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Fhaolan

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Blog Entries posted by Fhaolan

  1. Fhaolan
    I've been trying to publish my essays on a schedule, but I feel like I need to explain why I'm doing these blog entries at all, and so I'm publishing this out-of-order. Several times I've been told "You know this is a cartoon, right? The creators didn't put this much effort into it, why are you bothering?"
     
    Actually, they did. They put a lot of effort into making this cartoon, and I respect the effort that they put into it. I know I don't have the skills to do what they do, and I truly know that I don't have the discipline to learn those skills well enough to compete in that arena.
     
    But first let me answer the question directly: Doing what I do amuses me, and is part of the entertainment I get from the show. I would do this kind of thing even if I didn't have these blogs to do it in. I just don't normally write it all down. I don't expect anyone else to be the same type of person I am, but I know that some of you out there are in some way amused and entertained by what I'm doing, so I am publishing it through these blogs.
     
    Also, I fully admit that I am easily, and often, wrong with what I conclude. Because I've never had the opportunity to talk to any of the show staff directly, I may be missing things, or noticing things that were accidental. But I'm trying my best at this, and I try to admit when I've made a mistake. Plus when I enter into speculation territory, I try to always put it in terms of speculation, and not as fact.
     
    Back to the topic: The creative staff involved in the stuff I'm pulling out of the episodes is a fair number of people. There's the writers, the editors, the storyboard artists, the animators, the background artists, the in-betweeners, the actors, the musicians, the effects people, and in the current show you have the prop builders, the puppet makers and probably many more as I don't know all the steps necessary to produce a cartoon like these. And a good number of these people will have learned not just the tools they're using, but have formally studied film, art, animation, and music history and theory. In so doing they will learn some architecture, costuming, historical props, and the culture from various periods in order to provide a kind of library of symbols that they can put into their work so that they don't have to spell out every aspect that they want to convey. And each person's hands that the work passes through has the opportunity to add or modify things that they are drawing from their library. Good animated features, heck good Art in general, includes a lot more than the immediate surface of the piece, but will use symbols, like dress and environment to indicate mood, status, and other things of note. The setting of a story itself becomes a character of sorts, complete with implied and explicit backstories and behaviors.
     
    Not all the people involved will be doing this, of course, but there will always be some who are, in the good productions. When I went to University, there was a large Art College not that far away, and there was an exchange of students on certain subjects to minimize overlap and to give the best education in their respective specialties. In my classes on architecture, a full third of the students were actually model builders and illustrators from the Art College, looking to increase their library of symbols. In my literature and history classes, we had a good number of hopeful scriptwriters and artists, and in the one film class I took over at the Art College itself, there were several prospective storyboard artists that I was aware of.
     
    In My Little Pony, even in earlier generations, there are many times where the creative staff have obviously used reference material to get accurate symbols for the artistic shorthand they are using. Sometimes they don't get it quite right. For example, in the My Little Pony 'n Friends episodes 'The Glass Princess', there are very accurately drawn spinning wheels and looms from the 18th-19th century. However, the artists very obviously only drew based on pictures of the wheels and looms, and had never seen them in use. Making some very broad and incorrect assumptions on how they actually worked when the characters were spinning thread and making cloth. But for the most part they do very well indeed.
     
    Other people are more qualified to critique the writing, drawing, animation, acting, and music as artforms. I know history, mythology, architecture, clothing, and cultural models. So I am pulling out what I can, speculating and building on the setting itself based on what I'm good at, knowing that those others are already doing critiques based on their own specializations.
     
    Some of them use comedy to do their stuff, some use earnestness, some do nerd rage, and so on. Most are doing vlogs or podcasts. But I don't have the equipment or knowledge to do either of those. So I use this format. Maybe someday I'll try doing one of those, but I'm not sure it will work for what I'm trying to do. Heck, I'm not sure *this* format is really working. I've not being doing it for very long at all.
     
    In any case, I hope I've answered the question, and I'll return you to your regularly scheduled.... stuff.
  2. Fhaolan
    My Little Pony 'n Friends: Mish Mash Melee (G1 TV episode, 1986, 10 minutes)
     
    Polo? That's not polo, they're playing Pato. Pato is played without mallets. Mind you, Pato is also quite violent, being more like an extreme form of rugby on horseback.
     
    Mistificent Forest. That's a mouthful. May be inhabited. Like everywhere else in Ponyland, it's close enough to Paradise Estates to stumble into, yet only one pony ever seems to know about their existence.
     
    Gnome-like Delldwellers, who crack open acorns to let trees grow, and polish stones to make them round for skipping. And set up strange traps and slides.
     
    Again, looks like gizmonkey technology, but more reliable.
     
    wat
     
    Frazets?
     
    More personality altering creatures.
     
    That's actually unfortunate that they didn't seem to actually *learn* anything from having each other's personalities. They've gone back to normal, and are discounting the experience. If I was an actual critic, I'd be annoyed at this.
  3. Fhaolan
    My Little Pony 'n Friends: The Magic Coins (G1 TV episodes, 1986, 4x 10 minutes)
     
    Part 1
     
    I still don't understand why the seaponies have life perservers. Are they also bad swimmers, like all the other ponies?
     
    Okay, just ignore the magic treasure. Playing ball is so much more important. As normal with utopian socieites, they don't use 'crass money'.
     
    Single shot wishes from each coin.
     
    Uhm... you could also just herd the bubble all the way to the ground. It's not like you don't have multiple pegasi there.
     
    Okay, good there were fruit and sandwitches in there. At first it looked like it was all sweet baked goods.
     
    Heh, Spike raindancing.
     
    Spike now as a classic 'cowboy'. Someone's been watching westerns from the human world.
     
    So the wishes have to have something to do with the individual coin.
     

    Part 2
    Ah, these are *baby* seaponies. That must be why they've got life preservers.
     
    The Moochick. Haven't have him appear in quite some time. Rabbit s now white, and named 'Abbot'.
     
    The Treasure Collection of Nibblic the Troll, Crimson Canyon beyond the Jeweled Desert. Moochick actually knows Nibblic.
     
    The Jeweled Desert looks a lot like the dark crystals that Sombra was messing with.
     
    Puck. Seems a lot like the standard Robin Goodfellow to me.
     
    So *these* are official Goblins? Okay.
     
    Who's this fellow? And a non-pony unicorn dressed up as a charger? The fellow is wearing what is looks like a representation of a set of English globus-style breast-and-back armor, ranging anywhere from 14th to 17th century. Off to slay a dragon and save a damsel.
     
    Nah, he's just a businessman. "Put an egg in your sandal and beat it?" I must have misheard that. Rewind and play it again. No, I still can't figure out what he's going on about.
     

    Part 3
     
    "Slipped your bridle" I like that one. That's a keeper.
     
    Mix of stuff in the troll's place. The door specifically looks like the vented security doors at the oil refinery I worked at thirty years ago.
     
    Odd terrain. I'm not sure what I'm looking at.
     
    Heart of Fire, a huge ruby in the crater of Fire Mountain. Golden Rose in the Haunted Garden. Emerald Idol in the ruins of the City of the Ancients.
     
    Are they just 'treasures' or magic ones?
     
    Maze garden. With topiary guardians. Cute.
     
    Spike using his flame again! He's actually quite competent in this series, I wasn't expecting that.
     
    The Golden Rose is glowing, but doesn't seem to have any real magic properties.
     
    Troll has allergies. Also Cute.
     
    Idol is also glowing.
     
    Wait, something's gone odd. The Idol's no longer glowing.
     
    Okay, that's destroyed.
     
    Again, the treasure is glowing.
     
    Ah, winking has a range limit.
     

    Part 4
     
    So no success from any of the three subquests.
     
    How does that work, that's dirt that's catching on fire?
     
    The Magic of Friendship!
     
    I'm not sure I'm understanding what's going on?
     
    ... I probably shouldn't ask this, but if the troll reversed all the coin wishes since the weather control one, shouldn't his friend disappear as well?
  4. Fhaolan
    My Little Pony 'n Friends: Little Piece of Magic (G1 TV episode, 1986, 10 minutes)
     
    There's a huge focus on the baby ponies this entire series. Previously I thought the targeted age demographic dropped series to series, but I'm starting to wonder if it all happened in *this* series.
     
    Partial winking. That's just weird.
     
    Okay, that explains the whole 'what age are they' bit. We're dealing with *clones*. There's an adult Ribbons, and a baby Ribbons simultaneously. No wonder there are no male ponies in Paradise Estates, they don't need them.
     
    Da fuc? There's daydreaming, and then there's psycosis.
     
    Look out, one of those squares will be electrified. No, sorry, that was a Doctor Who episode.
     
    Okay, good, the red ball is different in each daydream. I was starting to wonder if this was some kind of dream villain stealing something from them.
  5. Fhaolan
    My Little Pony 'n Friends: The Return of Tambelon (G1 TV Episodes, 1986, 4x 10 minutes)
     
    This is the one I've been waiting for. I remember this one from when I was a kid. The next time I saw MLP, it was the next series which was a bit of a mental whiplash, and turned me off of MLP. This one is a lot more like the first TV special.
     

    Part 1
     
    Winking out referenced again.
     
    We've got Megan's siblings again. Also dressed the same way they always are.
     
    Derilect city, mix of architectures, but all medieval and back, allowing for fantasy 'stretching' of shapes.
    Baby Gusty? Gusty was an adult previously, I swear. I think pony ages are randomly changing between episodes.
     
    Volcano of Gloom, or the Black Mountains, I wonder
     
    The Lost City of Tambelon! In a dream.
     
    Realm of Darkness, 500 years between appearances. The ruler, Grogar, tried to conquer Ponyland the last time out. Which means that the ponies have been in the area for at least 500 years. Since it was the
    witches' grandparents that saw the ponies arrive... witches live a long time it seems.
     
    Winking out really is a phasing power. Because Tambelon is out-of-phase as well in this Realm of Darkness, the unicorns are getting caught up in it as the entire city is passing *through* their 'winking' space.
    Goblin-like creatures called Troggles, and a donkey in jester's suit? Named Bray. Definitely a donkey this one, and about the same size as the horses from Grayville. Those may still have been donkeys, but I doubt it.
     
    I wonder if the Troggles are any relation to the Grundles?
     
    Grogar is some form of ram and has access to magic.
     
    Cool effect with the stormcloud transforming into Tambelon.
     
    Lightning lances, that cause cages to appear.
     
    Again reference to Dream Valley being part of Ponyland.
     

    Part 2
     
    Need more slaves with hands, and Grogar knows about humans.
     
    All other Grundles captured? There was only one other I thought. The female one. Unless they've been breeding...
     
    That's not 'one', that's 'two'. Unless Megan doesn't count...
     
