When the Hater Becomes the Creator
In January, a short film full of French stereotypes went viral. Its titular protagonist, Johanne Sacreblu, is the trans heiress to a baguette business in Paris; her paramour is the scion of a croissant company. Everyone is almost always wearing berets and striped shirts, while extras roam the streets in mime makeup. Sometimes, people dressed as characters from the French animated series Miraculous inexplicably appear. Also, the whole thing's a musical.
Yet Johanne Sacreblu was not made by a French cast and crew. Rather, its mastermind is Camila Aurora, a trans Mexican director. She wanted to skewer the making of Emilia Pérez, the French-produced, Spanish-language musical set in Mexico City about a Mexican cartel boss who transitions to a woman. So Aurora followed in the footsteps of Jacques Audiard, the French auteur who directed Emilia Pérez: She assembled a team that largely didn't match her characters' cultural backgrounds, staged Johanne nowhere near where it takes place, and apparently did very little research—as Audiard admitted of his preparation for his film—into her story's setting.
The result is a strikingly original critique of Emilia Pérez, the movie with the most Oscar nominations this year. The film has been receiving serious backlash online in the form of analytical essays and social-media posts, but Johanne is different. It's an extremely silly, wholly inventive affair, complete with original music and choreography. Since the short's debut on YouTube at the end of January, it has racked up more than 3 million views. As Héctor Guillén, a Mexico City–based screenwriter who began a social-media campaign decrying Emilia Pérez, put it to me, Johanne Sacreblu is 'a sort of fan art.'
Make that anti-fan art. Anti-fans, as pop-culture scholars have termed them, are similar to hate-watchers: consumers who become fixated on what frustrates them. Both groups tend to target something in the zeitgeist, but unlike hate-watchers, anti-fans tend to construct something new out of their annoyance or contempt. 'Anti-fans are folks who dig into something they dislike because there's something about it that really irks them,' Melissa Click, an associate professor at Gonzaga University and the author of Anti-Fandom: Dislike and Hate in the Digital Age, told me. 'There's something that they can't just ignore. It calls them in a certain way, in the same way that people who are fans of things get called into something.' And what they produce, Click added, can range from the relatively harmless (a meme or two, posted on a snarky subreddit) to the actively hateful (harassment of the subjects of their ire online or in person).
[Read: A film impossible to have mild feelings about]
Dislike has long fueled art. Kendrick Lamar's Grammy-winning 'Not Like Us,' a track made amid a feud with the rapper Drake, wouldn't exist without disdain. Nor would the live-action film version of Sonic the Hedgehog, whose design was overhauled after fans protested the character's original look. But the internet encourages the transformation of antipathy into creative fodder, and enables its dissemination. On platforms such as TikTok and YouTube, creators build personal brands off parodying celebrities and constructing elaborate takedowns of what's in the mainstream. They draw dedicated audiences interested in granular interrogations of pop culture. (The video essayist Jenny Nicholson's four-hour dissection of Disney World's Galactic Starcruiser—better known as 'the Star Wars hotel'—went viral last summer.)
And the trajectory of Johanne Sacreblu suggests that online success can translate offline; the short film has enjoyed a limited theatrical run in Mexico City. Establishing yourself as a purveyor of anti-fan art seems to be good business, Suzanne Scott, the author of Fake Geek Girls: Fandom, Gender, and the Convergence Culture Industry, told me. Anti-fan art is, she said, 'absolutely more visible as a phenomenon than it once was, and a lot of that has to do with the shareability of digital content … What I think is new and distinct about some of this is you see fans and fan influencers professionalizing themselves around this kind of content.'
Michael Pavano, an actor who began posting his impersonations of celebrities during the coronavirus pandemic, has certainly benefited from the spread of anti-fandom. In January, he struck internet gold with a parody of Blake Lively's work in the romantic drama It Ends With Us. He wasn't familiar with the Colleen Hoover novel upon which the film is based; he'd watched the movie one night and wanted to offer some 'playful critique' afterward, he told me over Zoom. The next day, he'd donned a long auburn wig, turned on his camera, and uncannily captured Lively's expression throughout the movie by curling his lips and exaggerating her pout. The clip has accumulated more than 46 million views on TikTok, becoming his most popular upload yet. Pavano followed up by eagerly posting several more takes on Lively, who, as he played her, always seemed unable to change her morose appearance.
