Perhaps if bronys were known to win in underground fight to the death cage matches.OlasDAlmighty said:I don't think so, because brony culture isn't typically thought of as being masculine. In other words they haven't changed masculine values, they've simply ignored and/or broken off from them.
To challenge traditional masculine values you have to show that something once thought unmasculine can in fact be so, or vice versa. I don't think anybody sees MLP as being a "masculine" show. Instead they've shown that something thought unmasculine can have a male following that doesn't care about it being unmasculine and therefore doesn't care if they seem less masculine by association.
I think people find lazy ways to think themselves rebels.Dijkstra said:Why do people even care about things being 'masculine'? It's such a ridiculous waste of time. People who obsess over it should think for themselves how they ought to act instead of looking to some ridiculous tradition of 'masculine' values. If certain attributes show up in males more you don't need to freaking obsess over it and tell people to act in that way.
Lilani said:Yal said:I've heard this before, and I rather find it disheartening (though I know your saying it doesn't mean you agree with it). This is apparently the reason J.K. Rowling used that pen name when writing Harry Potter rather than her real name Joanne Rowling, because it's marketing suicide for a female author to write a book geared toward either gender and to make it known in the title that she is a woman. Yet another one of those things about women we haven't quite swept out of society's unconscious yet.And of course the show fulfills the most basic constraint of chick lit: It has a female creator and female protagonists. That's really all a book needs to completely crater its male readership numbers.
Well if that were true how would you explain twilight which is not male concerned at all?
There are some people who are sexually attracted to numbers. A very large group apparently because it's one of the first things that pop up when you type "Is it normal" In google. So I don't think people being sexually attracted to horse are the worst part of the internet. Also there are furries get over it internetmad825 said:OP, you're right! Our perception of masculine and feminine ideals changes every few decades. I myself consider MLP the best thing that a man can enjoy.
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When there are ton of pictures and a few videos of male fans cumming on MLP toys/doll and pictures...There's even a flash game where you can fuck raindow dash...I don't think so
Indeed, welding, mowing your lawn in your boxers and rustling cattle; that's manly stuff. I'd go as far to say that sitting on your ass and spending your free time playing vidya games isn't too manly either.A.A.K said:No.
I don't care if you watch it or not, I truly don't; but I don't think you're particularly 'manly' if you're a fan.
Re-reading what I wrote, I guess I left out an important detail, lol. It's marketing suicide if you're writing a book geared toward either gender because males have a tendency to not read books by female authors. Even if it's something they might find interesting, statistically they are simply less likely to pick up a book by a female author. Because Harry Potter is written for both genders, it was better for her to use J.K. Rowling instead of Joanne Rowling because J.K. Rowling isn't immediately recognizable as a female name.rbstewart7263 said:Well if that were true how would you explain twilight which is not male concerned at all?
Considering myself, and considering most of my friends as masculine people... we've all got something of our own as a 'gentle' thing.Vegosiux said:Indeed, welding, mowing your lawn in your boxers and rustling cattle; that's manly stuff. I'd go as far to say that sitting on your ass and spending your free time playing vidya games isn't too manly either.A.A.K said:No.
I don't care if you watch it or not, I truly don't; but I don't think you're particularly 'manly' if you're a fan.
Also, there's a trope for that, as always. [http://tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pmwiki.php/Main/RealMenWearPink]
Patrick Stewart loves him his pink shirts, and all.
You mean walking the streets in a miniskirt as male?Zhukov said:Depends what you mean by challenge.
They're "challenging traditional masculine values" in the same way that me walking the streets in a miniskirt would be challenging traditional masculine values.
That is to say, they're doing something that adult men are generally not expected to do.
However, I'm not sure which particular Traditional Masculine Value we're talking about here. Is it written somewhere? Thou Shalt Not Watch TV Programs Made For Prepubescent Females or something?