For the record, Shrek and Fiona chose to be ogres instead of white people. Let that sink in https://t.co/HMsCSnVPPU
— Headmistress Tallulah (@Tallulah_Chanel) March 2, 2025
One was a curse and the other was born an ogre and wanted to go back to what he was
β Taran Lathrop (@t3dansk3ds) March 3, 2025
Are you dumb or what?
Fiona loved being an ogre because she got used to it. Shrek was willing to be human because he loved Fiona enough to change himself.
β Alek Okie (@Conception_King) March 4, 2025
She chose to embrace being an ogre. So they both turned back.
It must be a unique way of living when you both can't hear the ceiling bird chirpβ¦
oh, so now fictional characters mean something? didn't yall say "iTs noT rEAl" when they turned White Disney characters black or brown?
β π‘πΈπΌπ²π½πͺ / Ψ±Ψ²ΫΨͺΨ§ (@earthtoroseyta) March 3, 2025
Shut up fat monkey
β ππβπβπ (@FeelLikeWorthy) March 4, 2025
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Fiona is the tricky one here. Whether or not she's doing something quite racially iffy depends heavily on whether we construct her as Rachel Dolezal in greenface, or as an ogre woman with a severe case of temporal vitiligo. The latter is uncomfortable. It requires us to ignore that Fiona's curse is distinctly artificial.
But, yes, I could arguably see that donkey and Shrek might call each other the n word in a brotherly sort of way, and it wouldn't be particularly controversial.
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