What is wrong with having a show that appeals to boys/men, or having a strong male hero?
Thankfully I cancelled Netflix over a year ago, but of course I heard about the bait and switch which is pretty commonplace now. The shill websites are doing the usual fan attacks as well as praising the "stunning and brave" direction. One even called it a "radical reimaging". Netflix obviously should've just openly stated that it would be a show about Teela but they know there wouldn't be an audience for it (outside of the sycophants in media). They knew that people who grew up watching He-Man would want a show about He-Man. Although I would rather market to them because they would most likely have kids and buy merchandise, but it makes much more sense to market to blue haired feminists on twitter.
You would think what has happened with comic books over the last 7 years would wake some people up.
I'm glad Anime and Manga are doing well and I hope that Japan never bends the knee. I recently bought some Conan comic books and novels, as well as the complete Robert Howard collection. I know Netflix is doing a Conan show, but I am pretty sure he will be upstaged or he will learn everything from women.
But I will close with my question from above. What is wrong with having entertainment that appeals to boys/men? Or as Yellowflash put it "nothing wrong with having something that appeals to women/girls but why is it that something that generally appeals to men have to appeal to everybody"
This is very, very true, and VERY deliberate. Big Publishing has become dominated by women editors, women managers, women marketers, women "sensitivity readers", etc. YA is the most egregious example of the end result.
My kids have read The Hardy Boys. The Boxcar Children. Isaac Asimov. Other Sci-Fi/Fantasy from my childhood (70s-90s ish). Only the occasional present day book, and I have to be very careful to vet them.
I like most of the books of that "Who was ....?" series.
The good news is, there is so damn much good stuff from the last 200+ years, that there's plenty to pick from.
When one of my kids was learning about Christopher Columbus, I found online a textbook from the 1940-50s that had an in-depth history about Columbus, told in story fashion (unlike today's school books). The kids loved it because it was interesting, there were heroic actions and evil actions, and no, it did not paint Columbus as perfect or flawless either.
I could continue to rant about this for a long time...
You may want to look at the Please Don't Tell my Parents I'm a Supervillain series. The main character is a young girl, but the series lacks woke nonsense and acknowledges consequences for the character's actions. It's also a good modern pulp adventure.