Jump to content
  • entries
    363
  • comments
    1,100
  • views
    270,504

"(Male) bronies stole FIM from little girls!" ...Really?


Dark Qiviut

2,704 views

Take it away, Miz!

Over the past several weeks, excuses after excuses after bashing after bashing from anti-bronies (and fellow bronies) have been chapping my teeth. First, it was the "it's for kids" excuse, and I wrote a blog calling that excuse (and the general population who uses it) out. Next, it was the bashing of the FIM analysis community (BTW, calling analysts "ANALysts" isn't cute or funny; it's stupid), and I'm seriously thinking of prepping for a defense of that community. Another imbecilic claim I see (including from other bronies) is how the older bronies and the community itself "stole the show from little girls."

Newsflash: That statement is full of shit. Older bronies never stole the show from ANYBODY. They're just as part of the fandom as the little kids and vice-versa. They're just as entitled to appreciate a good show, see it grow, want what they like to see (as long as it works in FIM's context/roots and doesn't deviate from the content rating), and critique it so it gets better as the kids and their parents. The core fandom is a very relevant part of sales, and bronies altogether are very influential both in merchandise and the show big or small, like fact-checking the Celestia doll from pink to (off-)white and (because the core fandom and little kids are growing up along with the characters) helping edge FIM into a more mature direction for season four (e.g., Testing Testing 1, 2, 3 calling out the public school system; Flight to the Finish addressing Scootaloo's inability to fly; plagiarism in Rarity Takes Manehattan; the Twilight/Tirek fight scene). Hell, don't even bother denying it — Because the show spread popularity to bronies young and old, we even have seasons four, five, and beyond.

And what's more idiotic is how some so-called "feminists" pull this "bronies are entitled/steal the show" bullshit. If you claim to be a feminist and then pull that card, then, well…this should explain nicely.

88aa5a9708fe10faa3529b8420fc07aa.jpg

Any feminist with an ounce of common sense would never pull that antifeminist, sexist card. It's hypocritical (about as hypocritical as Femme Fetale from The Powerpuff Girls), and if you really are a feminist, you should feel guilty for saying it, much less thinking of such bigotry.

Bronies regardless of age, gender, or culture NEVER stole FIM from ANYBODY, and it's downright antifeminist and sexist to believe otherwise.

  • Brohoof 21

12 Comments


Recommended Comments

Never thought about the feminist angle. Intriguing. I wonder why they're so defensive about the idea in the first place; this seems to be the first show that an issue like this has been raised.

  • Brohoof 5
Link to comment

 

 

Femme Fetale from The Powerpuff Girls

That character was actually based off of the kind of feminists who spout this shit :please:

+1 for female equality. That's not only fair, but it's right. Female supremacy is another thing, and the feminists who write that sort of nonsense are essentially going against the original cause of the feminist movement just by the gender inequality-laden rants that they spout off on Dumblr.

 

Just thought I'd share my two cents on that, although you may have stated it in your blog. Just sort of skimmed through it, to be honest.

 

Ultimately, though, anyone with half a brain would be able to see through the over-exaggerated piles of crap these people promote. If we're stealing the show from little kids, why aren't you criticizing the adult-laden fandoms of shows like "Adventure Time?" 

 

Because you're just bashing bronies to capitalize on the controversy they've spawned with the creation of their fandom so that way people will notice the articles you're putting out - which is really, in all likelihood, just a desperate grab from the writer for attention, which is probably because no one really cared about anything else they had to say.

 

Just weak-minded and full of logical fallacies, really, but you can't stop the world from having people who do stuff like that.

 

 

  • Brohoof 5
Link to comment

There is never enough popcorn for all the entertainment these knuckleheads provide with their stupidity.

  • Brohoof 4
Link to comment

That argument is so laughably bad, it looks like they're literally just looking for reasons to hate bronies or just take feminism to a whole new level.

  • Brohoof 6
Link to comment

I'm a feminist... A TRUE feminist... I realized that the brony community, with it's large portion of adult males, was a GOOD thing for feminism, and a step in the right direction. Part of what makes the world unfair to the female gender is the lack of understanding in the males, and that, for some reason, many men are afraid of looking even the slightest bit feminine because they think it's weak, and it's bad.

 

The fact that all genders and all ages can enjoy something that's target audience is young girls is a BIG statement of the progressive and open-minded nature of both the people creating the show, and the people watching it.

 

With a focus strong female characters, without making the few male characters that turn up look weak, it's exceptionally equal. Big Macintosh is very strong and hardworking, Shining Armour can produce a force-field around the entirety of Canterlot and is captain of the royal guard, Soarin is an exceptional flyer and (I think) is the second in command with the Wonderbolts. Even spike, who is a baby dragon, is intelligent enough to read, write, organize the library, and he does the typical "female" jobs around too because Twilight is often really busy.

 

And that's important. The key to feminism is teach both males AND females that they're equals, no matter what jobs they do.