Before long, however, he began seeing comments that were criticizing Lively herself. These arrived as Lively became embroiled in a legal battle against the film's director, an ongoing, headline-making case that divided viewers of It Ends With Us. Pavano felt that he needed to be more careful about how much Lively-related material he published. He was concerned that his work seemed to pander to the actor's critics, which was not his intention. 'For me, it's not about hate at all,' he said. He paused the impressions, telling his followers at the end of January that he 'might wait a couple weeks before I post her again.' But his new audience never stopped requesting more Lively, and Pavano told me that he felt that the actor's other roles, such as her work in the TV show Gossip Girl, were still worth riffing on—just for 'silly fun.' 'If Blake did reach out and say, you know, I'm not okay with this; this is really hurtful to me, of course I would listen,' he added. 'I would never capitalize on someone else's obvious hurt.' Last Sunday, Pavano indulged his audience by going live on TikTok for 12 hours, staying in character as variations of Lively's roles—including her part in It Ends With Us—the whole time.
The relationship between fans and the subjects of their admiration has always been tricky. What begins as support—of a public figure, a pop-culture phenomenon, a franchise—can grow into obsession. The same goes for anti-fans; their dislike can turn noxious, and creators within this genre who attract their own devotees risk perpetuating the cycle. Just as fandoms can become perilously passionate, so too can anti-fandoms. 'People who have hated things have always existed,' Click explained, 'but being able to find other people so easily who also hate the thing you hate is something that's new.'
The key to generating anti-fan art that doesn't elicit actual hostility, then, is care—authentic appreciation for the material being judged. Pavano may be mocking Lively's performance, but he's also studying it closely. Whenever he chooses a celebrity or an actor's work to imitate, he told me, he'll practice their quirks in the mirror for so long, he starts to feel like they're a part of him. 'It is sort of like a possession,' he said with a laugh. 'I visualize myself as this person … and I keep doing it until I feel the person.'
Someone like the YouTuber Jenny Nicholson, too, is obviously deeply engaged with the various subjects of her critique. She often dresses up in the relevant franchise's merchandise—a headband sporting Na'vi ears while talking about Avatar, for instance—and contributes robust context about a subject's history; she makes it plain that she understands her topic's appeal. The team behind Johanne Sacreblu also scrutinized Emilia Pérez with rigor; the short opens with a number set in the streets of France, the same way Audiard's film does with Mexico. Such analysis doesn't mean that these creators love what they scorn; they establish their bona fides to show how informed they are to viewers who might suspect otherwise. 'They lead with this kind of deep fan knowledge and affect,' Scott said, 'so that when they are critical, it's coming off both as informed and … so you don't get the sense that they're doing it in bad faith.'
[Read: The purest fandom is telling celebrities they're stupid]
The best anti-fan art produces a clarifying effect, in other words, rather than inspiring pure derision. They're works of respectful rebellion that cut through the growing hum of online chatter and that, Click said, 'might encourage us to become more critical consumers,' the kind who generate thoughtful analyses of pop culture. In the case of Emilia Pérez, the objections to it have grown cacophonous. There have been essays by Mexican viewers denouncing its crude rendering of Mexico's drug-related violence; damning statements from LGBTQ advocacy organizations such as GLAAD, which called the film 'a profoundly retrograde portrayal of a trans woman'; and social-media posts condemning the offensive missives made by the movie's star.
But Johanne Sacreblu delivers something fresh along with its creator's evident disapproval of Emilia Pérez. Guillén told me he admired that Aurora, 'instead of just trying to diminish other people's work,' made something original; in doing so, she highlighted what she found ludicrous about Audiard's approach while also offering a dose of humor, not anger. As he put it, 'I think it's way better to create something, right?' After all, without art, there wouldn't be fans—or anti-fans.
When you buy a book using a link on this page, we receive a commission. Thank you for supporting The Atlantic.