    Magic bell just sitting around, unguarded.
     
    Ponies need to learn patience.
     
    Grogar's magic is a bit more substantial than the lightning lances.
     

    Part 3
     
    Proto-Pinkie Surprise is actually only slightly like Pinkie. Pinkie is crazier.
     
    The Troggle tents are very early medieval campaign tents. I have to give kudos to the artists for bothering to look at reference material. They didn't have to.
     
    For all his magical power, Grogar is a bit of a nit and proud of his physicality.
     
    Intresting that songs in the whole series seem to default to long-term ideas. "Some day we'll escape", "Once, long ago there were Unicorns here", etc.
     
    Troggle deserter?
     
    Spike actually has a proper flamethrower. This is the first time he's used it.
     
    Twice even.
     
    Grogar really is a villain for villain's sake, along the same lines as Tirek and Squirk.
     

    Part 4
     
    Grogar is also far more successful than previous villains.
     
    That... should not have worked. But okay, cartoon physics.
     
    Grogar's got that swagger.
     
    That pony is a D&D bard, and made her 'Bardic Knowledge Check'. Randomly remembering stories that they didn't know prior.
     
    Okay, Grogar's little bell was a repeater for the real magic bell.
     
    So.... what are they doing with all the Troggles they just rescued? The version of the episode I'm watching just cut off and went to credits in the middle of a sentence.
  6. Fhaolan
    My Little Pony 'n Friends: Sweet Stuff and the Treasure Hunt (G1 TV Episode, 1986, 10 minutes)
     
    Another short one episode story. The pattern seems to be that they do an adventure-type for the four-parter, then a single slice-of-life episode.
     
    This episode also marks the half-way point of the first Season of this series. That's a lot of episodes, even though they're only 10 minutes long.
     

     
    Starting off with the bushwoolies this time.
     
    More talking animals. Squirrel this time.
     
    Okay, instead of teleportation, they're gone completely out of existance. Odd.
     
    It's called Winking, and you don't have to Wink back right away. You can actually stay phased out of existance as long as you want.
     
    Seaponies. Using life preservers? Why?
     
    Megan's back. Does she ever change clothes?
     
    Bushwoolies are daft.
     
    Bushwoolies are *really* daft.
  7. Fhaolan
    My Little Pony 'n Friends: Pony Puppy (G1 TV Episode, 1986, 10 minutes)
     
    One of those ponies is really dressed up, where none of the others is wearing much. Wonder why?
     
    Yikes! One giant dog.
     
    Just ponies in this one, no Megan so far.
     
    There's no way a dog could live very long on cupcakes and icecream cones. They're primarily carnivores and need meat protien. While they can go for quite some time on fruits and vegetables, they can't survive completely on them the way bears can.
     
    Nice doghouse. Very timberframe Tudor.
     
    More large dogs. There must be a full pack running around out there. There must be a serious food source out there in the wild for them.
     
    Gotta pause and give my own puppy a cuddle. I'll be back.
  8. Fhaolan
    My Little Pony 'n Friends: The Glass Princess (G1 TV Episodes, 1986, 4x 10 minutes)
     
    Another four-parter.
     

    Part 1
     
    Pony Olympics. Hurdles, pole bending but with balloons.
     
    What are those? Dogbirds?
     
    They have some kind of telepathic/remote viewing with...
     
    Princess Porcina. Looking for magic material to repair her cloak that can turn things into glass?
     
    Not sure what the little fuzzy thing that is wandering around is.
     
    Dogbirds are serving Porcina because she promised to create a kingdom just for them.
     
    Paradise estates is looking rather reduced today.
     
    Weaving horse-hair is actually pretty tough. My wife spins, and horse-hair is one of the hardest to do.
     
    What the? Okay Porcina is poor-man's Miss Piggy.
     
    Why is the pink pony dressed up as Strawberry Shortcake? No, don't answer that, I don't want to know.
     
    Kidnapping. Ponies are prone to kidnapping.
     

    Part 2
     
    Bushwollies. Again.
     
    Raptorians. The dogbirds are called Raptorians.
     
    Ah, Black Mountains. This has been referenced before. The other side of the Black Mountains is the Grundleland that was destroyed by the Smooze.
     
    Bushwollies have a shedding season.
     
    You wash fiber *after* it's been sheared, not while it's still on the animal. Just as a note.
     
    Obviously gizmonkey-made pony-wash.
     
    Cute. The raptorians are *really* not taking this seriously at all.
     
    Ponyland. This is the first time the entire region has been named. Dream Valley, Paradise Estates, Flutter Valley, even the Black Mountains and the Volcano of Gloom are all in 'Ponyland'.
     

    Part 3
     
    Uh, okay. They grow their manes back that fast? This is probably referencing some toy that 'grows' hair back. I have vague memories of that kind of thing.
     
    That's not how spinning wheels work. At all. Or looms for that matter.
     
    Why do I have the feeling it's not that easy to fix a magic cloak?
     
    That's a magic mirror as well.
     
    Okay, it is that easy to fix a magic cloak.
     
    Porcina still needs a spellbook to do additional magic.
     

    Part 4
     
    There's a serious difference between the mane hair of a pony, and the shed hair of a bushwoolie. The staple length is completely different. *sigh*
     
    That was a fast spin/weave of a new cloak.
     
    Is that heel-face change because she's honestly changed her mind, or because the cloak magic changes the wearer's personality, like so many artifacts in mythology.
     
    Nope, she's got the cloak back again and she's still on the side of the angels now.
     
    Cloak destroyed.
     
    So Porcina goes to live with the bushwoolies.
  9. Fhaolan
    My Little Pony 'n Friends: The Great Rainbow Caper (G1 TV episode, 1986, 10 minutes)
    The first stand-alone TV episode. Not much else to say here.
     
    Summary: This Gizmonks want the Rainbow of Light. Megan and company have to trick the creatures into letting them all go.
     

     
    Here's the rainbow of light, doing weather work.
     
    Don't screw with artifacts, it's rarely a good idea.
     
    Buh? Who the heck has a closed-circut TV system in this setting?
     
    Monkeys. Gizmonks to be precise. So this is where Catrina and others were getting their gear.
     
    Gonk and Glouda the Great, ooookay.
     
    Lesser crested snigglebacker?
     
    Drudge, a very large talking gopher. The scale of creatures in this setting is all messed up in general. Sometimes these things are scaled the same as in the real-world, something they're way bigger, and there's no pattern.
     
    Gizmonks have force-field technology.
     
    Nope, it's actually just a huge glass dome. That makes more sense.
     
    Kids being kids, sometimes useful.
     
    Uh, a horse-tank. Interesting.
  10. Fhaolan
    My Little Pony 'n Friends: The Ghost of Paradise Estate (G1 TV episodes, 1986, 4x 10 minutes)
     
    From here on, the series My Little Pony n' Friends seems to follow a pattern a four-parter followed by a stand alone episode. This is the first four-parter.
     
    Summary: An evil creature seeks to destroy all of Ponyland, starting with Paradise Estate.
     

    Part 1
     
    Building a nursery again to replace the one by Dream Castle. Again, baby ponies/foals seem to be raised in a creche system.
     
    Ghost bothering the foals. Interesting that it's shown as a winged ghost.
     
    Ghost can shapeshift into other forms.
     
    Animation error, the bed is missing or the pillow is already floating in midair.
     
    Megan and Molly is here. What about the brother?
     
    Okay, Megan has seen witches, giant spiders, talking animals, unicorns, pegasi, flutterponies, various goblins and furry things, but draws the line at ghosts? Megan is an idiot.
     
    Okay, there's the brother. Do they live here now? What happened to their parents?
     
    Rube Goldberg device. I remember building these at his age. I still do, occasionally.
     
    Not sure what happened there with the 'not reflection'. It changed colours right at the end, which may have been an animation error.
     
    How big is the freaking place? It's like a TARDIS, bigger on the inside.
     

    Part 2
     
    I recognize that voice from Scoobie Doo cartoons.
     
    Who's chasing who here?
     
    Pluma, a Penneth. Shapeshifter that orginally lived in this area, but moved far, far away. Looks like a lyrebird of some kind.
     
    Squirk, the villain of the day.
     
    All the area was underwater a long, long time ago.
     
    Squirk is a cephelopod thing, with an artifact called a flashstone.
     
    Water drained, and the penneth arrived. War between penneth and Squirk. The leader of the penneth, Pluma's grandfather, got the flashstone away from Squirk, broke it in half. Threw one part away into the river, and the other half underneath the land Paradise Estate is on.
     
    Unicorns can't teleport through things.
     
    Telekenisis is useful, but no stronger than a pony's own physical strength.
     
    Why Pluma can't dig underneath other than vaporize the estate, I have no idea.
     

    Part 3
     
    Now she digs. *sigh*
     
    Half a flashstone actually produces exactly half the effect, in the most useless manner.
     
    Lobster with hair. Don't want to think about that.
     
    Dragons don't swim very well.... according to prior episoded neither do ponies.
     
    Ahhhh! Shoopie-do!
     
    Or is it Blooma rather than Pluma?
     
    Wow, scale issues. Crank is suddenly huge.
     
    Okay, maybe he *is* that big.
     
    Why didn't Squirk get the other half of the flashstone *first* if it was that easy?
     
    Flashstone is a *lot* like the alicorn amulet in G4. Pulling off a great flood here.
     

    Part 4
     
    I'm not sure I understand this bit at all. The two of them together can transform easier than either could separately?
     
    Really? It looks normal to me.
     
    Crank or Frank? I'm having trouble understanding the names with these strained 'kiddie' accents they're doing.
     
    This is a weird con-job.
     
    So what's stopping Squirk coming back?
     
    In Megan's hand, this flashstone seems to act like the Rainbow of light, with the same display. Actually, that brings up a point, where has the rainbow of light been since the movie?
     
    Flashstone destroyed? I doubt it, magic items are rarely that easily gotten rid of.
  11. Fhaolan
    My Little Pony: Escape from Catrina (G1 Animated Feature, 1985, 22 minutes)
     
    The second special film for My Little Pony, called 'Escape from Catrina', originally broadcast in 1985. This isn't done as a second pilot, as it does seem to rely on the viewer having seen the first feature to understand some of the context, and it's not really part of the TV series that's still to officially start in the next year. Again, these notes are from the original version, not the re-edited version that was used in the later series.
     
    Summary: The witch Catrina will do anything for power, including making the bushwollies into slaves to produce the witchweed potion that gives Catrina the ability to control the weather.
     
    Not much preamble on this one, so I'm going to go right into my notes:
     

     
    Dream Castle seems to have a house built next to it in Tudor style.
     
    Seaponies are now part of the pony society.
     
