J.K. Rowling celebrates Olympics decision: ‘fair sport for women and girls’

J.K. Rowling praises the HBO Harry Potter series reboot but reignites the gender debate after the IOC ruling, referencing Imane Khelif and the Paris Olympics issue.

J.K. Rowling‘s X account has developed into a weird microcosm of our modern world: one minute you’re looking at a wand, and the next you’re gazing at a war zone. This week was a perfect case in point. Within a single hour, the billionaire author managed to celebrate the rebirth of her Harry Potter wizarding world and, at the same time, jump back into the trenches of the world’s gender debate.

One foot in the clouds, one foot in the trenches

The “good news” for the fandom was delivered first. Following HBO’s release of a teaser for their massive, multi-season Harry Potter reboot, J.K. Rowling did not hold back on how excited she was for it. Fans of the series were promised that it would be “incredible.” There was a brief period where it felt like it was back to 2001: pure, unadulterated hype for the boy who lived.

But this hype was short-lived. Barely twenty minutes before she was talking about Hogwarts, Rowling was already swinging at the International Olympic Committee.

Her X post reads, “Today’s ruling by the IOC means a welcome return to fair sport for women and girls, but I’ll never forget the scandal of Paris 2024, when people who consider themselves supremely virtuous and progressive publicly cheered on men punching women.

She wasn’t simply praising the new and more stringent regulations put in place by the IOC with regard to gender and sports; she was settling old scores. In her declaration of the IOC’s decision as a “welcome return to fair sport,” she quickly went back to the 2024 Paris Games. She did not hold back in her assessment of the situation, declaring the inclusion of the athletes a “scandal” and the public’s support of the athletes “cheering on men punching women.”

The object of her ire is still the Algerian boxer named Imane Khelif. The reality of the situation that Rowling ignores is the fact that Khelif is a female athlete who has been a woman her entire life. By positioning the situation as simply “men vs. women,” Rowling is again embracing the black-and-white perspective that has made her a hero and a villain.

This is the new reality of the world of J.K. Rowling. It is impossible to have the magic without the fire. She is the creator of the most beloved childhood fantasies and the most divisive figure in the culture wars of the 21st century.

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Sumedha Chatterjee
Sumedha Chatterjee

Sumedha Chatterjee is a Delhi University graduate who studied Geography, a subject that deepened her fascination with how cultures and regions shape the way we experience cinema and art. Her love for storytelling began at an early age, surrounded by theatricals, cultural performances, and books that celebrated the art of creativity. What started as childhood wonder has grown into a passion for exploring films and expressing them through words. She strives to be a wordsmith who captures not just the craft of cinema but the emotions it stirs, weaving together thoughtful and relatable narratives.

When she isn’t writing, Sumedha can be found binge-watching The Big Bang Theory, laughing at the clever chaos of Gintama, or crocheting little pieces of joy. With every step forward, she hopes to bring fresh insight and warmth to the worlds of film criticism and cultural writing.

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