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Backlash Erupts Over Disney’s New ‘Captain Durag’ Cartoon Character for Being ‘Stereotypical’ and ‘Offensive’

Animated superhero character in purple costume striking a confident pose with a playful bunny in the background.

Animated superhero character in purple costume striking a confident pose with a playful bunny in the background.

Disney is facing intense criticism for introducing a new cartoon superhero named “Captain Durag” on its Disney Jr. show “Hey AJ!

The character, who debuted in the middle of Black History Month, has been slammed by leftists as tone-deaf, stereotypical, and disrespectful to black culture.

Captain Durag is depicted as a black superhero fighting “grime” in Slime City, with his durag serving as both his cape and a mask that covers the upper part of his face.

Critics argue this portrayal reduces black identity to a caricature, sparking outrage on social media where users called it an “abomination” and questioned Disney’s judgment.

One X user complained, “They made a ‘Captain Durag’ in 2026 what the f–ck Disney,” while another labeled it “wildly tone deaf.”

The backlash has been particularly strong from within the black community.

In response to the uproar, Disney reportedly removed several “Captain Durag” clips from its YouTube channel, though the company has issued no official statement on the character’s future.

Despite the criticism, the character’s creator, 28-year-old Jamaican-American artist and comedian Camille Corbett, defended her creation.

In an X post, Corbett stated, “I created the character Durag Man, now known as Captain Durag on the Disney Show, Hey AJ and I’m just finding out people are finding it problematic? I just wanted our culture to have a superhero of its own!”

Corbett further told The New York Post that “as a scholar,” she’d “never speak on anything I’ve never experienced,” and encouraged viewers to watch the show.

“Hey AJ!” creator Martellus Bennett also pushed back against the detractors on Instagram, writing, “If that offends you, maybe the problem isn’t the durag. Maybe the problem is that you’ve never seen black imagination treated as sacred, heroic and worthy of a cape.”

 

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Bennett described the character as a reflection of black life.

Disney has faced criticism from the right for years over its pandering to woke leftists, and it still hasn’t saved them from the mob’s wrath.

The post Backlash Erupts Over Disney’s New ‘Captain Durag’ Cartoon Character for Being ‘Stereotypical’ and ‘Offensive’ appeared first on The Gateway Pundit.