    They have latex for balloons. They are definitely not medieval-style bladders.
     
    Okay, this is getting to be a theme here. Ponies can't swim normally?
     
    This must be the villain of the episode's lair.
     
    Extensive technology here, very late Victorian/early Edwardian machines in that pseudo-Egyptian/Indian style that the British Empire was so very fond of.
     
    What the heck are these bushwolly things?
     
    Another lizard-man type, this one in standard Norman England garb. Named Red? No, Rep.
     
    Machine is creating a green goop. Pleasant.
     
    Queen Catrina. Definately a cat-woman, not a cat-girl.
     
    Bushwolly is an idiot.
     
    Green goop is a potion? 'Witchweed', apparantly.
     
    Tiny amount makes Catrina into Giganta. And a blowhard..
     
    Bushwolly is an idiot.
     
    Wait, what? Lizard guy is a shapeshifter?
     
    Skydancer looks like a Rainbow Dash relative, with the rainbow mane.
     
    Art style on humans, specifically Megan, has changed. Not for the better in my opinion. She looks like a china doll.
     
    Closer look at the house. Not tudor at all. It's supposed to resemble alphabet blocks as it's some kind of creche arrangement, called the 'Nursery'. The 'baby' ponies live there as a group, not with their parents. All the babies wear a necklace of bells. Interesting. Also, they already have cutie-marks. It's possible with this version ponies are born with cutie-marks. Maybe we'll get 'newborns' at some point to be able to confirm.
     
    Only four baby ponies in the entire pony settlement. That seems a poor ratio. Wait, hold on. Are any of these ponies male? Or are they all mares? (checking....) Yep they're all mares. There are no stallions in this place yet. (Supposedly they will show up later.)
    Preemptive bushwollies are idiots.
     
    Elevator lift? Catrina seems to have access to technology far beyond the rest of the setting.
     
    Catrina can control the weather with this potion, causing a winter storm. That's what the blowing was all about before. Okay.
     
    Ponies believe the rainbow of light can fix this.
     
    Lighting eyes. The potion seems to turn Catrina into a full-fledged storm goddess.
     
    Rainbow is sentient! Interesting.
     
    Da fuc? Okay, Rep and Catrina are dressed in 1880's clothing in a flash-back kinda thing. Plus a penny-farthing bicycle from the same period. So that's another reference to them being from a separate time-frame from the ponies.
     
    Rep's a bit of a schemer, he planned for Catrina to run out of potion thanks to this musical number.
     
    Rainbow waterfall...
     
    Mix of Edwardian-style clothing for the ponies, specifically called 'costumes'.
     
    Odd, I didn't think Rep would go through with this.
     
    Okay, apparently Rep simply has a line that he won't cross. Anything Catrina asks for *before* that line is fine.
     
    "I can be really good!" Oooookay. Still a catgirl, I guess.
     
    Rather elaborate interior to this castle, and the ponies (and former villains) play dress-up in a variety of costumes from different periods. Megan is dressed in a 1920's style children's outfit. Probably also a costume.
     
    Just like the last one, no indication on where Catrina and Rep (and the previous Scorpan) go after the episode. I wonder if any of them are going to be referenced in the TV series proper later?
  12. Fhaolan
    Originally I was going to do a couple of entries about how it is possible to pull worldbuilding ideas and information from the previous generations of My Little Pony, when I realized something.
     
    I don't really remember the previous generations well enough to do this.
     
    I remember the first TV movie with the dueling rainbows, but past that point it starts to get vague. If I'm going to tackle this topic competently, I'm going to need to... oh god.
     
    Weep for me, dear readers. For I am going to do something dangerous. I'm going to watch all of My Little Pony, from the beginning. All of it, including *shudder* Generation 3.5.
     
    Now, I'm not going to really review the episodes. Especially not in the 'angry nerd' presentation that is so popular right now. That's not the way I think. I am in no way qualified to judge the quality of the stories or characterizations, and I'm especially not qualified to judge how suitable the stories are for their intended audiences. What I'm going to do is watch with the eye of a hobbyist anthropologist and try to glean bits and pieces of information that will help inform worldbuilding within the *franchise* of My Little Pony, and pass those bits of information on to you. And using a bit of educated fiddlybits, maybe I can put together some examples of how that information can be used.
     
    To keep this blog clear for those who are actually following it just for my worldbuilding essays, I'm going to put my notes I take from watching the episodes in a separate blog, and only put the compilations of my findings in this one.
     
    I just counted them up. If I include doing Gen 4 shows, and count mini-episodes as individuals... we're talking 183 episodes in total.
     
    No time to waste, let's get started. Rescue at Midnight Castle
  13. Fhaolan
    This is new for my blog, but will likely show up again on a regular basis as I get farther along. I'm going to do a brief revisit on something I've already talked about before, as something sparked a bit for me recently.
     
    In a previous entry on the Elements of Harmony: http://mlpforums.com/blog/844/entry-4702-the-elements-of-harmony-the-basics/ I listed the various Elements using the names that Twilight read from a history/mythological book. Those names are what the Mane 6 have continued to use for the Elements. Except for Magic, which Twilight named by herself.
     
    In a video:
    , Digibrony talks about how it seems like Applejack and Rainbow Dash are actually reversed in some way, like they got each other's Element. Applejack displays far more Loyalty, and Rainbow Dash is in many ways Honest to a fault. 
    But then there was a comment on the video made by someone going by the screenname of TheRubberFury981 that Celestia actually referred to the traits exhibited by the ponies by different terms in the Magical Mystery Cure. Terms that were more fitting than the actual names. So I looked again at that.
     
    The terms Celestia used were Charity, Compassion, Devotion, Integrity, Optimism and Leadership. And overall, these do seem to be better traits than the ones currently used, although I disagree with one of them, and have reservations about another.
     
    Celestia, as a rule, doesn't seem to correct ponies much if they are 'wrong' as long as they continue to do the 'right' thing. Basically she doesn't care if labels are wrong, at most dropping hints and seeing if they're picked up out of curiosity. And if anyone would know what the Elements *really* are, it would be Celestia. So it doesn't surprise me that she would let the writer of the history/myth book get the traits wrong, and let Twilight perpetuate it, as it doesn't have any real effect on any of the pony's behaviors or actions.
     
    Also, it depends a lot on whether these were magical artifacts that were deliberately made by someone, or were they naturally and spontaneously generated. Mythologically, those that create magic artifacts use very specific and defined names for their creations that indicate exactly what their purpose is and what they do. Spontaneously generated artifacts, or ones that are found mysteriously with no prior history, on the other hand are named via best guess and can be far more amorphous and seemingly random in abilities, and may even be self-aware or 'alive' by certain standards. While the rest of this entry is based on the idea that the Elements are manufactured, and therefore need very well defined names, I have my doubts. The way the elements are used and react to stimuli doesn't speak of them being self-aware, but they are definitely a lot more flexible in abilities and subject to random occurrences than manufactured artifacts usually are. I wonder if Twilight's confidence in the Mane 6 always getting the results she is asking for is really warranted, or if that's really a front put up to reassure the rest of the gang and she's playing the odds every time they put them on.
     
    Anycase, moving on with the alternate traits for the Elements.
     
    Generosity is Charity, and the emphasis change is interesting. Charity is typically more specific than Generosity. Charity is being generous to those whom you have no obligation. Basically being generous to your family, your employees, etc. doesn't count as Charity because there is an obligation there. Being generous to a random passer-by or river serpent would be Charity. In this case, I prefer Generosity as a concept for the Element due to it being broader and more inclusive, and this therefore is the only one that I really disagree with.
     
    Kindness is Compassion. I like this change. Compassion is a far stronger word while meaning much the same thing, and more benefiting an Element. It's definitely a tonal shift, but like Generosity, Compassion is the broader and more inclusive term to me.
     
    Loyalty is Devotion. While the dictionary often has loyalty and devotion as being synonyms, in actual usage there's a big difference between them. Rainbow Dash is far more about Devotion than Loyalty. She is devoted to her friends, devoted to her dreams, devoted to herself even. It's very hard for her to give something up, because she feels so strongly about everything. But it's not really 'Loyalty', as she can turn on ponies, be dismissive of them, and other things that are effectively being disloyal. Devotion fits very well with her tomboy attitude, and in fact marks her as one of the most likely of the Mane 6 to have a romantic relationship. Not necessarily a *good* relationship, as her innate devotion will lead her to cling to a relationship despite anything that might be wrong with it.
     
    Honesty is Integrity. This fits Applejack so much better. She is the dependable one, the responsible one, the one that everyone turns to for help, the grounded one, the one that gets upset over personal failures but forgives others of theirs. This is Integrity. Although being honest is part of Integrity, it's a secondary trait. This makes Applejack the other one to whom a romantic relationship is well suited, but in this case a good relationship. Applejack is all about family, and won't be fooled (for long) by the fripperies and deception that modern media uses as shorthand for romance, concentrating on the good solid parts of a romantic relationship and serving as a good role model for kids.
     
    Laughter is Optimism. Again, a much stronger word with far more breadth, and far more fitting as an Element, and Pinkie Pie in general. Laughter is a great expression of optimism, but Optimism is far more than just being entertaining, it's finding the best parts of any situation and bringing them to the fore. Much more useful for Harmony.
     
    Magic is Leadership. I can't say I disagree with this one, because it does fit Twilight quite well. But I prefer 'Friendship' itself as much better trait for the central Element of Harmony. It fits the whole 'Friendship is Magic' trick title. But friendship isn't a very clear concept in and of itself, so until I can think of something better, I think I'm stuck with Leadership.
  14. Fhaolan
    Now we move on to ‘magic’ as used by unicorns.
     
    Pseudo-psionics: And the third, and least popular one in mythology is the one that is most often seen in modern fiction. Where the magician simply wills something to happen and it happens because he’s just that cool. There might be some waving of hands around, and some nonsense chanting just to set the mood, but it’s the effort of will that is important and it’s entirely possible to bypass the dressings leaving only the will behind. For those used to Dungeons and Dragons, that falls into this magic style. There’s some dressing added to make it superficially resemble the second style, but it’s just dressing. Especially in later editions of the game where the dressing is easily bypassed via feats or something similar.
     
    That’s not to say this *doesn’t* show up in mythology anywhere. It’s a staple in more Eastern mythologies where willpower, correctly focused, can do wondrous things. Usually however, these wondrous things are highly internalized, allowing the practitioner to perform physical feats far beyond mortal understanding, or affect the spirit world in some way (crossing over with the first style.)
     
