What I was saying there was more a meta-narrative. It's that if a false media narrative is pushed, then eventually people start believing it, including the people who hold the creative decision-making strings. e.g. if they convince themselves that the previous backlash was fake (buying into the whole "fake review bombing" idea) then they're more inclined to double-down on those sorts of themes. e.g. I was really thinking more of the canto bight scenes with the animal rights / class warfare related stuff, rather than anything feminist.
e.g. if you dismiss the backlash as just a tiny minority then you won't do anything to win back that audience segment, because you consider them too minor to matter. e.g. labeling those who dislike the movies as mere "Nazis" and "Trolls" absolves you of working out whether their criticism are relevant, and you then look at the
praise for whichever themes the non-haters liked best. e.g. if you convince yourself that those with criticisms don't matter, focus on only the people who
liked it then ask "what did you like most about it?" you're inclined to double-down on
whatever that was, despite it being far from certain that this will net you more viewers or make things more "inclusive". e.g. only adding
more of the things liked by those who like something most tends to make things
more niche not have broader appeal. It's a type of confirmation bias. e.g. it's a way of only pandering to the
current hardcore fans, whoever they might be.
And I was basing the
rest, e.g. assumptions about what the new movie has in it, on stuff like this:
https://www.independent.co.uk/voices/solo-star-wars-hero-feminist-gender-new-film-a8365446.htmlSolo: A Star Wars Story shows us the hero all feminist men have been waiting for
...
Were Kylo Ren real and alive today, you strongly suspect he would be one of those enraged, hysterical followers of Jordan Peterson's morose YouTube ramblings
e.g. it's not us
making the broader Star Wars narrative to be all about SJW stuff. e.g. making out that anyone not 100% on board with sjws are the "evil" side from Star Wars. And clearly, this guy is also implying that anyone not on board with the
movie is in league with that same "dark side".
And then you have stuff like this:
https://www.theatlantic.com/entertainment/archive/2018/05/the-soul-of-solo-is-a-droid/560969/L3-37, voiced by Phoebe Waller-Bridge, is no go-along, get-along machine. She’s a robot revolutionary, demanding equal rights and sowing dissent among servants. You might call her Star Wars’ first woke bot.
Yay, fembot liberation. I mean, i assume the movie itself isn't really all about that, but these sorts of articles are trying to pitch the movie as being exactly that: social justice "brand" sci-fi, and making out that if you're not down with their politics, they don't want you watching the movie with them.
Even if the creators weren't buying into it, these sorts of voices are definitely trying to
steer the series to conform with their own personal politics, saying you're evil/twisted if you don't go along with it.