+1 for show producers being able to characterise successfully, then.mad825 said:Spare me from that rule 34 jargon. There are people who actually fancy them sexually explicitly as characters not the fact they might have a pair of tits and a hole drawn on.kailus13 said:Rule 34 exists for EVRYTHING. Ponies are by no means the weirdest thing for people to fantasize about.mad825 said:OP, you're right! Our perception of masculine and feminine ideals changes every few decades. I myself consider MLP the best thing that a man can enjoy.
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When there are ton of pictures and a few videos of male fans cumming on MLP toys/doll and pictures...There's even a flash game where you can fuck raindow dash...I don't think so
Well, MLP is there now, so you'll have to report back to us.Angie7F said:I dont know. I live in Japan and many men enjoy cute cartoons.
I am not sure how they would enjoy MLP though.
Before MLP there were furries, before that there was likely something else. Anything with a large enough fanbase will have people fancying them as characters.mad825 said:Spare me from that rule 34 jargon. There are people who actually fancy them sexually explicitly as characters not the fact they might have a pair of tits and a hole drawn on.kailus13 said:Rule 34 exists for EVRYTHING. Ponies are by no means the weirdest thing for people to fantasize about.mad825 said:OP, you're right! Our perception of masculine and feminine ideals changes every few decades. I myself consider MLP the best thing that a man can enjoy.
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When there are ton of pictures and a few videos of male fans cumming on MLP toys/doll and pictures...There's even a flash game where you can fuck raindow dash...I don't think so
I agree with the above, but I don't understand why people feel threatened by a bunch of dudes watching a show for little girls. To each their own I say.Legion said:From what he says in the video, I can see what he means, but right now I'd say no.
Mainly because as he points out, what is considered normal is considered natural. At the moment bronies are not considered "normal" by the general public. Hell, I'd say the average person who doesn't spend a lot of time on the net, probably doesn't even know that it exists.
Although I guess that depends on what you mean by "challenge". If you simply mean, the fact that it is so popular with many guys is a challenge in itself, then yes, I suppose it is. But I'd only really consider it worth noting if it was accepted by the majority. As long as it's the minority, it will be seen as abnormal.
Eh, I suppose you're right...As a general rule; people are stupid. When they're are other people, people do stupid things although to go on to say it's curing cancer is pretentious when it's just wank material.kailus13 said:Before MLP there were furries, before that there was likely something else. Anything with a large enough fanbase will have people fancying them as characters.
Well i can't speak for others but i think it's not as much feeling threatened as being confused. Adults being fans of a show like MLP is simply confusing to me. And the fact that we're constantly reminded of it through pics or avatars... well... some end up going on angry rants. Personally if people like it it's their right but i still think it's pwetty weirdExcelsior789 said:I agree with the above, but I don't understand why people feel threatened by a bunch of dudes watching a show for little girls. To each their own I say.
BTW what anime is that gif from? It looks rad as hell.
I never said we were challenging anything, I was just acting as a devil's advocate to your "pony porn proves otherwisemad825 said:Eh, I suppose you're right...As a general rule; people are stupid. When they're are other people, people do stupid things although to go on to say it's curing cancer is pretentious when it's just wank material.kailus13 said:Before MLP there were furries, before that there was likely something else. Anything with a large enough fanbase will have people fancying them as characters.
Bronies are challenging nothing other than forming a social group where people can have fun .I see a chav wear a pink polo shirt, that's socially challenging.
You don't defend things you like when people rag on them?Casual Shinji said:The only thing bronies are challenging is my patience with how overly serious they're taking a cartoon about ponies.
Baseless Generalisations.Abomination said:]Yes because male bronies are not known for being terribly masculine
Not terribly relevant since you yourself joined The Escapist community so you could discuss video games.and it has nothing to do with how they like My Little Pony or not, it is the other factors. Factors like joining some pseudo-club on the internet
Pony chat here on the Escapist talks about pony significantly less than other topics, since we already know that we like the show, we're in the user group after all. We talk politics, video games, warhammer vs halo happens a lot, etc.discussing a cartoon with fanatical devotion on the internet
In your mind sure, but again that's hardly an objective viewpoint you are pushing as fact.the average and stereotypical brony (ignoring their appreciation for a cartoon aimed at girls) does not conjure the image of a masculine male.
No, actually I don't. There's no real point in defending something I like against people who rag on it, unless they're outright lying about its content.Loop Stricken said:You don't defend things you like when people rag on them?Casual Shinji said:The only thing bronies are challenging is my patience with how overly serious they're taking a cartoon about ponies.
Been there done that.TizzytheTormentor said:Challenge? Nah, I don't really get people having issues with being "manly" What defines manly? Drinking beer, watching sports, brawling and other such nonsense?
I have seen the first 4 episodes, show is alright, didn't click with me, but it was okay, not sure why it exploded all over the internet (I think 4Chan had something to do with it)
Besides, we all know a man isa miserable little pile of secretssomeone who can beat Devil May Cry 3 on Hell and Hell mode!
When Powerpuff Girls was popular there wasn't a vocal subculture across pretty much every corner of the internet (or at least the bits of it inhabited by 18-35 year olds) that defined a significant quantity of their online persona by it.Susan Arendt said:And yet somehow none of this came up when PowerPuff Girls was popular? I'm just sick to death of people dissecting the possible reasons and/or implications of people liking a particular cartoon.
Once again, that's both blatantly false and unbelievably prejudiced. You're entire argument hinges on assumptions and stereotypes, that almost every male brony was seen as weird before they became a brony. Most were not, contrary to what you believe, and only became seen as actually weird by those around them after they started watching a show about pastel-colored ponies. You have no non-assumtion-based knowledge of how the average brony was viewed beforehand, so your argument is invalid.Abomination said:Yes because male bronies are not known for being terribly masculine - and it has nothing to do with how they like My Little Pony or not, it is the other factors. Factors like joining some pseudo-club on the internet, discussing a cartoon with fanatical devotion on the internet; the average and stereotypical brony (ignoring their appreciation for a cartoon aimed at girls) does not conjure the image of a masculine male.V da Mighty Taco said:Um, what? What do you mean by "by their nature, they are not (masculine)"? Excuse me if I'm misunderstanding you, but it seems like you're implying that most male bronies are not viewed as fairly normal males before they became a brony, which is flat-out not true and is incredibly prejudiced. As I said before, male bronies typically get shunned or at least lose a lot of respect from family and / or peers once the news gets out that they like a little girl's show, primarily because it's seen as something a grown man in particular should not do. This doesn't really apply to female bronies to anywhere near the same degree, as them liking a little girl's show is viewed as far more acceptable. Hence, males liking the show defies what is seen as specifically acceptable for males to do and by definition challenges the established gender roles. Can you tell me where my argument falls apart here?
That being said, a masculine male who does call himself a brony would challenge traditional masculine values as an individual. As a group bronys do not due to the average representative of said group not being particularly masculine.