    MLP:FiM gives the impression of following the third style the most, which makes sense given it’s influences. Magic can do anything at will. Nominally only Unicorns can perform this kind of magic, using their horn as a focus. But because it's the same focus for all spells, it's not truly Symbolic of anything. And the caster has to learn ‘spells’. But once learned, the caster can spam that spell as desired as long as they have the willpower to do so, with no reliance on symbolic tools or external powers. Willpower here being a consumable resource. However, pegasi have very specialized magic with their ability to walk on and manipulate clouds as if they were solid objects, and earth ponies appear to have the ability to manipulate the growth of plants and animals in a preternatural way. None of this via manipulating external spirits or using symbolism directly.
     
    Which throws Twilight’s lab in a weird light. She (and presumably other unicorns) seem to approach magic the same way as Alchemists did, using advanced symbology and similar techniques to break magic down into consumable chunks, and building up magic repertoires from that knowledge. But when it actually comes to casting spells, it all comes out as pseudo-psionics. Which again, is very D&D, from 1st edition Advanced Dungeons & Dragons onwards when spell research was introduced.
     
    FYI: Here's where my title for this topic comes into play. Magik is a pretentious alternate spelling for magic, used to differentiate between stage/performance magic and 'real' magic. It goes further than that: Depending on who you're talking to, any one of these three styles could be Magik while the others are just fake magic. The even more pretentious Magick is used by several religions to refer to their own practices to mark them as being 'even more real' than any of the other religions that espouse Magik as a real thing. I'm waiting for a Majhick, or Magichk to be introduced as the next step up. Any moment now.
     
    As I mentioned in my blog post about Dungeons and Dragons, limitless magic can cause problems with worldbuilding, but more obviously affects drama potential. If Twilight can simply cast a spell and get rid of any problem, then the writers have to put more and more effort into invalidating Twilight. Having her not be around, or be oblivious to the problem, or put some magibabble (the equivalent to Star Trek technobabble) in place so that she *can’t* just poof the problem away. If becoming an alicorn increases her effective power, the writers have given themselves an increase in this specific problem along with it.
     
    Watching the episodes back to back shows that Twilight’s effective power is highly variable depending on the exact writer involved. I believe this indicates different levels of awareness of this problem with the individual writer. More experienced writers, or those who have done longer-term projects before, are likely aware of this problem and work to keep Twilight’s abilities within a reasonable boundary. Less experienced writers, or those who in the past concentrated on one-shots rather than continuing series, are the most likely to use ‘limit breaks’ and boost Twilight’s abilities in some way, forgetting that they then will need to allow for these increased limits later as Twilight will have no reason to not use that tool/technique to break past that limit. I know that the writers of MLP do care somewhat for consistency and character growth, according to various interviews, so when they do fall prey to this kind of thing it is accidental and not deliberately ignoring long-term effects. It's very much the BMX Bandit and Angel Summoner issue:
     
    Rarity is a problem here as well. She has occasionally demonstrated power beyond that of the average unicorn (I hope), to levels that even oblivious and naïve Twilight should have noticed by now. She can manipulate several hundred objects simultaneously via telekinesis during a musical number, many of which were of significant weight. She can manipulate the weather directly to produce *patterns* of cloud formations, something that only pegasi are supposed to be able to do. She may be limited by the types of spells she can cast, but the power behind that telekinesis is astonishing. Again, I hope this is unusual for unicorns, because if it isn’t it invalidates a lot of the struggle the ponies go through on a daily basis. It does make the various fanfictions that depict a slightly older Sweetie Bell becoming a prodigy, Twilight’s student and perhaps successor to the Element of Magic far more reasonable. If, of course, she has inherited the same potential that Rarity is currently displaying.
     
    How to fix this as a writer? Well, simply being aware of it helps a lot. Magic has to be limited, otherwise it consumes the plot and becomes the only real answer to any problem, to the point that it trivializes any obstacle. This third style of magic is prone to this problem above the other two, because it doesn't have a built-in limiter. You don't have to convince an external power to do these things, and you aren't limited by your tools. So as a writer you have to deliberately restrict yourself and restrict the magic of your characters. Most importantly, keep your limitations consistent. Arbitrary limitations are fine, as long as they're *always* applied, and avoid putting work-arounds in your writing, because once you let that genie out the bottle, it ain't going back in. Once a work-around is applied, there's no reason why the character won't use that work-around repeatedly.
  15. Fhaolan
    [Note: I just noticed the formatting went weird on this one again. I'm trying to fix that. If this shows up as a new entry. Sorry.]
     
    There are lots of strange modern thoughts about what magic is, and what it can do. Historically (well, mythologically), there are three 'styles' of magic. Don’t fall into the trap of thinking this is all past and gone, a lot of this stuff is still in a lot of modern attitudes and habits. It’s just people don’t think of it as ‘magic’ anymore. Also, I’m drastically simplifying for purposes of discussion so a lot of nuance is going to be lost.
     
    Animism: This style is the most popular magic system mythologically. It’s based on the idea that everything has a spirit or soul, plus there are many ‘free roaming’ spirits for one reason or another. These spirits are unfettered by mortal limits, and can be cajoled or coerced into performing magical feats for someone with the right knowledge. Jinn, Loa, Daemons, Elves, Weirds, Dryads, Familiars, etc. Each culture has different names or different methodologies of dealing with these creatures.
     
    This style is also one of the most powerful historically, as the creatures being used can really be limitless. The Persian tale of Ala ad-Din and the genies of the lamp and ring (yes, Persian, not Arabic, and yes, genies, there are two of them in the story. In the original tale Aladdin is actually Muslim Chinese which places him somewhere in Turkestan, probably near modern Xinjiang.) exemplifies this type of magic.
     
    In the MLP:FiM world, Windigoes and Discord fall into this style as powerful spirits that can be manipulated with the right knowledge and skills. There’s really not much else though, unless you also include Parasprites and a variety of creatures introduced in various fanfictions. I myself have an crystal-equivalent to the Windigoes called Geenomes (modifying the earth spirit Gnome with a horse-pun Gee, and implying a connection to genetic modifications for purposes of the story) that I have not developed enough to publish to FIMFiction.
     
    Symbolism: This is the second most popular style, while also being the largest as it contains many different systems that all follow a theme. This involves using tools to produce effects, based on the tool’s symbolic meanings. The biggest within this style is Sympathetic Magic. The idea being that things can be used to represent other things and whatever you do to the representation will be reflected to a greater or lesser extent on the original. For example, with the right knowledge you can give yourself the eyesight of an eagle if you adorn yourself with enough eagle feathers. Sympathetic Magic also means that an object that used to be part of you, or even one you use regularly has ‘sympathy’ to you, and can be used to represent you. If someone gets ahold of that object they may be able to do things to you. The lock of hair in a voodoo doll, fingernail clippings in various witchcraft rituals, etc. In more modern times, the former instrument of a famous musician can be believed to grant increased skill in using it, especially if the instrument was being used during some important concert.
     
    Also within this style are the various runic and ritual systems, where the runes/diagrams/foci/whatever can represent different actions or channel mystic forces, providing you use the correct foci for the correct end effects. Magic wands, tarot cards, mystic rings, etc. Without the focus, the magician cannot bring whatever power they might have to bear, and the foci by necessity changes based on what exactly you’re intending to do. A holy symbol repels unholy spirits, a crystal ball can see into the future, etc.
     
    Alchemy also falls into this style very strongly. Classic Alchemy is all about removing impurities from substances, with the end goal of removing impurities from the Alchemist himself rendering him effectively immortal. If you could produce absolutely pure water, absolutely pure earth, absolutely pure fire, and absolutely pure air, you should then be able to produce absolutely pure spirit. The gold thing was a side path on producing pure earth. As a note, Aquis Regis (Royal Water) is a real thing, and was considered 'pure water' by Alchemists; a combination of Hydrochloric Acid and Sulfuric Acid.
     
    The one I really like in this set is shadow magic. Nailing a person’s shadow to the ground with a silver dagger or similar implement can pin a person in place, or allow you to cut their shadow off completely rendering them soulless and more easily controlled by you (Hey Peter Pan, nice to run into you here). The shadow represents the person, as it were. Along the same lines is a venomous snake biting the footprint can poison the person who made that footprint.
     
    In any case, this style has a very ‘cause and effect’ process. You do very specific things, very specific effects occur. Vary those things in any way, and the effect may not occur or go horribly, horribly wrong. Modern athletes fall prey to this style of magic, performing rituals that will help them ‘win’. Lucky underwear, tapping the foot with the bat precisely seven times, etc.
     
    In the world of MLP:FiM, this is pretty much Zecora and her stuff. She demonstrates herbalism and alchemy. Plus the love poison produced by the CMC. This doesn’t require any specific magic ‘ability’ in the caster, just the knowledge of the right symbols being applied at the right time in the right way. Anyone can do this kind of magic with the correct knowledge, or lack of knowledge in the case of the CMC. Oh, and Granny Smith’s cultivation of the Zap Apples. Specific actions driving specific events, even if Granny isn’t fully aware of the exact symbolism involved. She doesn’t *need* to know, as long as the trial-and-error process produces results.
     
    Next time: Unicorn magic!
  16. Fhaolan
    Just as a reminder, I'm treating everything as if it's a real-life culture and that it's not just random whim by the writers. Even though I know it's really random whim as many of the names are lifted from previous generations based on an 'approved' list the writers received from Hasbro's legal team, and the previous generation names were very much driven by whim.
     
    Okay, so I believe there is a strong tradition for families to use naming themes. But when two ponies marry, unless they accidentally have names that fit the theme, one or both of them will want to change names. For example, either Carrot Cake or Cup Cake likely changed their name to the Cake theme, unless... no, let's not go there. That's just being needlessly horrible.
     
    Now here’s the interesting thing. When Shining Armor and Princess Mi Amore Cadenza were married, neither changed their names in any way. So while this changing of names, while traditional, is not a cultural requirement even for such a high-profile marriage as that.
     
    Add in all the ponies mentioned in show that have suspiciously accurate names relative to their skills and cutie-mark, and you get the impression that either their names have directed their development to the point that it almost dictates their cutie-mark, or the ponies are treating names like some older cultures in real life did.
     
    In some cultures, for example the Celtic tribes and related peoples, the name of a person can change throughout their life. Not just the family name/special identifier, but all of their name. Mainly because the name people know them by is not their ‘real’ name, but a nickname that can be changed at any time. The person’s real name is known only to themselves and a very select few, to protect them. For knowing someone’s true name gives you mystical power over them. Because the name they are known by is a nickname, they're not like modern names where the parents just liked the way the name sounds or have some vague meaning lifted from a baby name book. No, instead these name have very direct meanings. In many cases they're really words in the current language of the people. So pony names of 'Twilight Sparkle' and the like wouldn't be unusual in such cultures.
     
