J. K. Rowling is back in the news cycle.
The Harry Potter author has been interviewed for a new podcast called The Witch Trials of J. K. Rowling, which unpacks her rise to success and her complicated legacy following a series of anti-trans comments.
The 57-year-old author sat down with US writer Megan Phelps-Roper, a high-profile former member of the Westboro Baptist Church, at Rowling's home in Edinburgh to discuss it all.
With two episodes of the podcast out now, here are the main points that have everyone talking.
The main takeaways from the podcast with J. K. Rowling.
While the first two episodes of the podcast didn’t directly address the author’s anti-trans comments, Rowling spoke briefly about her legacy in the first episode of the podcast, describing how she has been "misunderstood".
"I never set out to upset anyone. However, I was not uncomfortable with getting off my pedestal," she said.
"And what has interested me in the last 10 years and certainly in the last few years, particularly on social media, 'You've ruined your legacy, oh you could have been beloved forever but you chose to say this' and I think you could not have misunderstood me more profoundly.
"I do not walk around my house thinking about my legacy. What a pompous way to live your life walking around thinking about what my legacy will be. Whatever. I'll be dead. I care about now. I care about the living."
The second episode recounted how many groups accused the Harry Potter series of promoting witchcraft to children.
In 2000, J. K. Rowling and her team were forced to evacuate a bookstore during a signing because of a bomb threat by an alleged far-right religious fundamentalist.
Top Comments
Transpeople existing is a scientific fact. Feeling like you are "born in the wrong body" is also a scientific fact. Intersex people exist. Sex and gender are not the same thing, it is a spectrum. Also a scientific fact.