  • Brohoof 5
Link to comment

It's a problem that I'm all too familiar with from what I've seen on Tumblr. Personally I view the femenism angle as simply a bunch of tumblrinas who seek attention as Tumblr is a popular hotspot for brony hate at the moment.

 

I've always found the whole 'stole the show from the intended audience' as  a laughable excuse as Lauren had intended the show to be enjoyed by not only little girls but also their parents as well, which DHX has obviously extended to include the male audience entirely by how many older references are available in the show and the quality in general. Even Hasbro has taken que from this considering of how much higher the quality in the MLP toys has gone thanks to bronies critiquing Hasbro's products and choosing more expensive but higher quality fan made toys in favor.

 

Their same argument can be applied to any other fandom that exists (Rule 34) but yet none of those other fandoms receive the same hate for it as others (save for Furries) all because guys liking something feminine is considered weird at best and pedophilia at worst by society in general, and even many feminists do not like the idea of guys liking something that they consider their stuff, which is sexist itself.

  • Brohoof 3
Link to comment

I'm a feminist... A TRUE feminist... I realized that the brony community, with it's large portion of adult males, was a GOOD thing for feminism, and a step in the right direction. Part of what makes the world unfair to the female gender is the lack of understanding in the males, and that, for some reason, many men are afraid of looking even the slightest bit feminine because they think it's weak, and it's bad.

 

The fact that all genders and all ages can enjoy something that's target audience is young girls is a BIG statement of the progressive and open-minded nature of both the people creating the show, and the people watching it.

 

With a focus strong female characters, without making the few male characters that turn up look weak, it's exceptionally equal. Big Macintosh is very strong and hardworking, Shining Armour can produce a force-field around the entirety of Canterlot and is captain of the royal guard, Soarin is an exceptional flyer and (I think) is the second in command with the Wonderbolts. Even spike, who is a baby dragon, is intelligent enough to read, write, organize the library, and he does the typical "female" jobs around too because Twilight is often really busy.

 

And that's important. The key to feminism is teach both males AND females that they're equals, no matter what jobs they do.

 

n121391_citizen20kane20clap.gif

 

Perfectly said, and I commend you for saying how the brony community is a good thing for feminism.

 

If there's one thing to say about FIM's main series, it's how unabashedly pro-feminist it is. One of the show's most important themes is subversion of cliches and stereotypes. You see this everywhere.

  • Twilight being relocated from her school in Canterlot to Ponyville
  • Green Isn't Your Color tackling the subject of jealousy realistically
  • The Best Night Ever satirizing fairytales
  • Sisterhooves Social
  • Hurricane Fluttershy and the consequences of bullying
  • Testing Testing 1, 2, 3's criticisms of streamlined structure of academic learning
  • Cheese Sandwich and Pinkie Pie being successful and great party planners in Pinkie Pride
  • Suited for Success's criticism of executive meddling

Because there's such an huge, out and about population of bronies (male, female, young, old, etc.), with the help of reliable networking of social media, the brony community perfectly proves how anyone can enjoy quality, pro-feminine family entertainment regardless of base demographic.

 

FIM is the most important pro-feminist show since The Powerpuff Girls.

  • Brohoof 2
Link to comment

I agree. It's a pretty ridiculous statement to make, seeing as the show isn't suddenly unviewable by the younger audience now that it has achieved a massive surge in popularity among the older audience. If anything, this growth is a positive thing for the younger audience as well, reason being as you explained the show has taken more attempts at tackling more mature concepts. And the show/brand is definitely going to last much longer/stay more relevant now that the brony fandom exists than if it didn't.

  • Brohoof 2
Link to comment

It looks like to me that they are only coming up with random excuses because they honestly have no reasons to bash the community, therefore need a reason. 
 

  • Brohoof 2
Link to comment

It's simple, really. If the show garners an audience this huge and commands this much appreciation, and we can break it down to definitively say that it IS a good show, what right does anyone have to be picky about who should or shouldn't enjoy the show?

 

We're not allowed to enjoy a show because we're a certain age or gender? They have a word for that now. It's called discrimination.

  • Brohoof 2
Link to comment

"Target audience" is way less sacred than gatekeepers think it is. Most writers and show runners aren't actively trying to keep their work from being enjoyed by a broader audience. Target audiences exist mainly for marketing purposes, not to establish some kind of exclusive space.

  • Brohoof 2
Link to comment
On 17/08/2015 at 8:56 PM, Zerbu said:

"Target audience" is way less sacred than gatekeepers think it is. Most writers and show runners aren't actively trying to keep their work from being enjoyed by a broader audience. Target audiences exist mainly for marketing purposes, not to establish some kind of exclusive space.

Not sure that isn't an argument for the title one though - Adults tend to have WAY more disposable income than preteen girls, so will pay more for collectables and display pieces (while a preteen is more likely to have a smaller but actively played with collection)

Link to comment

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Join the herd!

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
×
×
  • Create New...