    J.R.R. Tolkien, being primarily a linguist and a folklorist knew all about this, which is one of the reasons I found the Silmarillion one of the hardest books to read. Character names changed throughout the book, with little to no notice, which confused me considerably when I tried to read it when I was a kid. Now, some of that was likely due to the narrative being assembled after Tolkien had passed away by his son, but still it occurred.
     
    So it seems that ponies are using a similar system to the Celtic one. Whenever a pony undergoes a life-changing event or hits a significant milestone, such as gaining their cutie-mark, getting married, having children, and so on, they may decide to change their names to reflect their new situation. They don’t have to, but they can if they wish, and many seem to have wished.
     
    This kind of naming freedom in a culture that also fosters a strong clan system is indicative of evolving from a relatively low-population and highly mobile culture. Likely one that was originally nomadic and has retained a some of the trappings of that lifestyle. Which makes the Hearth's Warming Eve story interesting as it might in fact be an interpretation of a nomadic period long enough ago to now be shrouded in myth and legend. For that matter, it wouldn't surprise me to find that many ponies in Equestria, especially Earth Ponies, follow a similar tradition to the Travellers (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Irish_Traveller); a force of itinerant workers moving from place to place as the seasons demand and being a remnant of the original pony culture.
     
    Granny Smith likely changed her name when Big Mac was born, to retain the Apple theme while reflecting her new status as a Grandmother which she is very, very proud of. Unless of course there were other grandchildren before Big Mac. Not to say that Applejack has more siblings that aren't around, but with Babs Seed being an Apple cousin, that means one of her parents is very possibly a child of Granny.
     
    At least one of the Cakes will have changed their name as well. It could fit both of them, but I personally like the idea of Carrot Cake being originally named Romeo (It’s a specific type of carrot that looks more like a radish. I just think it’s amusing for the tall, thin Carrot Cake being named after a small, round carrot. The other meanings to the name Romeo is just a bonus.), and being Golden Harvet/Carrot Top’s older brother or something.
     
    One thing this idea addresses is the various characters that seem to have multiple names. The aforementioned Golden Harvest/Carrot Top could very well have been born with one name, and taken on the other later after a significant event. Also Ditzy Doo/Derpy Hooves, Moondancer/Twinkleshine, Daisy/Flower Wishes, so on and so forth.
     
    It is unlikely that ponies follow this system to the same extreme as the Celtic peoples, with a secret 'true' name. Mainly because that belief is tied very strongly into the Celtic mythological magic systems which at a cursory glance is quite different from the magic system apparently being used by the ponies.
     
    What might throw you off though is the occasional pony name that isn't just an assembly of regular words at first glance. Trixie and Donut Joe are the two that come to mind. Gilda and Gustave, being griffons, are from another culture so we can disregard them for purposes of this discussion.
     
    Donut Joe is easily explained as a translation glitch between Equestia and us. Joe being an old military slang term for coffee, and given his career running a donut store the local equivalent of coffee is going to be involved there. Given it was military slang at that, it wouldn't surprise me to find out the Joe is a former Guard (police), who has retired to running a donut shop. Just a bit of amusement there.
     
    Trixie's a bit easier. It's a misspelling. The actual word is 'Tricksy' which for those who don't know is an actual English word dating back from before Shakespeare, meaning overly elaborate and prankish. A perfect word for a stage magician.
     
    Mi Amore Cadanza and Fluer de Lis are interesting as while they are just normal words as well, they are not in English. Which, which when added to the Cutie Pox's 'She's speaking in Fancy!' gives the impression of Italian and French equivalents *somewhere* in the world. And yet not on the official Equestria map. But I dealt with the inconsistencies there in a previous blog entry. Just add this to that.
  17. Fhaolan
    I’m away selling stuff at the Washington Midsummer Renaissance Faire for the next several weeks, so these are going to be shorter and less well-thought-out than normal for awhile. If they happen at all.
    This one is about something that everyone has already noticed, but I feel the need to talk about it for some reason.
    Family names are a relatively recent invention, historically. In Europe family names came into use in the 13th century or so, but didn’t filter down to the peasantry until around the 17th century. Like many things, the Oriental regions adopted the idea long before that, probably due to larger populations in this case.
     
    Names in general are just used to identify individuals. As long as there’s only one Morag around, there’s no need to add anything. But if there are more than one Morag, you need to add qualifiers. Such as location: Morag from the Dell, or Morag o’ Dell. Career: Morag the Smith, or Morag Smith. And of course, who their parent is: Morag daughter of Fergus, or Morag Ni Fergus. If an ancestor is famous, craft secrets are passed down, or being 'from' a place is important, then the qualifier may be passed down as well, and eventually becomes the family name.
     
    But really, the idea of family names comes into play when an individual is trying to either gain something from being associated to a family group, or the society is wanting to hold the family group responsible for things the individual does. Which only really occurs when the society has a large enough population that individuals don't automatically know each other.
    Every culture deals with family names, and given names, differently. Some have a relatively simple descriptor that gets passed down, some actually assemble their family name from parts of their ancestor's names, ancestral hometowns, and other bits and pieces. Which is how you end up with the German surname of: Wolfeschlegelsteinhausenbergerdorffvoralternwarengewissenhaftschaferswesenchafewarenwholgepflegeundsorgfaltigkeitbeschutzenvonangereifenduchihrraubgiriigfeindewelchevorralternzwolftausendjahresvorandieerscheinenbanderersteerdeemmeshedrraumschiffgebrauchlichtalsseinursprungvonkraftgestartseinlangefahrthinzwischensternartigraumaufdersuchenachdiesternwelshegehabtbewohnbarplanetenkreisedrehensichundwohinderneurassevanverstandigmenshlichkeittkonntevortpflanzenundsicherfreunanlebenslamdlichfreudeundruhemitnichteinfurchtvorangreifenvonandererintlligentgeschopfsvonhinzwischensternartigraum
     
    I'm not kidding, that's supposedly an actual German surname. As far as I can tell only one person in modern history wrote it all out on their passport, everyone after that shortened it down to the much more manageable Wolfe.
     
    In any case, Equestrian ponies have an interesting relationship with family names, in that it’s not necessarily a ‘name’ that is common amongst all members of the family, but they seem to follow Themes instead.
     
    Take the Apples: Applejack, Apple Bloom, Big Macintosh, and Granny Smith. We can even add more in, if necessary: Braeburn, Apple Fritter. Red Gala, Apple Tart, Golden Delicious, so on and so forth. All the names have something to do with the Apple theme, but actual word Apple doesn’t necessarily show up. Interestingly, their names assume that everyone hearing them will know that these are Apples, even with the apple variety names that many may not be familiar with.
     
    Now let’s look at Twilight Sparkle and Shining Armor. We don’t have the names of anyone else in Twilight’s family stated explicitly in the show, although a blind bag toy called Twilight Velvet that has the same color scheme as Twilight Sparkle’s mother, so we can assume that’s correct. Her father resembles a G1 pony called Night Light, but that’s even more speculative. The theme here seems to be Light, and Twilight herself has that doubled up with both Twilight and Sparkle, both of which would count.
     
    Rarity and Sweetie Bell have even less to do with each other, name-wise. And we have to reach really far into non-show materials to try to find names for their parents. Their mother resembles several ponies in G1 to G3 but none of them are a true match, and their father is named ‘Magnum’ in the Gameloft game. None of this really helps, unfortunately. We’ll just have to assume that a theme is present, and we just don’t have enough of a sample to pick out the pattern.
     
    And the final family group that we have names for are the Cakes: Carrot Cake, Cup Cake, Pound Cake and Pumpkin Cake. It’s pretty obvious there that they’ve taken the Theme to the next level and turned it into an actual family name as we would understand it.
  18. Fhaolan
    A thousand years.
     
    This is tossed out a lot in the show as a ‘really long time’ metric. Nightmare Moon was imprisoned for a thousand years. Discord ruled a thousand years ago. The Crystal Empire disappeared a thousand years ago.
     
    Even if that is meant as a figurative or approximate number, in human terms thousand years is a *really* long period of time. Think on how much has changed in the last thousand years. It’s currently 2013, so we’re looking at 1013 as our starting point. The beginning of the High Middle Ages, where civilizations around the world were peaking yet again.
     
    In Central America, the Toltec and the Mixtec civilizations are at their height. In Europe, the Byzantine Empire is taking a serious downturn, but former barbarians like the Normans are absorbing the civilizations that had come before, and are dominating most of Europe. In India and the Far East, we’re dealing with the Chalukya Empire and the Song Dynasty respectively.
     
    They’ve just invented movable type in China. Various Greek and Roman inventions, medicines, and architectural techniques are being rediscovered by Norman Europe. It’s still a hundred years before windmills are invented, but improved agricultural systems are given the impetus to come up with similar solutions to deal with a serious increase in food production.
     
    Map this back to Equestria. ‘Modern’ dress for ponies recall Edwardian outfits, especially in the ‘Sweet and Elite’ and Appleloosa episodes. The plough used by the Apples is a cartoony version of the “Scott’s Plough” which fits the time period as well, as well as the mechanical parade floats used in One Bad Apple. So we’re dealing with equivalent to 1900-1915, using us as a yardstick. The pioneer outfits worn by Granny Smith’s family in flashbacks fit this, being at worst a hundred years earlier. So this gives us a good fixed point for the current time.
     
    The traditional outfits for the Crystal Ponies recall Byzantine costumes. This all makes sense, relatively speaking, for a thousand years having passed since they were in the world. The military gear worn by Rainbow Dash and Fluttershy for the jousting scenes are reasonable as Greek Revival, but jousting as a sport (which is technically called tilting) was a relatively recent development from around the 16th-17th centuries. Add this in to Hearth’s Warming Eve, and there's a bit of a strange pattern there. The peasant outfits are discountable, as that style existed over a wide spread of time, but the noble-type outfits recall the 13th-14th century. Sure, this could predate the Crystal Ponies of the time of their disappearance, but that means the cultural development over the last thousand pony years is more like 200-300 human years at best.
     
    And then you have Cherilee’s 80’s outfits, and Vinyl Scratch’s 1950’s turntables. (Yes, this surprises a lot of people, but using a dual turntable setup and mixing station was experimented with in 1930’s and showed up more strongly with ‘scratching’ in the 50’s, long before hip-hop became its own genre twenty years later.) Twilight’s lab also resembles the equipment common in 1950’s laboratories. This throws off our starting point by 50 years, which to a human is a significant length of time.
     
    If we ignoring technology and fashion development as nitpicking, we move on again to actual cultural change.
     