Article originally published at The Atlantic
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Yahoo
5 hours ago
- Yahoo
Trump booed and cheered at the Kennedy Center while attending 'Les Misérables'
WASHINGTON (AP) — A tuxedo-wearing President Donald Trump was booed and cheered as he took his seat for the opening night of 'Les Misérables" at the Kennedy Center, bringing his own dose of political drama to the theatrical production that was unfolding onstage. It was his first time attending a show there since becoming president, reflecting his focus on remaking the institution in his image while asserting more control over the country's cultural landscape. 'We want to bring it back, and we want to bring it back better than ever,' Trump said while walking down the red carpet with first lady Melania Trump. The Republican president has a particular affection for 'Les Misérables," the sprawling musical set in 19th-century France, and has occasionally played its songs at his events. One of them, 'Do You Hear the People Sing?,' is a revolutionary rallying cry inspired by the 1832 rebellion against the French king. Opening night had a MAGA-does-Broadway feel. Ric Grenell, the Trump-appointed interim leader of the Kennedy Center, stood nearby as the president spoke to reporters. Attorney General Pam Bondi chatted with other guests. Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. took selfies with attendees. Vice President JD Vance and his wife, Usha, were also there. There were more precautions than usual, given the guest list, and ticketholders had their bags searched after walking through magnetometers. Canned soda was on sale for $8, while a glass of wine cost $19. Terry Gee, a bartender, bought his ticket for the show in November and didn't mind Trump's presence. It's his sixth time seeing 'Les Misérables,' and he said, 'I'm going to enjoy the show regardless." Hannah Watkins, a nurse, only learned that Trump would be there when the Kennedy Center distributed information about extra security and she searched online to see what was happening. 'I've seen a lot of famous people so far, which is exciting,' said Watkins, who had claimed a spot near the VIP entrance with her mother. 'Honestly, we just like 'Les Mis' and are excited to be here.' However, when the lights went down and the show began, there were empty seats in the balconies and even in the orchestra section. Before Trump, presidential involvement in the Kennedy Center's affairs had been limited to naming members to the board of trustees and attending the taping of its annual honors program in the fall. But after returning to office in January, Trump stunned the arts world by firing the Kennedy Center's longtime director and board and replacing them with loyalists, who then named him as chairman. Trump promised to overhaul its programming, management and even appearance as part of an effort to put his stamp on the national arts scene. His latest moves have upset some of the center's patrons and performers. In March, the audience booed the Vances after they slipped into upper-level seats to hear the National Symphony Orchestra. Trump appointed Usha Vance to the Kennedy Center board along with Bondi, White House chief of staff Susie Wiles and Fox News Channel hosts Maria Bartiromo and Laura Ingraham, among other supporters. Sales of subscription packages are said to have declined since Trump's takeover, and several touring productions, including 'Hamilton,' have canceled planned runs at the center. Actor Issa Rae and musician Rhiannon Giddens scrapped scheduled appearances, and Kennedy Center consultants including musician Ben Folds and singer Renée Fleming resigned. Understudies may have performed in some roles Wednesday night because of boycotts by 'Les Misérables' cast members, but Trump said he wasn't bothered by anyone skipping the performance. 