By Natalie Sandoval
Copyright dailycaller
Elon Musk wants you to cancel your Netflix subscription.
The tech billionaire urged his 227 million followers to “[c]ancel Netflix for the health of your kids” in an Oct. 1 post on X. Musk has shared numerous posts criticizing transgender themes in children’s television shows available on Netflix.
If you’re on the fence, here are five good reasons to never give another penny to Netflix.
1. An Obama-Produced Gay Wedding
Ada Twist, Scientist follows an “eight-year-old Black scientist” as she “explores people through scientific discovery, collaboration, and friendship” according to Rotten Tomatoes. The cartoon is rated TV-Y, according to Netflix, indicating the content is appropriate for children of all ages.
Ada Twist is produced by former President Barack Obama and former first lady Michelle Obama’s production company, Higher Ground.
YIKES. Ada Twist, Scientist, a show for 7-YEAR-OLDS on @Netflix, showcases young students coming together to set up and celebrate their teacher’s gay wedding. Oh, and Barack and Michelle Obama are the show’s executive producers. pic.twitter.com/1LL2lkY8FH — Libs of TikTok (@libsoftiktok) September 30, 2025
One episode of the show features young students working together to throw a gay wedding.
“Everyone’s favorite karate instructor, Sensei Dave, will be marrying mixed martial arts champion, Jiu Jitsu Joe,” an animated reporter gushes.
After the men tell each other, “I do” and “I definitely do,” the reporter pronounces them “husband and husband.” The men kiss, confetti explodes, the children applaud.
2. Crossdressing Toddler Musical
“Something that we know about you, you love to get up and dance,” sing two animated men to a young boy in CoComelon Lane. The boy is supposed to be their son. (RELATED: Popular Kids’ Show CoComelon Lane Features Boy In Tutu And Tiara Dancing For 2 Gay Dads)
“How about you break out those moves for you two biggest fans?”
The young boy does just that, putting on a tutu and a tiara, performing for the gay men.
OMG. CoComelon Lane, a Netflix show for CHILDREN, showcases a little boy in a dress, dancing for his two gay dads. Why does @netflix have so many shows pushing LGBTQ propaganda on children??? pic.twitter.com/5X4vaRQmtT — Libs of TikTok (@libsoftiktok) September 30, 2025
The boy then considers which outfit to wear. One of the men tells the boy, “Just be you.”
“Just be me?” The boy questions.
The show is rated TV-Y, according to the Netflix catalog.
3. Rocko’s Very Modern Life
I’ll concede that Rocko’s life is very modern. I won’t concede it’s appropriate for children aged seven or older, as Rocko’s Modern Life: Static Cling is rated on Netflix.
The Nickelodeon reboot features a “prominent trans character,” according to Gay Times.
Ralph Bighead, a character in the original series, is now Rachel Bighead.
Series creator Joe Murray told Entertainment Weekly that an episode in the original series, in which Bighead tries to hide his identity as a clown in a town of jesterphobes, was intended as a gay allegory.
“We were still playing by the rules, so to speak, and still trying to interject those situations [into the cartoon],” Murray told Entertainment Weekly.
Oh, neat. Children’s television has been corrupted for decades. Producers and writers just feel no need to disguise their intentions anymore.
4. Dead End
Where to start with this one.
Netflix cancelled Dead End: Paranormal Park in 2023, according to show creator Hamish Steele. It remains available on their site and is rated TV-Y7.
Protagonist Barney Guttman is a “a gay Jewish teenage trans boy finding love and acceptance while struggling with unaccepting family members,” according to a review in Paste Magazine.
🚨 If you haven’t cancelled @netflix yet, use this as your justification: “Dead End: Paranormal Park” is targeted for ages 7+, which pushes trans ideology. See for yourself! pic.twitter.com/D4rREAuhf2 — Gays Against Groomers (@againstgrmrs) September 30, 2025
Paste praises the show for its “groundbreaking trans representation.”
“Despite bigots complaining about the show being ‘inappropriate’ for kids, Dead End: Paranormal Park is definitely targeted at a younger audience than its source comics,” Paste writes.
“Targeted” feels like the right word choice here.
“Before making the show, I’d developed quite a few shows, and I love kids’ shows 100 percent, so we try to make it so that there’s nothing in the show that is inappropriate for an 8-year-old. But I think there’s an age group that cartoons just sort of abandoned for a long time, and assumed that when you get to about 12 or 13, you’re just watching adult shows,” show creator Steele told the Hollywood Reporter. (RELATED: Ohio LGBT Activists Want To Make Sure Gender-Confused Kids Only Have One Option)
See, silly bigots. The show isn’t “inappropriate.” It’s only sowing confusion in kids on the edge of puberty and leading them down a path of irreversible damage.
5. Fund For Creative Perversion
If you remain unperturbed by Netflix’s catalogue of kid’s shows, consider the following business decision.
Netflix’s Fund for Creative Equity funds the Transgender Film Center, a “nonprofit advancing the work of transgender film creators,” according to Netflix.
“Our mission is to bring more trans-made stories to the world, and we designed the lab to address the root of the opportunity, by helping more transgender creators find career success in TV and film,” said Sav Rodgers, the Transgender Film Center’s executive director, according to Netflix.
🚨Netflix is an activist outfit, hellbent on ideological indoctrination. As part of its ‘Fund for Creative Equity’, it has given hundreds of thousands of dollars to the ‘Transgender Film Centre’ in order to “bring more trans-made stories to the world”.https://t.co/dvCEKrYzql — James Esses (@JamesEsses) October 2, 2025
The Transgender Film Center’s 2024 “career development lab participants” consists of eight diversely pronoun-ed individuals, including “Sir Lex Kennedy,” whom you may refer to as “he,” “they,” or “sir.”
Kennedy is a “vegan, queer, black trans masculine media content creator,” according to Netflix.
Then there’s Xoài Pham, a “a Vietnamese trans woman descended from warriors, healers, and shamans.”
Another in the cohort is a “transfemme Iranian-American filmmaker” with a “dissociative adolescence” who tells stories of “aloof trans girls force-feminizing bigoted men.”
…It’s just fetishes all the way down, isn’t it.
Follow Natalie Sandoval on X: @NatSandovalDC