    The most important barometer of cultural change, in my opinion, is language. Using English as the yardstick, because it’s my own native language: the best example of true Old English from a thousand years ago is the poem Beowulf. Here’s a snippet and a rough translation. Remember that both versions here are *English*, just English divided by a thousand years of linguistic drift. (I wanted to put this in a table so you could compare line to line, but I apparently those BB codes aren't implemented in this system.)
     
    Hwæt! Wē Gār-Dena in geār-dagum
    þēod-cyninga þrym gefrūnon
    hū ðā æþelingas ellen fremedon
    Oft Scyld Scēfing sceaþena þrēatum
    monegum mægþum meodo-setla oftēah
    egsian Eorl syððan ǣrest weorþan
     
    Listen! We of the Spear-Danes in the days of yore
    of those clan-kings heard of their glory
    how those nobles performed courageous deeds
    Often Scyld, Scef’s son, from enemy hosts
    from many peoples seized mead-benches
    and terrorized the fearsome Eorl after first he was
     
    If a modern English speaker hears Old English, they can likely pick out a few words (“Oft” becomes “Often”, “We” is pretty much unchanged), and puzzle their way through a couple more (“Hwæt!” becomes “Wait!” becomes “Listen!”), but that’s about it. Relative to this, Luna shouldn’t be speaking in a vaguely Shakespearian English. She should be almost unintelligible. Not just because she’d pronounce words differently and use a different word order, but the word meanings themselves will have shifted as well. I understand that doing this would make the story more difficult, but there are ways around it. Have Nightmare Moon speak Old English at first, and have a brief segment where she uses her dark magic to ‘learn’ modern speech when she realizes that nobody understands her. Her not getting it quite right ending up with Luna’s trademark Late Elizabethan English.
     
    But worse than Luna, the Crystal Ponies were ‘disappeared’ before Nightmare Moon was imprisoned. Yet they don’t even have Luna’s speech pattern; they are completely modern right from the get-go.
     

     
    Add this all together, and the conclusion is difficult to avoid. Pick *any* thousand year time span that we have records for, and you’ll find that the cultural, technological, and linguistic changes in that time are pretty huge.
     
    Yet, in MLP… not so much, and what little occurs is inconsistently even within its own framework. Pony culture is effectively stagnant for over a thousand years. To us Celestia imprisoned Nightmare Moon at the same time as William the Conqueror led the Norman invasion of England. To the ponies, it was more like when Shakespeare took the stage for the first time. Cultural change in Equestria is hideously slow.
     
    Which reduces historical worldbuilding by an equivalent amount. The timespan between ‘eras’ is so short relative to our models that we can’t really build up past civilizations, because there’s no time for them to have existed. Their cultures won’t be significantly different from current Equestria, because nothing really changes. Stuff is just too static in MLP:FiM, which means that to do any worldbuilding, to improve this setting, we again have to choose which parts of the canon we need to ignore.
     
    Here are the parts that make sense to me: Granny Smith was using 100 moons as an idiom meaning ‘a long time’, while the various time spans in Equestria Girls are to be ignored. Twilight must have meant Earth Ponies in general, and not Ponyville in specific when referring to how long they’ve been doing this version of the Winter Wrap Up ceremony/ritual without magic. Language and culture in Equestria is exceptionally stable due to Celestia’s presence during this time, so 1000 years in Equestria is equivalent to about 300 human years of cultural change.
     

     
    I've just checked my list of topics for this blog, and realized that I haven't really dented my original list. Mainly because the list has in it all the topics that *could* be worked into fanfiction if I was a better fiction writer, and I've been dealing with more general systemic stuff. Is there anything anyone would like me to talk about, or go into further detail on? Should I be using images more for illustrative purposes, like I did with the morphed maps? Anything? Anyone?
  19. Fhaolan
    We know only a limited amount about alicorns, despite how important they seem to be in show. I honestly thought this would be a single entry, because of how little I thought there was. But when I wrote it all out, I was amazed at how much there actually is.
     
    Just for completeness, what do we know from non-show sources about alicorns:
     
    First off; Alicorn and Unicorn are technically the same name, but have moved into English through different paths. Unicorn comes to English from old French (unicorne), which got it from Latin (unicornus), which is from the old Indo-European roots of oi-no-kernu. Alicorn is the same root, but filtered through the Moors instead of the Franks, shifting the oi-no pronunciation in a different direction. Ali instead of Uni, which isn’t that big of a shift linguistically. English itself has undergone similar pronunciation shifts, even after the invention of the printing press which slowed down such changes. For example, the reason why knife is spelt with a silent k is because when the spelling was set the k wasn’t silent, it was actually pronounced.
     
    Alchemists used a lot of stuff from the Moors and other more eastern cultures for their own philosophy, and developed their own creole-style 'secret' language based on it. They took the Alicorn word, and applied it to the mystical substance of the horn itself, rather than the entire creature; because that was the bit they were interested in.
     
    As for Winged Unicorns themselves, they have been in mythology since at least the Assyrians (really, really, long ago). But then the Assyrians stuck wings on pretty much anything they came across. It was a 'thing' with them. Winged unicorns, winged bulls, winged cats, winged dogs; I’m sure there’s an Assyrian winged ferret out there somewhere, just because. The Assyrian winged beasts were all symbols of protection from evil forces, used on seals, as guards, etc.
     
    The first known instance of Alicorn = Winged Unicorn showed up with Piers Anthony. Before that authors just spelled it out as winged unicorn, or less often a horned pegasis. If they bothered to call it anything more than 'unicorn' or 'pegasis' depending on whether the horn or wings were more important to the story at hand. After Piers, Alicorn became synonymous with Winged Unicorn.
     
    Not sure any of that helps, but it’s information. Let’s talk about in-show:
     
    There are five known alicorns, one of which may have been fictional even within the show itself. Celestia, Luna, Cadence, Twilight, and the unnamed princess who was affected by the love poison in the storybook within Hearts and Hooves day. I’ll start with the unnamed one, because she’s the one with the least information in show, but also points out some odd cultural idiosyncrasies.
     
    The problem with Princess (I’ll call her that for lack of a better name), is that she’s not really in the episode. The book was likely written long after that individual was gone, so what we have is what the author and illustrator thought was true. The author says that she was a Princess, and the illustrator drew her as an Alicorn. If the illustrator was going off of the authors description, then possibly he drew her as an Alicorn simply because the author said she was a Princess. We've already seen that Princess Celestia the Alicorn was around for so long, most of it as the only Alicorn, the idea of Princess = Alicorn may simply be ingrained in all the ponies of Equestria, even by the time that book was written. It could go the other way around as well; if the illustrations came first it’s possible the author saw those and assumed because she was an Alicorn that she was also a Princess. So it’s possible that she was an Alicorn *or* a Princess, or both, or even neither, depending on whether the author and the illustrator were going off of personal knowledge or just copying down a story they had been told.
     
    Interestingly, when under the influence of the love poison, it is stated that ‘A dragon came, a kingdom fell, and chaos reigned’. Which I have stated before sounds an awful lot like the rise of Discord. If so, this gives us a loose time frame for these events, in that it predates Celestia and Luna’s defeat of Discord. The kingdom mentioned may or may not be Equestria. If it is, then this Princess must have been the ruler of Equestria before Celestia and Luna. If not, then there are/were pony kingdoms *other* than Equestria out there. Possibly evidence that the Crystal Empire was much larger in the past, including more than one city?
     
    The Hearth’s Warming Eve panto doesn’t mention alicorns beyond the image of what appears to be Celestia and Luna in the ‘new’ Equestrian banner. (For those confused by the word ‘panto’, it is a English concept. It’s a type of play specifically for younger audiences where audience interaction is encouraged; booing the villain, cheering the hero, that kind of thing. Where I grew up they were usually put on during the holiday season.) However, because that was a play it’s also possible that they just used the current Equestrian banner, rather than going through the effort of trying to dig up the historical one from over a thousand years ago. Not entirely sure I buy that, because I can't see Twilight letting that slide unless the banners were sprung on her at the last minute, or she was convinced by somepony else that the audience would react better to a familiar image rather than a mysterious one they've never seen before. However, if we assume the banner was anachronistic, it’s likely there were no alicorns at the time of the founding of Equestria. So Celestia and Luna occurred *afterwards* and likely the mysterious Princess was as well.
  20. Fhaolan
    Right, we now have the Crystal Empire shattered into little bits, the Princesses running a small version of the Kingdom of Equestria, and King Sombra in control of the former capitol of the Empire.
     
    Over time, Celestia and Luna learned how to extend their influence, stabilizing some of the other former fiefdoms of the old Crystal Empire piece by piece. However, King Sombra was doing the exact same thing but from the other direction. Eventually the two groups would come into conflict, with Celestia and Luna moving against the Imperial Seat itself in an effort to remove the tyrant, and maybe even to get ahold of this magical artifact, the Crystal Heart, and add it to their growing collection (Elements of Harmony + a few other knickknacks). King Sombra, unable to compete with the pair of alicorns and the EoH, took his ball and went home rather than capitulate. Vanishing the capitol and its environs into some kind of limbo state to keep the Crystal Heart out of their hooves.
     
    As a note, this has happened before in the MLP franchise. Tambelon was a city in G1’s My Little Pony series that shifted in and out of the Shadow World, and many fans have linked that Shadow World to Tartaurus mentioned by Twilight in Lesson Zero. The idea of a city or town that only appears on a semi-regular basis due to a curse or magic is a fairly common trope in mythology and fable, with the most well-known examples being seen in the musical Brigadoon, and the much older story of Germelshausen, which in turn is based on even older myths.
     
    With the capitol gone and Sombra defeated, all the pony-controlled regions were swept up in the Equestria Reforms, possibly re-instating the Council of Princes with Celestia and Luna presiding over the assembly, all officially part of the new Kingdom of Equestria. The old Kingdom of Equestria possibly becoming the Duchy of Everfree, in reference to the Princesses defeating both Discord and Sombra and freeing all ponies from tyranny. As the Imperial Capitol was gone, the capital of the old Kingdom of Equestria transitioned into the capital of the new larger Kingdom. Likely centred on the Castle of the Royal Pony Sisters.
     
    The Empire no longer existed, so there was no need for an Emperor as such. Celestia and Luna, as Presiding Princesses of the Council would be considered de-facto Empresses-Elect if anyone bothered to care.
    Back to Blueblood; as an alternative to my earlier blog post it could be membership of this Council that gave Blueblood and Cadence their official titles of Prince and Princess. Again using the Holy Roman Empire as a model, there were two different types of 'Princes', ones with voting power on the Council as they actually controlled valuable land, and those with no voting power but were still considered members of the council with the right to debate as they were titled but did not hold anything of political value. In which case, Blueblood is a voting Prince as he is likely the actual Duke of Canterlot, while Cadance, prior to the return of the Crystal Empire, may have been a Princess in name only without a region of her own due to her adopted relationship to Celestia.
     

