

The Real Adventures of Jonny Quest
AI Woke Score
No detectable agenda — story first.
confidence: medium
Audience Score
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The Verdict
A faithful 1990s modernization of the classic Jonny Quest franchise focused squarely on adventure and sci-fi. The addition of Jessie Bannon gives the team a competent female member, but nothing here pushes identity messaging — it's a clean kids' action show by these metrics.
What the AI Flagged
Each axis scored 0–100, with the receipts. The headline score weights the worst offense, so a single egregious element isn't diluted by the rest.
Identity Swaps
10The series largely retains the established characters from the original Jonny Quest, with Hadji remaining an Indian character as in the source.
Girlboss & Male Demotion
15Jessie Bannon is a capable, adventurous female character added to the team, but she's not presented as a flawless girlboss who diminishes the male leads.
- Jessie Bannon as an active member of the adventuring team
LGBTQ+ / Trans / Non-Binary Content
0No LGBTQ+, trans, or non-binary content present in this kids' action-adventure series.
DEI Casting
10Hadji and the international cast are consistent with the original franchise's globe-trotting adventure premise; no quota-driven casting.
- Hadji as a longtime established character
Preachiness
5Focused on action-adventure and sci-fi storytelling without sermonizing or activist messaging.
Anti-Masculinity / Anti-West
5Dr. Quest and Race Bannon are portrayed as competent, heroic male figures; no anti-masculine or anti-West framing.
- Race Bannon as a capable bodyguard hero
Source Betrayal
15Modernizes the property and adds Jessie as a regular, but these are ordinary creative updates rather than identity-driven rewrites of established characters.
- Addition of Jessie Bannon to the core team
- Updated animation and tech themes like QuestWorld
Audience Reviews
Discussion
Cast & Crew
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