It’s one thing to complain on Twitter about your favorite TV show ending.

But a fan of the canceled sci-fi mystery series “The OA” has taken her objection to the extreme, vowing a hunger strike to bring back the Netflix show.

Protester Emperial Young, 35, is one of several who have posted-up outside of the streaming giant’s campus in Hollywood, Calif. She claims she hasn’t eaten since Aug. 16, and is saying she plans to continue until her favorite show is reinstated by the streaming giant.

“It is an absurd overreaction to protest with a hunger strike over the cancellation of a television show,” Young told the LA Times. “And I acknowledge that, but it’s because my protest for ‘The OA’ is really a culmination of multiple factors.”

Young, who is reportedly unemployed, says television has been “one of the few things that I and others have as a coping mechanism.”

“It’s helped people process their trauma. It’s helped people feel like they’re not invisible,” she added.

Last Sunday on Twitter she wrote that she is not only protesting the show’s cancellation, but also the “capitalist forces that killed” it.

The movement began online on Aug. 5, when Netflix announced the cancellation of the series, which stars the show’s creator Brit Marling, along with co-writer Zal Batmanglij, and actor Brandon Perea. Fans say the show and its protagonist — a blind woman whose vision is mysteriously restored after being held hostage for seven years — has resonated with marginalized viewers.

“The existence of disabled and mentally ill characters, of LGBTQIA characters and characters of color, is really quite groundbreaking in its portrayal of these groups,” superfan and protest organizer Mandy Paris told LA Times. “There have been YouTube videos that discuss how the show helps people with PTSD, depression, bipolar disorder and other disorders, making people feel seen and understood.”

Fans began using the hashtag #SaveTheOA to build a following, and in just 24 hours a GoFundMe campaign raised over $5,000 to pay for two massive billboards, in Times Square and across from College Medical Center in the LA suburb of Hawthorne, Calif., promoting the show. Their Change.org petition has nearly 80,000 signatures currently.

The show’s cast has also spoken out.

“We’re humbled, to be honest, floored, by the outpouring of support for ‘The OA,’ ” Marling wrote in a statement on Instagram four days ago, thanking fans for their rallying.

She continued, “You’re building something far more beautiful than we did because it’s in real time, in real life, with real people . . . The show doesn’t need to continue for this feeling to.”

Her co-star Parea has overtly voiced his support of the #SaveTheOA movement — sharing an image of Young with her picket sign.

“Ran into this GEM of a human while driving down Sunset!” he wrote in an Instagram post on Aug. 17. “I had to pull over and say hi! The support for #SaveTheOA is REAL! THANK YOU! P.S. it was 81 degrees outside . . . She is a true super hero.”

A user in the Reddit group r/TheOA, one of the primary digital meeting grounds for fans and protesters, posted a “Comprehensive Briefing” of their demands earlier this month.

“In rejecting sincerity and humanity, Netflix is endangering their own existence,” the statement reads. “If by September 10th, Netflix does not renew or release ‘The OA’ to be bought or acquired by another platform or network, #SaveTheOA will begin advocating for mass cancellation,” and adds, “Netflix has clearly demonstrated they do not value their subscribers.”

The briefing concludes, “Netflix does not abide by the core values it most claims to promote, such as honesty and selflessness.”