Ok, this gonna sound polemic and I’m gonna try to not use any adjectives. (Except for once)
The thing is that sometimes I feel like many stories try to appeal to a broad audience, but regardless of what they aim for, a lot of the time the audience ends up being (I’ll allow myself this just once) men rather than women. I’m not sure if this happens with the animated series of Avatar, but I do notice that with Star Trek, even though they try to make everyone feel represented, the reality is that the average viewer is, well, just that—the average person in the country where it’s broadcast.
In the case of Avatar, it’s criticized by some Japanese people because they associate it more with China, to the point that they label it as almost racist when it’s compared to Japanese animation (anime). What I mean is that no matter how much a series tries to appeal to a general audience or to please everyone, that’s never really going to happen; it will always end up having a group with shared characteristics that likes it.
But what do you think? Can there be stories that anyone—regardless of gender, ethnicity, or country—can enjoy? I think the closest thing to that is Harry Potter, and well, you know what the creator is like, but that’s not the point here.
It’s hard to explain, but this is more aimed at writers or any other creative producer: do you write with a specific audience in mind, or do you think that everyone will like what you create?


Is it? It’s hard to find any real data.
Based on the fact that one of the biggest black movie stars of the 90s, chose to be in Star Trek because of the influence seeing the diversity in TOS had on her I don’t think the Trek is white boy sci-fi narrative really holds up to any scrutiny.
Source of Harry Potter demographics: https://pro.morningconsult.com/instant-intel/harry-potter-fandom-demographics Getting almost 50-50 woman and male in a fandom is VERY hard to get.
Of course there is black people who love what Star Trek do in their universe, but they aren’t a big number of the fandom, Whoopi Goldberg is a great actress, yes, but still the fandom is predominant by white men because the story itself is more atracted to that audience.
Ok do you have a source on Trek demographics?
What are you basing this on?
@RIotingPacifist @cuchi “A shockingly high percentage of Americans consider themselves to be Star Trek fans: 37% overall. Men are half again as likely as women to be fans: 45% vs. 30% of women.” https://researchscape.com/consumer-research-2/paramount-subscribers-and-star-trek-fans