For much of the summer, since the release of the final season of She-Ra and the Princesses of Power on Netflix, hardly a week went by without 'MORE SHE RA', 'MOVIE FOR SHE RA' or some similar phrase trending on Twitter, as fans called for a continuation of the animated series.

Showrunner Noelle Stevenson and series writers have repeatedly voiced amazement at the demand. While the campaign's momentum slowed down since a Twitch panel with the crew drew criticism for a racially insensitive joke (the crew has since apologized), it has once again started to pick up steam, and it would not be a shocker to see people still asking for more She-Ra months or even years into the future.

Community Season 6

There's certainly plenty of precedent for fans of a TV series or movie using social media to lobby for a continuation. Community was always on the brink of cancellation, and NBC actually dropped the ax with Season 5. However, calls for #SixSeasonsAndAMovie propelled the cult-favorite comedy to a six-season run, with the final episodes streaming on the short-lived Yahoo! Screen. (The possibility of a movie is still floated.) A 2012 April Fools' Day event led #BringBackToonami to trend so heavily on social media that, within two months, Adult Swim permanently revived the anime programming block.

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Then there's the elephant in the room: #ReleaseTheSnyderCut. While there wasn't a finished "Snyder cut" of Justice League to release in 2017, fans of director Zack Snyder pushed relentlessly on Twitter for nearly three years (and even paid for billboards, and plane to carry a banner over Comic-Con International 2019). Now, HBO Max is financing the completion of the filmmaker's vision, to debut on the streaming service next year, in four one-hour installments.

She-Ra fandom hasn't gone to such lengths, and is nowhere near as aggressive as the Snyder devotees. There's no indication of a sense of entitlement, or expressed anger about the show's end, as is so often seen when a series is abruptly canceled, a film is re-edited or a planned sequel is abandoned.

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She-Ra and the Princesses of Power, however, wasn't canceled or butchered. It enjoyed a complete run of five seasons, telling the story it set out to tell. The ending is so  satisfying that it retroactively makes the entire series better in retrospect. Stevenson had occasional behind-the-scenes conflicts with the studio, but won the most important of those fights, giving viewers the beautiful queer romance the show had always been building toward. If Season 5 was the last we saw of the series, there would be absolutely nothing wrong with that. The fans simply want more of the thing they enjoy.

That makes the campaign for more She-Ra an inherently positive one. While She-Ra and the Princesses of Power presented a complete story, that doesn't mean there aren't more stories that could be told with these characters, perhaps as a movie. Stevenson is up for doing one, and if DreamWorks Animation Television is paying any attention to social media, executives have to be seriously considering it. At this point, it's less a question of if we'll get more She-Ra, but when.

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