Skip to content
Search AI Powered

Latest Stories

New Nick Jr. Series Created By White Woman Accused Of Ripping Off Oscar-Winning 'Hair Love' Short Film

New Nick Jr. Series Created By White Woman Accused Of Ripping Off Oscar-Winning 'Hair Love' Short Film
Sony Animation/Nick Jr.

On July 10, 2017 a Black artist named Matthew A. Cherry began the kickstarter for his project Hair Love. Cherry wanted to tell the story of a young girl and her parents—all of whom embrace, find power in and show love through their natural hair.

In 2018, a project called Fashion Ally was greenlit. The creator of Fashion Ally is a White woman named Paula Rosenthal. This will matter later. Pin that info.


Fast forward a few years to present date and time.

Matthew A. Cherry was able to reach his kickstarter goal. He used that money to support a team of Black creators and tell the story of Hair Love—which became a short film that ended up winning an Oscar.

It touches on long-term illness, a father struggling to handle what mom normally does, a creative and determined young girl (and her feline sidekick) who connects with mom through blogs/videos, and the idea of hair as a woman's crowning glory ... and how losing it doesn't make a woman less of a Queen, especially to those who love her.

It's a powerful six minutes even with almost no dialogue.

www.youtube.com

The story was such a powerful vehicle for love and acceptance of natural hair, in fact, that Cherry turned it into a book. The book became a best seller, inspiring children and adults to embrace and celebrate their natural hair texture.

That is when Nick Jr. announced its new project, Made By Maddie.

The project revolved around a Black family—a father with locs, just like Hair Love; a creative and determined young girl and her feline sidekick, just like Hair Love. It also features a mom whose hair looks almost exactly like the mother from Hair Love in the end scenes.

You may also notice how a blog/videos play a major role and that the design choices—right down to the color and patterns on the cat—are almost note-for-note the same. In fact, there are so many similarities that people just assumed Made By Maddie was connected to Hair Love in some way.

Nick Jr. promoted it as a positive moment of representation, so much of the public believed that they had, in some way, connected with the creators of Hair Love and adjusted the animation style to be more in line with other children's shows, like Doc McStuffins. The trailer for Made By Maddie features much more dialogue than the mostly-silent Hair Love, in which the only character who actually speaks is Mom, and even then it's in the video Zuri watches.

Keep an eye out for similarities here in Mom, Dad, daughter, cat, and device.

www.youtube.com

Let's do some direct comparisons.

We will start with the mothers and daughters together. The mothers in both projects wear their natural hair loose and carved out. Both Zuri and Maddie wear theirs in poofs with pink bows. Mom's hair in the Hair Love screenshot is longer, but for much of the video she has no hair at all.

This style is pre-illness and in the end credits her hair is shorter as it regrows—which you will see in a moment.

Hair Love / Screenshot


Made By Maddie / Screenshot

Now lets turn our attention to Dad.

Both projects feature Dad as a man with shoulder-length locs worn loose with the top pulled back, a longish face and wearing a light blue button-down collared shirt with the sleeves rolled up. He has a crooked smile in both projects as well.

It's a very specific aesthetic.

Hair Love / Screenshot


Made By Maddie / Screenshot

Look at the families spending time together.

Hair Love / Screenshot


Made By Maddie / Screenshot

Check out Mom's stance—and hair length/style, as we mentioned earlier.

Hair Love / Screenshot


Made By Maddie / Screenshot

Even the cats...

Hair Love / Screenshot


Made By Maddie / Screenshot

Now that you've seen the side-by-sides, it's easy to understand why people believed Made By Maddie was connected to Hair Love.

It is not.

In fact, Made By Maddie wasn't even originally Made By Maddie at all. Made By Maddie started life as Fashion Ally, the project we mentioned earlier. Fashion Ally didn't seem to originally center around a Black family, though we are unsure when any changes were made.

