For me that’s RWBY. By god I loved V1-V6, and I was completely expecting how V6 ended, because I knew they listened to shippers way too much, but the Vic stuff just made me fall out of love with it instantly. It also helped that I started getting deep into the FGC and esports at that time, so learning how to play fighting games took a bunch of time that I used to spend watching other things and I put that into something more interactive.
This came up because I started listening to a bunch of older RWBY music, realized how old RWBY is and how long it’s been since I watched an episode. Not gonna watch one of course, but it’s just something that came to my mind recently, and god damn, if I win the lottery, I know exactly what I would do with the money.
It really hasn't affected me. I don't watch TV and read a lot. Plus, horror as a genre has been relatively untouched by this woke crap. Even the horror movies that are trying to make statements about race (Get Out) I still found pretty enjoyable.
It's also the only genre that seems still interested in Christianity since demonic possession is a subgenre of horror. I'm not religious but it does bother me how much of mainstream media seems to ignore that much of the country still is.
Get Out had a totally woke premise but it's an example of how to do subtle messaging right in fiction. How scifi used to be. Jordan Peele seems incapable of reproducing that success. Like most wokies he can't stop himself from hitting you over the head with his racist agenda.
I was deeply confused by the reviews for Get Out. It felt like 90% of them didn't watch the movie. The racism angle was a total bait-and-switch that gave way to horror genre conventions.
To be fair, as you've pointed out, it looks like Peele didn't really understand his own movie either.