The Owl House creator Dana Terrace has called on fans to cancel their Disney+ subscriptions in protest at the company’s decision to introduce user-generated AI content on the streaming platform. Her posts came shortly after CEO Bob Iger used Disney’s latest earnings call to outline “the biggest and the most significant changes” to Disney+ since launch, including tools that would let subscribers make and share short-form, AI-assisted videos using company characters and brands.
Responding on X, Terrace wrote, “Unsubscribe from Disney+. Pirate Owl House. I don’t care. F**k gen AI,” urging followers to stop paying for the service and to access her former Disney Channel series through unofficial means. The message quickly spread across social platforms and fan forums, where users shared screenshots and debated the ethics of piracy as a form of protest.
Terrace, whose fantasy series ran from 2020 to 2023 and has developed a strong post-broadcast fanbase, framed her stance as a defense of human artists rather than a personal dispute with Disney. In additional comments, she argued that so-called “regular people” already create films and art without AI, pointing to working animators, directors and writers who rely on traditional tools. She criticised plans to charge subscribers to generate material that the company would own, and urged aspiring creators to “pick up a pencil” and post their work independently instead of feeding corporate systems.
Disney has not answered Terrace directly, but Iger has described AI as an “engagement” tool that can personalise Disney+ and connect it more closely to the company’s wider businesses, from games to theme parks. He has stressed that the company is in talks with AI vendors with an emphasis on protecting intellectual property and sees “phenomenal opportunities” to use AI across its direct-to-consumer platforms.
The reaction to Disney’s plans has extended beyond one showrunner. Comment threads and opinion pieces from across the entertainment world reflect fears that generative systems will be trained on existing work without adequate consent or compensation, accelerating pressure on already fragile creative careers. Supporters of the initiative counter that carefully designed AI tools could give fans new ways to play in Disney’s story worlds and potentially help unknown artists experiment with ideas they could not otherwise afford to produce, provided clear safeguards are in place.





















