What we do know is that it was not created until about a year after Hair Love and that Nickelodeon did not approach Matthew A. Cherry to work on a project with them or even to collaborate on Made By Maddie. Nick did promote Made By Maddie as positive representation of Black families and natural hair, so once people found out Matthew A. Cherry was not involved, they started to ask the obvious next question.

If Cherry and his team of Black creators didn't do Made By Maddie, who did?

The answer, of course, is Paula Rosenthal—who didn't seem to want to be found all that easily.


While the acting team on Made By Maddie was a mostly Black cast, the creators, directors, producers and people in power are not. It could be said that this was all one big coincidence had Hair Love not been a major cultural moment.

Oh, also all of this.



The confusion—and anger—was pretty real.





Thing is, the issue is more complicated than just "White woman steals Black artist's work... again."

Everyone in power in the Made By Maddie project was White, and the content seems suspiciously similar, yes. A lot of people are angry about that, yes.

But Nick Jr's response to cancel the show entirely has people heated as well.

There is a serious lack of representation when it comes to little Black girls, positive and affectionate nuclear Black families and natural hair. Also, the voice actress who was hired to play Maddie just lost a wonderful opportunity over this.

More than anything, people seem like they would have liked to have seen some sort of compromise. Made By Maddie was acquired from Rosenthal's team—but Nick Jr. absolutely has to resources to create another show with original ideas and design work.

They can easily recast the young actress who lost out because of these actions.

Legalities are complicated, but Nickelodeon is in an excellent position and has both the time and financial resources to handle this. Ideally, we would love to see original representation and that actress given the chance to shine without being connected to the rest of the drama and accusations.

More from Trending

Jeff Ross
Mike Coppola/Variety via Getty Images

Comedian Jeff Ross Shares Photos Of Puffed Up Lip After Allergic Reaction To Ice Cream

Insult comic Jeff Ross revealed he had a medical emergency after a show Saturday night that resulted in a trip to the ER. However, he assured fans the show must go on despite "looking like Mickey Rourke at the end of The Wrestler."

Ross recounted the ordeal on Instagram, showing his swollen lip taking over his face from eating burrata ice cream after his Take a Banana for the Ride show in Mill Valley, California, near San Francisco.

Keep ReadingShow less
screenshot of Jesse Watters on Fox News
Fox News

Jesse Watters Offers Mind-Numbing New Claim About Masculinity—And Is Instantly Dragged

Problematic Fox News MAGA pundit Jesse Watters has made another bizarre claim about masculinity.

Having already taken exception with eating ice cream, drinking milkshakes, and taking bubble baths, Watters is now targeting tech jobs.

Keep ReadingShow less
Donald Trump with the Dodgers
Kevin Dietsch/Getty Images

Trump Leaves Everyone Confused With Hilariously Bizarre Word Salad Tribute To The Dodgers

President Donald Trump was widely mocked after he welcomed the 2024 World Series-winning Los Angeles Dodgers to the White House on Monday with a bizarre, tangential, and rambling speech.

The team arrived at the White House on Monday morning, where Trump, in his remarks, praised two-way star Shohei Ohtani and infielder Mookie Betts. The Dodgers had defeated the New York Yankees in five games to clinch their second World Series title in five seasons.

Keep ReadingShow less
Donald Trump
Kevin Dietsch/Getty Images

Trump Roasted After Giving Clunky New Nickname To People Criticizing His Tariffs

President Donald Trump was criticized after he pushed back against critics of his tariffs, coming up with a new nickname for the "weak and stupid" people who oppose them.

The Trump administration’s newly imposed tariffs on imports from various countries have unsettled consumers, triggered a trade war, disrupted global markets, and sparked widespread fears of a potential recession in the U.S. and beyond.

Keep ReadingShow less

Childhood Experiences People Thought Were 'Normal' But Weren't At All

Content Warning: Child neglect, child abuse, narcissism, gaslighting, people-pleasing, and other traumatic childhood experiences

It's important for us to work on ourselves, to continue bettering ourselves throughout our limited time on this earth, and a key way of doing that is acknowledging what we do not know, and working on that.

Keep ReadingShow less