Disney chose a white girl from a former slave state who stakes out land on African soil to be its next princess. The colonially reminiscent movie plot did not generate overwhelming sympathy from the Internet writ large, prompting tense interactions between the screenwriter and a slew ofcultural diversity advocates on Twitter.

On Wednesday, the Hollywood Reporter announced Disney had tapped Stephany Folsom to write “The Princess of North Sudan,” the company’s next animated princess movie. The “real” princess of North Sudan, upon which Folsom’s script is inspired, is daughter to Jeremiah Heaton, a farmer from Abingdon, Virginia.

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Thus began an onslaught of #PrincessOfNorthSudan criticism on Twitter. A notable example:

Disney's 1st black princess was a frog for 90% of the movie & they r making the 1st African princess a white girl. Ok #PrincessOfNorthSudan — naomi (@naaomibella) May 14, 2015

Folsom took to Twitter herself to defend the movie she’s writing. “Agree w/everything people are saying. Wouldn’t write that story. But if you want to focus your hate on me, go for it,” Folsom said in a tweet that is now deleted. The screenwriter elaborates, “There is no planting a flag in Sudan or making a white girl the princess of an African country. That’s gross.” And: “I’ve been to the Sudan. The people there are amazing. Colonialism is bullshit. Hope you all have a beautiful night.”

Early Thursday, Folsom assured Twitter users that the movie plot she is writing is “NOT the story” they think it is:

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As laid out by @THR article I can understand why you'd be upset. Rest assured that is NOT the story we are telling. #PrincessOfNorthSudan — Stephany Folsom (@StephanyFolsom) May 14, 2015

By way of background, Agence France-Presse interviewed Heaton last year regarding his voyage with his daughter to Sudan , whereby Heaton, “planted a flag in a tiny parcel of uninhabited land on the border between Egypt and Sudan on June 16th, Emily’s seventh birthday,” and “the Kingdom of North Sudan was born.”

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Describing his motivations, Heaton says, “With a child you don’t want to ever tell them they can’t be something they desire to be, and at age six, her frame of reference for the world was to be a princess. So I told her that she could be.”

Why go all the way to Sudan to establish a seven-year-old’s princess credentials? Heaton explains to AFP: “Initially I looked at the Antarctic continent, which doesn’t have a population… but due to the Antarctic Treaty, there are no new claims that are allowed to be made.”

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Behold, more of the Internet’s wisdom on Disney’s “Princess of North Sudan.”

https://twitter.com/cramer_rm/status/598886647254667264

Colonialism ain't heartwarming how the hell are they gonna make a kid movie out of it #PrincessOfNorthSudan — ♡ reem ♡ #IAmTheSudanRevolution (@queenreemmm) May 14, 2015

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If this backlash was intended to drum up controversy and interest early on, that's the only way I can see #PrincessOfNorthSudan making sense — Adam Abadir (@AyoAbadir) May 14, 2015

#PrincessOfNorthSudan represents the incredibly calculated way colonialism has been rebranded by the western cannon in the last century — harris (@airhrs) May 14, 2015

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The true story behind #PrincessOfNorthSudan is horrifyingly disgusting and there is no "angle" where it is anything but an outrage. — @red3blog (@red3blog) May 14, 2015

I really hope #PrincessOfNorthSudan is just a white privileged pipe dream that never comes to pass. You have a choice here @DisneyPictures. — Megane-hime「眼鏡姫」 (@BaelockHolmes) May 14, 2015

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