a fandom that has made a movement of cosplaying as the faceless soldiers of a fascist regime. The idea that Star Wars is, implicitly, a safe haven of diversity and example of the same is, at the very least, flawed.

So, what can be done? If Disney and Lucasfilm want to rid Star Wars fandom of its toxic elements, the companies will surely need to double down on their efforts: denouncing bigotry more vocally and encouraging others to do the same, preferably without reference to fictional realities. Placing a greater focus on onscreen diversity, in increasingly visible and important roles, will also be key. They would also do well to remind fans that the Empire/First Order are the bad guys, not aspirational figures.

But those are just the first steps. Star Wars has struggled with the flaws in its fandom for a long time. This week’s tweets and videos are, to be sure, signs that Lucasfilm is attempting to address the racism its actors receive more directly. But some of the change will ultimately need to come from the fans themselves. Then, maybe, Obi-Wan can know peace.
 
I'm sure the actress is a nice enough lady IRL but the forced diversity shit is getting old and her character is poorly written.
 
Nobody gives a fuck, your show sucks, your franchise sucks, your company sucks, your theme park based on the franchise sucks, you suck.
Bitch about racism more to cover up how bad you are, because I don't give a fuck, and neither do "fans" that you try to upset so much with your canon breaking horseshit.
 
Yeah let’s not forget that Hollywood thinks that outrage drives box office.
Leslie Jones accidentally tweeted that she and Paul Feig (at least) were tweeting racist shit about ghostbusters 2016 to stir up outrage.
Nobody in the media picked up on this admission (it’s been wiped from the net too, completely memory holed) but there were hundreds of articles decrying sexist racist assholes attacking the cast of the movie.
Every time a show or movie comes out that has one of these articles attached I wonder how much they paid a bot farm in Taiwan to generate those ugly DM’s.
 
All these characters are so bland, they make English food look like delicacies in comparison. They have no redeemable character traits or are memorable in just about any way. They don't have the intimidating factor that immediately draws attention and respect like Darth Vader, or charisma like Han Solo.

The racebaiting is boring and old-hat.
 
Yes, Star Wars does in fact have a "fandom problem".

The "fandom problem" is that it has far too many emotionally unstable fans who are far too fucking old to be this invested in programming about space lasers meant for children.

It's fucking creepy.
 
Alec Guinness would probably be pretty annoyed that his character is still being wrung out for money.

He did once tell a mother to never let her child watch Star wars again.
 
When all of your cronies spend more time getting exposure on Twitter than gaining from products your companies produce because there's an equal helping of basic thinkers who operate at the single cell level.
 
Star Wars has a writing, acting and diversity problem.

All these shows and movies fucking SUCK. They are not just meh, they are actively bad.
 
I continue to be disgusted by these marketing campaigns where a company actively hates and abuses its primary customers in exchange for the gamble that offending them will bring in a whole bunch of NEW customers that were just waiting for the invitation. Those people are a very loud minority that never come and never spend.

All these retarded companies have made a grave mistake. Their IPs blossomed because they catered to their core audience. suddenly stopping that is not how you make the IP continue to bloom.
 
The woke shit is about destroying everything that came before.

This is back to Star Wars from the KK side of things. It had a managed PR campaign about racism before the show even released.

I really don't know what the fuck they are doing, but they are determined to destroy Star Wars and just push narratives about Racism to justify it.
 
Star Wars has a toxic fandom? Ah oh well guess they need to close it. Once a fandom is toxic it can't be repaired. It's why they don't make new Wagner music because his music became closely associated with the Nazis.

Oh well it was fun when it lasted.
 
I just don't understand people who can't ignore bad Star Wars. I've been ignoring bad Star Wars since the fucking Vong and it's actually way easier to do to the Disney canon since, aside from parts of Rogue One and Fallen Order, it's been an unrelenting stream of dogshit. Just ignore this pozzed corporate trash, the old books still exist, the old games still exist, the good/fun movies still exist, get a group of friends together and run a tabletop game.
 
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