I never understood how liking childrens' cartoons makes you a paedophile. That's one of those things that never quite clicked with me. I'm sure I enjoy the same food as a serial killer. Doesn't make me a murderer by default.Caramel Frappe said:The problem with Youtube is that it's on the Internet. Anyone can be outside of themselves and be the worst possible being alive yet get away with it because there are no consequences. Not to mention their joy is seeing others overreact.. for who knows why *shrug*. Always makes me wonder why but meh.Thyunda said:First paragraph - yes, pretty much. Bronies don't like the show, they live it. That just ain't right. I'd get annoyed with any guy doing that though...like that one Trekkie who insists on talking to you in Klingon because he thinks it makes him cool. Sure, it's cool among other Trekkies, but when you're not with other Trekkies, try to adapt to society. You can fight its norms all you want, but you're the only one who'll suffer for it.
Niccolo Machiavelli wrote that people who acted as though they lived in the world they desired would be destroyed by the real world and the very evils they sought to escape.
Second - No, I don't like being called 'somepony', because, now hold onto your seat, this might shock you, I am in fact not a pony.
Third - People overdo everything. That's not up for debate. Just look at YouTube, and you have all the evidence you will ever need for every negative aspect of human nature you could ever want.
Actually laughed with your statement on 'somepony'. It's an inside joke in the show, where everyone is everypony because of the characters themselves. Oddly, in the real world we don't say 'somehuman' but say 'someone' because the one means it's just one person we already have in mind when we relate. Now I am getting to deeply involved with the word.. my bad.
The problem I have when people dislike the fans for living it in a show's style (as in acting like they're part of the show) is that people tend to get to harsh on anyone even remotely related in their passion. I could just say something about liking the show and already get quoted 4x saying "Oh, you like that show? You must want to be a girl, or like little girls you pedo!" Truth be told that has happened.. but I don't let it get to me because the majority tends to go with what they are used to.
As in, you're into realism and honestly doesn't appreciate someone acting like they are a pony or inside character MLP fan. Yet, it's not always a bad thing... people in the 80's-90's acted like Jedi's because they were so much into Star Wars. I mean, the Star Wars franchise was made by a huge SciFi fan who wanted to live like he's in space. Sometimes the best imagination comes from those who go into the deep ends of their mind. Don't get me wrong, no one should bring forth a show into the real world having it consume their life style but when trying to be creative or bring forth something like an art, music.. then yeah I think it's okay to let that out. Only when it's right and not overwhelming people.
Although a more fitting analogy would probably be the fact that I share many interests with my brother, but it does not make me into incest.
It's perfectly okay to act like you're in that world - so long as the people around you are also in that world. It's okay to roleplay during a Dungeons and Dragons game, however, if you start acting like your character out in the real world, then you're gonna have issues.
Friendship is not a concept to focus a show around. It's a theme. A message. Grand Theft Auto IV had very strong family-based themes, but everybody missed them because they got sick of Roman wanting to go bowling. So, yeah, the game was about crime lords and gunfights, car chases and cop-killing, but the narrative undertones were of family bonds and revenge. No matter how much trouble Roman got into, or how annoying the fat bastard was, Niko was always there for him. That's a decent message. Halo: Reach attempted to convey a message of camaraderie, and the slow acceptance of the new Noble Six into the team - though Bungie fumbled that one, cutting Six's interactions with the team to one mission per character. It felt like a lot of Emile time had been cut out.Gordon_4 said:As a fan of My Little Pony-Friendship is Magic, I'm disappointed Cracked. I expected a merciless savaging and all I got was a cherry tap.
Well I can think of worse concepts to centre a show on than friendship. Also, I agree that the really insane fans can ruin it for fans and non-fans alike: being part of Star Trek and Transformers fan communities really lets you zone in on some Twilight Zone tripping mother fuckers.Thyunda said:You don't like the show. You've become the show. While I think Trekkies take it a little bit too far sometimes, and I don't get their jokes, I can understand why you'd get into a franchise as big as that. THAT, at least, is the target audience. You guys are getting off over a story about FRIENDSHIP. I'm not sure how hard I have to hit these nails for you to understand. They are happy little horses who are struggling to understand friendship. This is morality for kids. You should not be entertained by this drivel. Good God.
I also disagree that its drivel. The narrative is from my perspective uncluttered and simple, true, but each of its main characters are remarkably three dimensional.
In honesty I would never have expected someone to take a concept as run into the ground or as overtly pastel as My Little Pony and made something genuinely watchable out of it. I stand here today a converted fan and reminded that with the right kind of creativity, almost anything is possible.
And as I've discovered, in many different ways with some of the best friends I've ever had, met and made long before this graced the airwaves; friendship really is magic. And that's the kind of thinking I really would like to see more of.