• Mossy Feathers (They/Them)
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    525 months ago

    I still like Harry Potter and don’t blame people for still enjoying it, it’s just too bad the writer sucks ass. Imo if you wanna still play Harry Potter games, or watch the movies, go pirate them. You get to enjoy the series without giving the writer money. Win-win imo.

    • Norgur
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      225 months ago

      Or buy them used, or have a friend bring them over, the possibilities are endless

      • @astreus@lemmy.ml
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        65 months ago

        Library books aren’t free. They are paid for by the library and the author gets a payment per lend (called Public Lending Rights). Not sure how it works for games, but I would be shocked if it’s not a similar system.

        • Sneezycat
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          55 months ago

          Not for games, but for books you can just read them at the library. No lend, no payment.

    • nfh
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      225 months ago

      I was a big fan throughout my child and teen years, but seeing her not only descend into bigotry, but use her large platform to push that bigotry really made it hard for me to enjoy HP going forward. I don’t blame myself for having enjoyed it in the past, but it puts a significant cloud over the series in my mind into the future; yeah, supporting her is a drop in the bucket, but a small share in the large harm she’s seeking to make with her platform is something that very much doesn’t appeal to me.

      Her actions are much more visible, and much more impactful on the wider world than someone like William Shatner or Chevy Chase apparently being notorious jerks, and have soured me much more on her work than either of them have on theirs. And there are plenty of other things in the world worth enjoying that don’t have this kind of shadow cast over them.

    • Sapphiria 🏳️‍⚧️ [she/her]
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      195 months ago

      I agree that enjoying her work doesn’t necessarily make you a biggot, but it does mean you aren’t an ally. Your money absolutely does make a difference. She sees continued support of her works as support of her anti-trans ideas.

      • @DillyDaily@lemmy.world
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        5 months ago

        Also, what I loved about HP has changed, what I see in the original source material can’t be unchanged. I loved the magic, the opportunity, the hope and the underlying messages of love and found family.

        But I don’t see those things anymore when I re-engage with the source material. They’re still there on the surface, sure, but now I know more about the author I can’t unsee the racist undertones, the issues surrounding gender roles and the failed allegorys for homosexuality. It was there the whole time, and I was blissfully ignorant as a teenager reading these books, and that’s why okay, but as an adult, I can’t go back. What I loved about HP isn’t there anymore, and trying to read other again through the child like lens makes me feel uncomfortable because it’s like I’m closing my eyes, sticking my fingers in my ears and convincing myself that it’s okay to be complicit engaging with bigotry.

      • @FluffyPotato@lemm.ee
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        65 months ago

        Very true. Like refueling your car probably help slavery in the middle east a tiny bit, buying any clothes funds sweatshops somewhere and eating chocolate also enables slavery where ever. Rowling is a tiny drop in the ocean of all the bad shit everyone are already passively funding.

        There’s zero ethical consumption in capitalism and boycotts of massive global brands like this are as effective as trying to empty the ocean with a bucket. If you want to enact real change then join a union, volenteer at a soup kitchen or do work for a political party you believe in.

    • AdaA
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      5 months ago

      She actively and explicitly funds services to exclude trans people and she uses her ongoing popularity as vindication for her actions.

      It doesn’t matter how you spin it, if you’re putting money in her pocket, you’re helping her hurt trans people. Anything you tell yourself otherwise is just lying to yourself…

  • Drusas
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    5 months ago

    I have never read Harry Potter, but I have held a slight resentment for it ever since the first movie. I had a similar, but not quite as bad, haircut as Harry and similar, but not quite as bad, eyeglasses as Harry at the time that the movie came out.

    The last time I went out for Halloween, I went dressed as a samurai. Pretty authentically, in fact, with the hakama and haori and all but with the exception of having a bokken (wooden practice sword) instead of an actual katana. This was a couple of years later, I think.

    Multiple people asked me if I was Harry Potter.

    I could not express my disappointment.

    • Transporter Room 3
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      45 months ago

      I had so many people point at me and say “look, it’s Harry potter” to their kids whenever a movie was in theater.

      All I had was a scar and a bad haircut. No glasses at all.

      If I were older, I’d definitely go out of my way to make them feel bad for pointing out something I was self conscious over like it’s some kind of costume jewelry.

  • prole
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    5 months ago

    “Was”?

    I think Hogwarts Legacy showed that there is no shortage of adult fans of Harry Potter (you know, a series of books written for literal children).

    It’s so cringe. Maybe try reading books meant for your age group.

    Edit: Lol, you can downvote all you want but it doesn’t change the fact that a significant portion of your identity is based on a series of mediocre children’s novels.

    Like, if you think those books are good, you should try actually reading something meant for your age group. It might blow your mind.

    • @Duamerthrax@lemmy.world
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      45 months ago

      I tried reading HP when it was for my age group. Gave up half way through because of mounting little issues and getting increasingly disappointed by the ending and the increasing slog to get to it. The first book was fine, but Voldemort isn’t a good reoccurring villain.