We’ve documented how the Media Research Center stopping hating Ricky Gervais once he starting mocking transgender people. Now the MRC has flip-flopped on another pop-culture figure — ironically, for similarly going anti-trans.
The MRC has generally tried to find ways to hate J.K. Rowling, author of the Harry Potter series, for seemingly as long as she’s been writing the books.
A 2007 post by Mark Finkelstein melted down over Rowling’s revelation that series character Dumbledore is gay, adding, “Somewhere, Jerry Falwell is smiling.” Robert Knight huffed that Rowling “has to succumb to political correctness and ‘out’ Hogwarts Headmaster Albus Dumbledore,” adding that “my guess is that she made her shocking revelation in order to pander to the cultural elites who regard celebration of homosexuality as a mark of sophistication.”
A 2016 MRC post groused: “When busy Tweeters compared Trump to Voldemort, J.K. Rowling defended the racist, mass-murdering villain of the Harry Potter series, saying, ‘How horrible. Voldemort was nowhere near as bad.'” Another post complained that Rowling opposed Brexit and also “took the opportunity to slam U.S. Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump as a “fascist in all but name,” for saying Britain should exit the EU.” Yet another post complained that Rowling expressed an opinion on Brexit.
In 2017, Corinne Weaver grumbled that Rowling “is still accusing Trump of ignoring a disabled child and calling the POTUS ‘stunning and horrible'” though a full video allegedly proved a “deceptively edited video” false.
The MRC was even angry that actors in Harry Potter projects expressed political opinions.
The MRC did offer up one early defense, though: a 2016 post by Matt Philbin stated in his usual jerkish fashion that Rowling “is in heap-big trouble for not being sufficiently sensitive to the diversity within the ‘Native American wizarding community,'” concluding: “So Rowling has played fast and loose with American Indian stuff, in the same way she played fast and loose with dozens of other traditions in the name of entertaining children and making some money. Some crime. You’d think she played for the Red Skins or something.”
But what really turned the MRC into a group of Rowling fanboys was her dismissal of transgender community. Gabriel Hays sneered in a Dec. 19 post:
Turns out Harry Potter author J.K. Rowling might not be as progressive as she thought. Recently, the fantasy writer angered radical LGBTQ folks on social media for tweeting a defense of a person fired for believing that there are only two genders. The author has since been called a “transphobe,” or more specifically a “TERF” (trans exclusive radical feminist.)
For a woman who was once so woke that she officially altered the sexuality of one of her series main characters to appease lefty fans, this is a bit jarring.
[…]But such is the scourge of social justice. The ruling [upholding the firing of a British official for anti-trans views] was so disgusting that even the woman who retroactively turned Dumbledore gay to appease her LGBTQ fans found limits in her PC code of ethics. And the internet let her have it.
Clay Waters asserted that a New York Times reporters “joined the mob against Harry Potter author J.K. Rowling for transgender wrong-think” by “merely affirming there are in fact two sexes.”
Christian Toto cheered how Rowling “refused to apologize for comments deemed “transphobic.” and ” refused to go on a GLAAD-orchestrated Apology Tour,’ cheering that “Rowling hasn’t been officially canceled in any discernible way.”
When Rowling said in June that only women menstrate, the MRC rushed to her defense again. Waters lamented that Rowling has been “long targeted by radical transgender activists on Twitter for her stubborn adherence to the biological reality that men are men and women are women” and complained that a New York Times article on the controversy “actually contained the slur ‘terf,’ a derogatory and decidedly un-journalistic acronym employed by trans activists to smear their feminist opponents.”
Hays proclaimed that Rowling “appealed to a more concrete view of human anatomy” with her statement and huffed that “Several blue checks accused the author of being “transphobic” and an “asshole” because Rowling affirmed that no matter what they call themselves or how they “identify,” only women have periods, period.” Hays concluded: “This pseudoscience adds to the confusion, which is undoubtedly the real reason as to why trans folks have such difficult lives. Stay with it, J.K.!”
That’s how you get the MRC to like you: share a common enemy, preferably transgenders.