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I long felt No Yay had an issue of not distinguishing between intentional and unintentional examples, and worse has examples of fans objecting to unintentional subtext so complaining about fans who claim such as opposed to the work.
For now, just trim the overly fetish parts. The rest is a wider issue likely requiring TRS.

This entry is currently on Sailor Moon Crystal. I'm looking to fellow fans familiar with the manga and Crystal specifically for assistance with this, as the 90s anime is not pertinent. Detailed explanation forthcoming for people who aren't.
Well, yes. I agree that Black Lady (Chibi-Usa's transformed older self) is meant to be creepy. Chibi-Usa, however, has been misblamed as an incestuous creepy young girl in the fandom for years.
She's a Daddy's Girl with an emotionally distant mother - she loves him as a father and reveres her as an idol. Her attachment to Mamoru is simultaneously her wanting the paternal love that she suddenly is deprived of, being so far from home, and a precocious crush of the Father, I Want to Marry My Brother flavor. (She also perceives Usagi, Sailor Moon, and her mother Neo-Queen Serenity as being separate people, even though they're just the past/superhero/future self of the same person - it stands to reason that she similarly separates "Mamoru" and "Papa".)
What Wiseman did was meant to be creepy - it's a non-verbal attack on Usagi that the people she loves could be transformed against their will, their bodies twisted, their mind manipulated so they would do things that they would never, ever, in a million years even think about. Chibi-Usa was so hurt and lonely she clung to everyone who offered her kindness, and Wiseman offered her her greatest wishes: grow up, be a lady, have the kind of unconditional love and utter devotion that her father has shown her mother all their lives. Blaming her is blaming the victim.
That's a lot of text just to get to this point: How would you fix this entry? Is merely cutting the part about the fetish enough? I think it should still stay because it has a narrative point, not just there to gross out the audience (or titillate them).
Edited by annieholmes