'I couldn't care less,' he said. Since returning to the White House in January, Trump has adopted a more aggressive posture toward the arts. The White House has taken steps to cancel millions of dollars in previously awarded federal humanities grants to arts and culture groups, and Trump's budget blueprint proposed eliminating the National Endowment for the Arts and the National Endowment for the Humanities. Trump has also targeted Smithsonian museums by signing executive orders to restrict their funding and by attempting to fire the director of the National Portrait Gallery. Trump characterized previous programming at the Kennedy Center as 'out of control with rampant political propaganda' and said it featured 'some very inappropriate shows,' including a 'Marxist anti-police performance' and 'lesbian-only Shakespeare.' The Kennedy Center, which is supported by government money and private donations, opened in 1971 and for decades has been seen as an apolitical celebration of the arts. It was first conceived in the late 1950s during the administration of Republican President Dwight Eisenhower, who backed a bill from the Democratic-led Congress calling for a National Culture Center. In the early 1960s, Democratic President John F. Kennedy launched a fundraising initiative, and his successor, President Lyndon B. Johnson, signed into law a 1964 bill renaming the project the John F. Kennedy Memorial Center for the Performing Arts. Kennedy had been assassinated the year before. ___ Associated Press writers Mark Kennedy in New York and Chris Megerian in Washington contributed to this report. Darlene Superville, The Associated Press
Yahoo
5 hours ago
- Yahoo
Trump Unironically Attends 'Les Misérables' As Protests Spread
As protests against his immigration policies balloon nationwide, President Donald Trump is seeing one of his favorite musicals on Wednesday night: 'Les Misérables,' the story of an anti-government uprising, abusive police and harsh imprisonment. Trump is going to opening night of the famous musical's one-month run at Washington, D.C.'s John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts, whose entire board of trustees he replaced in February and had them name him chairman. 'We've seen it many times,' Trump said upon arriving at the Kennedy Center with first lady Melania Trump. 'Love it. One of my favorites.' When a reporter asked him which side of the musical's conflict he most identified with, Trump laughed and refused to answer. 'That's tough. You better answer that one, honey,' he said, gesturing to the first lady. 'I don't know.' When another reporter asked how he felt about reports that some of the 'Les Misérables' cast would be boycotting the night of his performance, Trump said he 'couldn't care less.' 'All I do is run the country well,' he retorted. Trump received a mixture of cheers and boos when he took his seat at the theater. His attendance comes after he deployed National Guard troops to face largely peaceful protesters in Los Angeles and announced he was sending in Marines, despite pushback from local leadership. 'Les Misérables,' the musical based on the 1862 novel of the same name, tells the story of French peasant Jean Valjean after he emerges from a 19-year prison sentence for stealing a loaf of bread for his niece. Much of the musical centers around student demonstrations against the French monarchy. One of the musical's most recognizable songs ― 'Do You Hear The People Sing?' ― has a long history as an anthem at pro-democracy demonstrations. It's also an apparent favorite of Trump's, as he played the song right before walking onstage to announce his third presidential run in 2022. Several drag performers also attended the show Wednesday night to protest Trump, who announced in February there would be 'NO MORE DRAG SHOWS, OR OTHER ANTI-AMERICAN PROPAGANDA' at the Kennedy Center going forward. They received applause as they walked in to the theater, social media videos show. Vagenesis, whose government name is Anderson Wells, was one of the planned attendees. 'Theater is supposed to be a place of community, a place of storytelling, a place of celebration, joy, catharsis and it should be open and available to all,' Vagenesis told NPR on Wednesday. Trump's former Vice President Mike Pence similarly caused a stir when he went to see 'Hamilton' shortly after winning the 2016 election. He was loudly booed when he arrived at the Manhattan theater. When Pence was trying to exit the theater after the final curtain call, actor Brandon Dixon, who was playing the part of Aaron Burr, asked him to stay and delivered a message to him. 'We, sir, we are the diverse America, who are alarmed and anxious that your new administration will not protect us, our planet, our children, our parents or defend us and uphold our inalienable rights,' Dixon said. 'We truly hope that this show has inspired you to uphold our American values and to work on behalf of all of us,' he continued. Pam Bondi Warns Of More Arrests In California Amid Protests Against Immigration Raids Karoline Leavitt Snaps At Reporter For 'Stupid Question' About Peaceful Protests There's Growing Anger Over Flags Flown At LA Protests. Here's What Everyone Is Getting Wrong.
