"Xenites" are ensuring Xena's continued pop-cultural presence.
2004, Walter Alesci, "Xena: Warrior Princess Out of the Closet?: A Melodramatic Reading of the Show by Latin American and Spanish Lesbian and Gay Fans", in Femme Fatalities: Representations of Strong Women in the Media (eds.Rikke Schubart & Anne Gjelsvik), page 209:
Meanwhile, Jenny is a moderator of a Xenite site and has also her own site.
2007, Maria Wyne, Caesar: A Life in Western Culture, page 35:
It also spawned a large fan base (the Xenites) who communicated with each other via the Internet, and inspired comic books, action figures, novels and magazines, even Xena club nights and cruises.
2016, Kaarina Nikunen, "Placing Fan Cultures: Xenites in the Transnational Spaces of Fandom", in The Ashgate Research Companion to Fan Cultures (eds. Linda Duits, Koos Zwaan, & Stijn Reijnders), page 253:
Furthermore, fans from different cities have organized their own meetings, such as the Turku Xenites, composed mostly of female fans focusing on the subtext of the series.
2017, Liz Millward, Janice G. Dodd, & Irene Fubara-Manuel, Killing Off the Lesbians: A Symbolic Annihilation on Film and Television, page 141:
[…] she was in a Xena chatroom called The Pub when a Xenite in New York City invited her to come and visit.