    Everything being idylic for possibly even a hundred years or more, eventually the Nightmare Moon incident occurred. This caused a resurgence of long-dormant Discord magic, rendering the entire original Kingdom of Equestria region uninhabitable and covered by the Everfree Forest. The Castle of the Royal Pony Sisters was abandoned, and the capitol moved yet again, this time to Canterlot which very likely at one point had been part of the Kingdom of Unicornia from whence Princess Platinum originated from before the founding of old Equestria as per the Hearth's Warming Eve episode, but as part of the Equestrian Reforms had been 'downgraded' into a Duchy, much like the Duchy of Everfree.
    The caverns beneath that castle are curious. It's possible that the Crystal Heart may have originated there, given up to the Crystal Emperor to use as part of his Imperial Regalia when the Duchy joined the Crystal Empire back in the day. Perhaps the other gem-based magic items seen in the show all come from those mines as well, each torn from the earth by greedy unicorns, shaped into artifacts of power, and scattered over the world by various adventurers, questers, and whatnot. Making the ancient unicorns the Equestrian equivalent of dwarves, svarts, and kobolds. (Not the D&D versions; the *mythological* ones.)
     

     
    With Celestia being the only known alicorn at that time, and likely due to several hundred years of habit, she retained her position of presiding over the council despite the loss of her own Principality.
     
    Now when the region vanished by Sombra re-appeared, it and the lands surrounding retained the name 'Crystal Empire' simply out of expedience as it was the last remnants of that old institution. When Sombra was defeated for a second time, Cadance took over the region as the 'Crystal Princess', and finally gained voting membership in the Council of Princes in her own right. This making the so-called Crystal Empire a vassal state of Equestria; a complete reversal of the original setup. Also making it perfectly valid for hosting the Equestria Games.
     
    If Cadance was the type to climb the greasy pole, she might be able to make the case of transitioning her 'Crystal Princess' title into 'the Empress' and claim the entirety of Equestria as the former Crystal Empire. But for some reason I can't see her really wanting to do that.
     
    Next week.... I honestly don't know. Maybe I'll do the Alicorn stuff, as I think I've only got enough for one post on that, rather than my current pattern of stretching each topic out to three posts. I know people *are* reading these, so any suggestions?
  21. Fhaolan
    As a note, I've had it mentioned to me in the past that I tend to over-emphasize European cultural and historical models, and not address ideas from other cultures. I agree this is a failing on my part, and my only excuse is that given the volume and depth of human history I had to specialize in some way. So delving into the culture and history of my own ancestors is where I've started. When someone refers me to good sources of info from other cultures, I do go through it, but European history is my comfort zone and my first fallback when doing this kind of speculation.
     

     
    Okay, now we have pretty much destroyed anything resembling a hierarchy of titles, let's go deeper into how this relates to the Crystal Empire and break what little remains. For this, let's use the odd situation that occurred once in history where Princes officially outranked an Emperor.
     
    Once upon a time, there was the Holy Roman Empire. Not the original Roman Empire (27 BC - 476 AD), or the Eastern Roman Empire (285 AD - 1453 AD, also called the Byzantine Empire), but a later version (926 AD - 1806 AD) that contained the areas now covered by modern-day German, Italy, the Czech Republic, and parts of France.
     
    The Holy Roman Empire was ruled by an Emperor, but to be Emperor you had to first be elected King of the Romans by a council of dukes, kings, margraves, archbishops, etc. who were collectively known as the Council of Princes. Once elected as King of the Romans (not just 'King', because there were several Kings in the Holy Roman Empire, but very specifically 'King of the Romans'), to get the final title of Emperor the Pope had to confirm the new title. Later that last detail was abandoned, and the rulers of the Holy Roman Empire were just Emperor-Elects, and eventually even the term 'Emperor' was lost with the rulers simply titled 'King'.
     
    However, despite being Emperor whoever managed to jump through all those hoops did not have complete control like you would expect with that title. The Emperor could be overruled at any time by the Council of Princes, simply by threatening to replace him as King of the Romans with another from their number. This is very similar to many modern governmental systems where the Prime Minister (or President) can be removed from power via a vote of non-confidence. The precise mechanism varies, but the idea is the same.
     
    Getting back to the Crystal Empire, the reaction of the crystal ponies to Cadence was interesting. Nobody paid much attention until she got ahold of the symbol of sovereignty, the Crystal Heart, and then suddenly they're all 'Crystal Princess' for her. Being an alicorn, supporting a barrier against Sombra, and even having the Crystal Heart as her cutie-mark, meant nothing. But once she got that artifact, it felt a lot like the King of the Romans getting the Pope's permission to be the Emperor.
     

     
    So here’s how it could have gone, using what I've discussed so far and pulling in what little we know about Equstrian history:
     
    Once, long, long ago, the Crystal Empire was composed of many subject kingdoms, dukedoms, etc. Including a much smaller Kingdom of Equestria than what exists at the moment. This small Kingdom occupying the area now covered by the Everfree Forest. Other sections of the Empire were the original countries that the various tribes came from before founding Equestria, plus several others, and the most northern region which contained the capital of the Crystal Empire itself.
     
    Then there was a minor incident with an alicorn princess and a supposed love potion.
     
    A dragon came, a kingdom fell, and Chaos reigned. (http://cupidite.tumblr.com/post/40034251127/neverending-story. I’m not saying I believe this specific event is connected to Queen Chrysalis, but I like the imagery in this tumbr post, so I'm borrowing it for illustrative purposes. All credit for the image goes to Cupidite, of course.)
     
    Meaning that Discord took the opportunity presented, and turned everything upside down... perhaps literally... In time Celestia and Luna, likely being somewhere around the age Twilight is now, went on a quest to assemble the Elements of Harmony (as detailed in my previous blog topic), and stoned Discord as soon as they could. The pair took over the Kingdom of Equestria, probably as the region they themselves originated, leaving the rest of the Crystal Empire in disarray. They were still relatively young and were yet to develop the political acumen necessary to stabilize the entire empire. It is entirely possible that they were briefly titled Queens of Equestria, but in an effort to recall the 'golden age' prior to Discord, those titles were superseded by the 'Princess' title from the Council of Princes that would normally have determined the next ruler of the Crystal Empire.
     
    If that council was still working in any way, or even existed in anything other than the Princesses' own hopeful imaginings.
     
    While the Crystal Empire did not technically exist anymore, as it was broken up into multiple smaller independent kingdoms, dukedoms, etc. there was still a northern region with the original capitol, and home to the Crystal Pony tribe. After Discord's fall, this was obviously taken over by the Warlord Sombra, who without a functional council of Princes declared himself King of Crystal, and claimed the Imperial Throne. Due to the lack of organization, nobody either supported or disputed this for quite some time.
  22. Fhaolan
    This time I get really deep into speculation. I’ve got nothing to really base any of this off of. It’s a precarious house of cards I’ve built, based on a rather whimsical theory. Next week I'll get back to more solid world-building ideas, but this is one of those 'get it out of my head' things while I'm on the Elements of Harmony topic.
     
    During the Friendship is Magic episode, it is shown that four stars did in fact aid in Nightmare Moon’s escape. What exactly were they?
     
    Let's connect this to another, probably unreleated, thing. Twilight's cutie-mark. The various stars represent Magic, according to Twilight. However, they just happen to map pretty well to her and her friends, and so to the Elements of Harmony. So if in the lexicon of cutie-mark symbology, Stars = Elements of Harmony... What if the stars that released Luna were more Elements? Ones corrupted by the Nightmare magic, or maybe the Nightmare magic sprung from their corruption. Thinking back that would mean that Celestia had five elements (Laughter, Kindness, Honesty, Loyalty, Generosity) and Nightmare Moon also had five: One ‘good’ element (Friendship/Magic), and four ‘corrupted’ elements (Something or other). Much more balanced. In order for this to conceptually work with what we’ve set up before, we’ve got five ‘harmony generating’ elements, four ‘support’ or ‘balance’ elements, and one ‘focus’ element.
     
    Which is why all Celestia could do is imprison Nightmare Moon, rather than cleanse her. Nightmare was protected by those four corrupted elements, and controlled the focus as well. Celestia only barely had the upper hand with five ‘clean’ ones. Unfortunately, using the elements against her own sister broke the bond with the elements themselves.
     
    When Twilight & Company came along, Nightmare Moon got hit with six full elements, instead of five. One of which was the focus element that Nightmare Moon herself used to wield. All her corruption got stripped off, and ‘dispersed’, along with the four ‘stars’ that aided her escape.
     
    The author of the book of Myths didn’t mention the corrupted four, because as far as the author was concerned they weren’t elements of harmony. Maybe they were found after the Discord battle, and were added to Luna’s armament. Maybe that’s why they got corrupted, because they were added later, rather than being part of the original set.
     
    Here are my ideas as to four possible ‘corruptible’ elements that are more support-focused than generating Harmony in and of themselves. There are probably others ideas, but these are the ones I’ve settled on.
     
    The element of Confidence. Having Confidence in yourself, and in others, is important as without Confidence no one will ever do anything. However, this is easily corrupted into Arrogance. Interestingly enough, we’ve seen a gem-based necklace artifact that matches this concept: The Alicorn Amulet.
     
    The element of Forgiveness. Known to bronies as ‘Tolerance’. Also important, for without Forgiveness, no one will ever get past mistakes. However, this is easily corrupted into Apathy. We’ve also seen an episode where a large number of ponies were acting extremely Apathetic. I wonder if the Crystal Empire re-appeared because the Element of Apathy fell into Smoke Sombra’s…. hooves? Cloud? Whatever.
     
    The element of Discretion. This is actually an important thing for maintaining Harmony. Yes, telling the truth is important, but knowing when to tell the truth and when to not say anything at all is important. However, this is easily corrupted into being Secretive. If I was a betting man, I’d say this was the Dark Rainbow from Gen 1’s Rescue at Midnight Castle.
     
    I don’t actually have a clear idea for the fourth one, as we’ve not seen anything resembling a fourth corruption of an Element, unless there is something in the comic series as I've not read those yet. (Should I?) If I was to separate up bad things about Nightmare Moon, I think one aspect of her personality was Zealotry. Which if it was a corrupted version of an element, I would name such an element ‘Faith’.
     
    Basically, with the corrupted elements stripped off of Nightmare Moon, they scattered all over Equestria and reformed into their ‘original’ artifacts, to be found in two cases by Trixie and Smoke Sombra. Which means that two others are still out there somewhere. The Gen 4 interpretation of the Dark Rainbow, and the element of Zealotry.
     