Yahoo
6 hours ago
- Yahoo
Netflix, Incentives and Location Perks Spur Growth in Mexico's Film and TV Industry
Depending on who you ask, the state of Mexico's film industry is either waxing or waning. The twin labor strikes of 2023 saw fewer U.S. film and TV productions that year and the following year. However, the first trimester of 2025 has reported a 16% spike in overall audiovisual activity, said Guillermo Saldaña, Mexico City's Film Commissioner. More from Variety Boxing, Uprisings, LGBTQ+ and Coming-of-Age Stories Power Guadalajara Co-Production Meetings Lineup Climate Change Hell, Military Coups, Big Industry Pollution, Fractured Families: Guadalajara Gives a Bracing Latin American Take on World Collapse Guadalajara Highlights Hits, Notable Debuts Among Recent Spanish, Portuguese-Language Movies, Plus a Film About a 'Hell of Naked Depravity' 'I'd like to think that we have a symbiotic relationship with the U.S. and Colombia because we share talent, industry and information. We always work closely with the MPA, the major studios, Netflix and the others,' he said, adding: 'Lately, there has been a sense of uncertainty — I'd call it a sort of tariff threat — but we're not 100% dependent on the U.S. industry, as you well know. We also have a strong local industry that produces content for both domestic audiences and the U.S. Latino community.' 'Some local production companies saw limited activity in 2024, but are now gaining momentum in 2025 with two to three projects underway,' said Saldaña. Others are still discouraged from the paring back of incentives for domestic productions and have been inactive. 'Mexico's presence on the international stage has been down recently,' noted Pimienta Films' Nicolas Celis ('Roma,' 'Emilia Perez'), who's just been named president of the Mexican producers association AMPI and the newly launched Mexican Federation of Film Producers (FMPC), unveiled at the Guadalajara Film Festival on Sunday. Eficine, the incentive for co-productions, rejected local producers' bids to participate in both films that won in Cannes' Un Certain Regard this year, Chile's 'The Mysterious Gaze of the Flamingo' and Colombia's 'A Poet.' When Netflix's co-CEO Ted Sarandos showed up in February with Mexican president Claudia Sheinbaum to announce a landmark $1 billion investment in production over the next four years in Mexico, the local audiovisual industry let out a collective cheer. 'It was very well received by the film community, I got calls from everywhere in the world,' said Redrum's Stacy Perskie, who has worked on some of the biggest international productions in Mexico, led by the 2015 James Bond thriller 'Spectre,' which featured a spectacular Day of the Dead parade in the streets of Mexico City, Neil Blomkamp's dystopian 'Elysium' and Netflix's upcoming 'The Gringo Hunters' and 'Man on Fire.' Among other large-scale local projects, he's also worked on 'Narcos: Mexico,' 'Pedro Paramo' and Alejandro González Iñárritu's 'Bardo,' which involved closing down the center of Mexico City. Reflecting on the growing competition from elsewhere in Latin America and other territories, he pointed out: 'There are all these incentives all over Latin America and in Europe as well but sometimes when you compare Mexico to all these places with incentives, you see that at the end of the day, you won't have to bring equipment, crew, department heads, etc. And we're closer to Los Angeles than Atlanta or New York!' At present, Mexico offers a 16% VAT rebate to international productions on a federal level. Only the state of Jalisco extends a cash rebate incentive, but it has an annual $5 million cap. 'If we did have incentives, Mexico would be so much more appealing,' noted Celis who has a slew of productions in the pipeline, including the latest fiction features from Lila Avilés ('The Chambermaid'), Tatiana Huezo ('The Echo'), Eliza Miller ('Hurricane Season') and the directorial feature debut of lauded stop-motion animation artist, Sofia Carrillo. The issue of a nationwide location filming incentive is being discussed and coordinated closely with the Presidency and the Ministry of Economy, according to Saldaña. 'In Mexico City, the film industry makes up nearly 12% of the city's GDP, reflecting significant investment. The President is well aware of its importance — hence her joint announcement with Netflix. Discussions are ongoing in the Ministry of Economy's Creative Industries roundtables, alongside cultural institutions like the film institute Imcine, the Ministry of Culture led by Claudia Curiel, and various industry chambers,' he asserted. Asked if Netflix foresees any challenges to fulfilling its $1 billion commitment to Mexico, Carolina Leconte, Netflix VP of Content for Mexico, responded: 'We've been producing original content in Mexico for a decade now, so we've built strong local partnerships with cast and crew, in front of and behind the camera, and we continue to grow alongside each other.' 