If I'm an actor at this point and I receive an offer to audition for something in Star Wars, a franchise that, in the last decade, has either had to tell fans publicly to chill the hell out with the harassment (e.g. Moses Ingram) or turn a blind eye to the toxicity entirely (Kelly Marie Tran) - not once, but multiple times - I'd avoid that shit like the plague.
All that grief and anguish just ain't worth it when you're trying to build a career. And now that these studios who stand by and do nothing are aligning themselves with these toxic "fans" just compounds the problem and makes the future landscape rather fucking bleak. The absolute last opinion any creator should care about when creating something is what the die-hards are gonna think.
One could do that, sure. Or - and this might sound crazy, but hear me out - one could take the role, and its potential massive career boost, and pay a remote worker $25/hr for 2-3 hours per day for six months or so to scrub your public "social" media profiles of racism and toxicity. Hell, if you ask, the studio may even offer to hire someone themselves to do that for you for six months. Or, one could simply not do public-facing social media at all. Does it stink that toxic trolls exist at all? Of course, but noping out of big franchise roles for that reason alone is needlessly self-sabotaging.
Not giving toxic sh*t-stirrers attention isn't "aligning" with them; it's common sense. "Don't feed the trolls."All that grief and anguish just ain't worth it when you're trying to build a career. And now that these studios who stand by and do nothing are aligning themselves with these toxic "fans"
Does anyone here think that Trek's studios (before toxic trolls could send actors online messages directly) didn't get toxic/hate mail for the likes of, say, Nichelle Nichols or Avery Brooks? I'd be pretty darn surprised if they didn't, and if some mail room clerk didn't have the menial job or sorting out the crap. But then that clerk would have thrown said crap in the trash, not gone to the actors' trailers and read it to them as they got their makeup done. And does anyone think the pre-Internet fan scene would have been better had said actors talked about their hate mail in nearly every interview or public appearance?