Before The Phantom Menace even hit theaters in 1999, the Star Wars discourse machine was already warming up its hyperdrives—and somehow decided that a nine-year-old child was a perfectly acceptable target. Yes, really. Long before social media outrage cycles, YouTube essayists, and algorithm-fueled pile-ons, Newsweek published a piece criticizing Jake Lloyd’s performance as young Anakin Skywalker… before the film was even released. And that’s when Ron Howard stepped in—with a letter so calm, measured, and devastatingly polite that it still reads like a masterclass in public decency. A Letter That Aged Better Than Most Hot Takes Dated January 14, 1999, the letter came directly from Ron Howard, co-CEO of Imagine Entertainment and someone who, conveniently, actually knew what it meant to be a child actor under public scrutiny. Howard didn’t yell. He didn’t grandstand. He didn’t threaten.He simply dismantled the article with quiet precision. He called the critique of Jake…