'We always strive to tell better stories and to apply learning as the industry evolves in the newest production standards and technologies, and luckily Mexico has so much talent and so many stories to tell,' she added, listing a slew of projects underway. These include: 'Las muertas,' the first series from film director Luis Estrada ('Herod's Law') and Mexican Revolution period series 'Mal de amores,' based on the novel by Ángeles Mastretta. It has recently kicked off production on four new series: 'Santita,' 'Love 9 to 5,' 'I'm Not Afraid' (No tengo miedo) and 'Corruptors' ('Los corruptores'). The state of Jalisco, whose capital of Guadalajara hosts a number of cultural activities, including the Guadalajara International Film Festival (FICG), a book festival and a gay pride parade among others, launched a 40% cash rebate on production and post-production expenditures in 2023. The incentive is luring more companies to set up shop there in order to avail of the rebate, open to those who have had offices in the region for at least three years. Non-resident producers would need to forge a co-production deal with a Jalisco-based producer to avail of the rebate. News broke at FICG that post-production house Chemistry joined forces with its Guadalajara-based counterpart Semillero Estudios in order to better tap the perks. Netflix has shot Season 3 of 'The Manny' as well as 'Snakes and Ladders' in Guadalajara while AppleTV+ was shooting its Eugenio Derbez series 'Acapulco' in Puerto Vallarta. While Jalisco has yet to reach Mexico City-levels in terms of crew and department heads, the state boasts a wealth of locations. 'Barring snow, we have cities, we have deserts—in other words, Jalisco offers a wide variety of locations, which isn't the case, for example, in Mexico City where if you wanted a beach location, it would take at least five hours to get there. We have a clear geographic advantage in that sense, plus, we have great food – and of course, tequila and mezcal,' said Filma Jalisco film commissioner Alejandro Tavares, who added that it hosts an average of five to six international audiovisual projects a year. 'We organized a fam trip here for producers from Los Angeles, directly in coordination with the Los Angeles Consulate. It was great that they came to see firsthand how easy it is to do things here — co-productions, etc. As you know, Hollywood is facing major issues right now, so they're looking for new filming destinations,' he said, adding: 'Jalisco has a big advantage over other states in Mexico, mainly due to its connectivity. Two of the country's top five airports are in Jalisco, and we have direct flights to Canada, Europe and the U.S.' Guadalajara has also become an animation hub with the Guillermo del Toro-backed film school El Taller del Chucho spearheading the genre. Over the weekend during the Guadalajara Festival El Taller unveiled 'Sira,' an ambitious hybrid animated feature co-produced with Spain, written by actor-writer-director Ángeles Cruz. Also, 'They're doing a lot of work with students, thanks to strong ties with the University of Guadalajara; It's become a key training ground for up-and-coming filmmakers and a talent pipeline for the animation industry,' Tavares noted. Around 20 animation studios have been working on several international projects, including some from Marvel. FICG's opening night film, Mexico's first stop motion animated feature 'I Am Frankelda' was post-produced in Guadalajara and tapped the cash rebate. Some of the pics in FICG's Made in Jalisco section used the cash rebate, most notably 'Abracadaver' and 'Over the Waves' ('Sobre las olas'). 'The political push by other states to develop their regions has benefited everyone, as a greater number of developed regions means more audiovisual industry growth and production services coming to Mexico,' said Saldaña. 'We are open to exploring locations where the story calls for it, and we continue to explore new regions,' said Netflix's Leconte, adding: 'So far, we have filmed in over 50 locations in 25 states – for example in Oaxaca ('El secreto del río'), Baja California ('Gringo Hunters'), Puebla ('Mal de amores'), San Luis Potosí ('Pedro Páramo' and 'Las muertas'), Tijuana ('Santita') and Veracruz ('No tengo miedo'), among others.' Said Saldaña: 'We're planning to fully leverage Mexico City's infrastructure and are working to diversify the permitting process. The goal is to shift filming away from the usual central areas – like Roma, Condesa, and Coyoacán, which are typically featured – and instead spotlight and give visibility to other parts of the city, such as Iztapalapa, with its deep cultural roots, and Azcapotzalco. We're also focusing on boroughs with significant protected natural areas, like Milpa Alta, Magdalena Contreras and Tlalpan. In short, we're aiming to bring more exposure to these underrepresented, ecologically and culturally rich areas of Mexico City.' And to partly address the beach issue, the city is working on an agreement with the famous coastal resort town of Acapulco. 'Our goal is to revive the audiovisual corridor between Acapulco and Mexico City, with the initiative led by the Tourism Ministry. We're deeply invested in restoring Acapulco's rich cinematic legacy and its long-standing history in film,' Saldaña said. Best of Variety 25 Hollywood Legends Who Deserve an Honorary Oscar New Movies Out Now in Theaters: What to See This Week Emmy Predictions: Animated Program — Can Netflix Score Big With 'Arcane,' 'Devil May Cry' and the Final Season of 'Big Mouth?'