IT: Welcome to Derry Season 1 transforms Stephen King's horror prequel into a lecture hall on 1960s racism, with an extremely heavy focus on systemic bigotry that overshadows Pennywise's terror. Nearly every white adult in Derry is depicted as openly racist, deranged, or evil, creating a cartoonish portrait of white villainy that serves progressive messaging rather than building atmospheric dread. Casting choices prioritize DEI with prominent Black leads like Jovan Adepo as a U.S. Air Force Major and Taylour Paige, alongside Native American representation, in a small 1962 Maine town where such diversity feels forced and historically incongruous, clashing with the source material's implied demographics. The plot weaves in military exploitation laced with racial segregation critiques, Cold War paranoia as metaphor for societal ills, and child ensembles diversified beyond organic plausibility. Creators Jason Fuchs and Brad Caleb Kane defend these elements as 'painting reality' while addressing monsters alongside 'bigotry and fascism,' revealing activist intent that prioritizes identity politics over storytelling. Audience backlash on platforms like Reddit and YouTube brands it 'woke garbage' and 'race-baiting propaganda,' with complaints that progressive intrusions make it 'hard to watch' and deliver stilted dialogue, weightless horror, and compromised entertainment value in service of social justice scolding.