    Unless someone has any suggestions, next time I'll talk about the Crystal Empire, and the title of Princess.
  23. Fhaolan
    As with my previous topic, there comes a point where the show itself runs out of information and I have to go into speculation territory. However, there are other sources that are possibly relevant.
     
    Here’s something interesting: The power of the Elements displays as a big, powerful Rainbow. Where have we seen that? The Sonic Rainboom that triggered all of the Mane6’s cutie-marks? Yep. However, there’s something even earlier than that. As far back as Generation 1 My Little Pony: Rescue at Midnight Castle and the rest of the 1980’s series there was an artifact that had serious magical powers of harmony called the Rainbow of Light.
     
    What if the Rainbow of Light was one of the Elements of Harmony from before Celestia and Luna? Which one, I wonder? It’s likely Magic/Friendship, but for some reason it tickles me to think it was Loyalty, and that the Sonic Rainboom was actually Rainbow Dash’s first demonstration of her connection to her element.
     
    In which case Celestia and Luna didn’t create the Elements. They found them. Probably one at a time during some massive quest, and deliberately bonded to them, assembling them into set as a weapon against Discord.
     
    Six elements, two wielders. Okay, so they split them three and three. But which three? Especially when one behaves as a focus for the other five.
     
    Wouldn’t it be more reasonable to think that one would get the focus, and the other would get the five? Who would get the focus then? You’d think Celestia… but I wonder. Since Magic/Friendship wasn’t in the ruins, it had to be summoned. Maybe it was Luna’s, and the banishment of Luna sent it off into a limbo of its own, which it had to be summoned from.
     
    In which case Celestia was gambling a lot. She had to gamble that when Nightmare Moon showed up, that the five elements activating would drag the sixth out of limbo.
     

     
    There is another gemstone artifact that acts like a focus, just like the sixth Element. The Crystal Heart. Could this be the Element of Love? Perhaps Celestia and Luna, after the defeat of Discord, kept looking for more Elements, and their search brought them to the Crystal Empire.
     
    In which case, they didn’t attack King Sombra just because he enslaved the crystal ponies, but because he had in his possession another Element equal in power to the ones they already possessed, and refused to give it up. When they blasted him into smoke, his final curse didn’t just throw the Crystal Empire out of phase to imprison the crystal ponies, but more importantly put the Crystal Heart out of the alicorn’s reach.
     

     
    Oh yes, and another interesting bit from the G1 series: The villain of that first special had an artifact called the Dark Rainbow which gave the wielder secret knowledge that allowed him to transform pretty much anything living into anything else. Let's go into that in more detail next time.
  24. Fhaolan
    First, a point of order; I’ve had it suggested to me that I slow down the blog entries to one a week, rather than one a day. There was concern about burn-out, where my original intent was to just get this stuff out of my head so I can concentrate on other things. Thinking it over I checked my list of potential topics, and I've only got twelve big ones right now. So I understand their point, and I have decided to try one post a week with topics lasting two to three weeks each, and see how it goes.
     
    Okay, back to the Elements.
     
    As we all know, there are six Elements of Harmony: Laughter, Honestly, Loyalty, Kindness, Generosity, and Magic. At least the first five are what the author called them in that book of mythology Twilight found. The sixth being a mystery to that author.
     
    First off, just because it’s written in a book doesn’t make it true. (Twilight would kill me for saying that, but oh well.) It is very likely that is what the author believed was the truth. However, we have no reason to doubt the author here, given that those ‘elements’ mapped pretty well to their eventual bearers.
     
    The one that is off is Magic, since there is no classic name for it. So Twilight made an assumption: Her specialty is Magic therefore the element must be Magic too. After all, her cutie-mark represents Magic, doesn’t it?
     
    But does Applejack’s cutie-mark represent Honesty? Does Rainbow Dash’s cutie-mark represent Loyalty? No… not as far as they seem to think. So I find Twilight’s assumption suspect, although I can understand it given… I’ll get back to that.
     
    There is another idea. This was pointed out to me at one point, and it took a while for it to sink in. Friendship is Magic. Therefore Magic is Friendship. The Sixth Element is Friendship, which fits the pattern of the others.
     
    This throws an interesting light on the events of the Magical Mystery Cure. Twilight was alicoronated because she explored the magic of Friendship to lengths no other pony had. Does this mean that if Rarity explored the magic of Generosity to lengths no other pony has, she would get alicoronated as well? How about the others of the Mane6?
     
    In any case, the sixth element behaves differently than the other five. It wasn’t in the ruins with the others, it had to be summoned. The others appeared as dull gray spheres marked with different regular polygons. This conflicts with the illustration in the Nightmare Moon storybooks which had all of the elements as colorful gems. I would assume that when they are bonded and in use they are gem-like, and this is what happens when the bond between the wielder (Celestia) and the elements is broken, they turn into these dull gray stone things.
     
    When the five elements were shattered, and reformed, they reformed into the shape of their bearer’s cutie-marks mounted on necklaces. The sixth element then appeared out of nowhere as a tiara with Twilight’s cutie-mark as the central element. Here's another interesting little tid-bit that pulls from that: When the Elements bonded with the bearers, they actually bonded through their cutie-marks. Which implies that what Starswirl's unfinished spell actually did was re-arranged the bonds between the Elements and the bearers, dragging the cutie-marks along with them. The cutie-mark switch was a side-effect.
     
    Another interesting thing about the reformed elements is that the colours don't map to the ones in the original illustration. There is no green element anymore, instead there is a magenta one. And the purple one is not the central one anymore. So there's a good chance all the colours shuffled during the bonding process.
     
    And the final difference is that this sixth element acts as a amplifier for the others. Or more likely a simple focus, allowing the artifacts to work in conjunction where normally they wouldn't be able to.
     
    Why is this one different from the others? For that matter, why six?
  25. Fhaolan
    Here's my take on all this: The Guard is a military organization, tasked with protecting Equestria and everyone within it from threats foreign and domestic. They enforce the laws all over Equestria, but are concentrated in Canterlot as the center of Equestria.
     
    They have a relatively flat organization structure with a dozen different ranks at most. They have full mobility within the ranks, mostly because of this flattened structure, however they likely use the old British method of accelerating advancement by 'buying' higher ranks. This doesn't work quite the way you might think, however. What it means is that officers actually pay for all the equipment those who report to them have. The more the officer can pay for his rank, the more men he can support. This would be why there are so many unicorns in higher ranking positions, as the show gives the impression that unicorns are in general wealthier than the other races, or at least they are in Canterlot where we've seen most of the Guard.
     
    There are several uniforms for use in different situations, dress, day guard armour, night guard armour, undress, etc. Many fanfic-writers have proposed Day Guard and Night Guard divisions, and that's possible, but more likely it's more a case of 'which shift do you pull this week, Bob?' The armour appears to be enchanted increase uniformity in the Guard, probably a relic of prior war-like periods where such 'faceless multitudes' would increase the fearsome aspect of the military. It is likely that Luna's personal guard simply has a more extreme version of that enchantment, as we've not seen anything further around the batponies... however we have seen others with extreme variation from their 'race' norm that recalls the batponies, so I'll leave them alone for now and deal with them in a different blog topic.
     
    The Wonderbolts are a division of the Guard used as a recruiting force amongst Pegasi. Which wouldn't be that hard to do, given the historical descriptions of Pegasi as being more militaristic in culture (Hearthswarming Eve) There are likely similar organizations for that purpose for Unicorns and Earth Ponies, but they are not as popular or as flashy as the Wonderbolts. Junior Speedsters is the youth cadet group associated with the pegasi guard. Again, likely there are similar cadet groups for the others. Junior Sparks and Junior Scouts, perhaps.
     
    As a former Junior Speedster, and as a current Wonderbolt recruit, Rainbow Dash is likely a member of the Guard; perhaps a reserve member, rather than full-time. If the Guard do use the 'reserve' concept, then it is also possible that Applejack and Big Mac are reserve members of the Guard, simply because of their personalities.
     
    If the Guard don’t use the ‘reserve’ concept, then Rainbow Dash needs to be already full member of the Guard in order to join the Wonderbolts, and as such that’s her day job. Since being Ponyville’s top weather pony is kind of her thing… that might mean that weather patrol is actually part of a pegasi Guard’s duties. Which would also explain why a bunch of the Wonderbolt recruits were all known weather ponies from Ponyville. They're Ponyville's Pegasi Guards who have reached whatever seniority necessary to try out for the Wonderbolts, or were dragged along by Rainbow Dash. If this is true, then the Guard’s working pegasi uniform code is very, very lax indeed or Rainbow Dash is exercising her senior rank to simply ignore the uniform code in the same way Colonel Blake in the old M*A*S*H* series did. In fact, that might be why we haven’t seen any Guard at all, Pegasi or otherwise, in Ponyville in the show, they may all be taking their cues from Rainbow Dash, and simply aren’t wearing the regulation uniforms.
     
    The guard likely has an Intelligence Service branch, primarily focused on whatever external countries exist, like Saddle Arabia, and wherever the Griffons and Zebra normally live. Given the uptick in dangerous events ever since the Nightmare Moon incident, I would be surprised if the Guard as a group isn't contemplating pulling together Special Forces as well, possibly using the Mane 6 as a model due to their success.
     
    They also will have stationed several more Guard in Ponyville than normal in case of emergency due to the massive target the Mane 6 all living there has painted on the town. As an alternative explanation to Rainbow Dash's attitude towards regulation uniforms; they're possibly undercover . For some reason I peg Luna as the instigator of that idea of undercover Guard, rather than Celestia. While Celestia may be a chessmaster, when she moves pieces around she doesn't really hide that she's moving stuff. She doesn't tell anyone why, but she makes no bones about her moving them. Luna strikes me as someone who's more likely to use stealth.
     
    And finally Shining Armor was a Captain of the Guard before he became a Prince, not the Captain of the Guard. He's simply too young to have the top rank in a national military/police organization. The top rank for the Palace or Canterlot Guard, I can see, but not for all Equestria. Other cities and regions would have Captains of their own. If I was to guess to ranks, I would say that there is at least one rank above Captain; the Marshal who coordinates entire regions of Equestria, and Celestia and Luna themselves would likely have ranks of Grand Marshal. By the way, Shining may still be a Captain officially, in the same way the British Royalty all have military ranks from when they were in the service. (Yep, the Queen was a Captain, and she served as a driver and mechanic in the British armed forces during World War II before she became Queen, when she automatically became Commander-in-Chief. Can you imagine that? "Oh yeah, I was driven around by Princess Elizabeth. She had to replace the carbonator on the car once...").
     
    I think that's about all I've got on the Guard for now. Now I need a topic for next week. Where's my twelve-sided die? It doesn't get enough love.... *roll* Okay, Elements of Harmony it is.
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