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rva98014
Current Version
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Twice on the Characters page, Judy's disbelief when told that Otterton attacked Manchas is listed as an example of her being prejudiced about Otters. The examples cite this as Judy being either hypocritical or politically incorrect in that she's holding onto the PlayfulOtter stereotype and can't see Otterton acting outside of that. While I can how this could fit, I don't think it holds up in light of the recent [[http://www.theqandapodcast.com/2016/10/zootopia-q.html 2016 Podcast]] involving the writers and directors of Zootopia.
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Twice on the Characters page, Judy\'s disbelief when told that Otterton attacked Manchas is listed as an example of her being prejudiced about Otters. The examples cite this as Judy being either hypocritical or politically incorrect in that she\'s holding onto the PlayfulOtter stereotype and can\'t see Otterton acting outside of that. While I can how this could fit, I don\'t think it holds up in light of the recent [[http://www.theqandapodcast.com/2016/10/zootopia-q.html 2016 Podcast]] involving the writers and directors of Zootopia.
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They talk about how they struggled to lay the groundwork for Judy's unconscious prejudice of predators in general and that she believes they are biologically predisposed to be savages as well as how her distrust of foxes stems from her parent's distrust and from her own encounter with Gideon Grey.
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They talk about how they struggled to lay the groundwork for Judy\'s unconscious prejudice of predators in general and that she believes they are biologically predisposed to be savages as well as how her distrust of foxes stems from her parent\'s distrust and from her own encounter with Gideon Grey.