Bronies are a subculture that, not entirely unreasonably, weirds some people out. Hell, I like the show, I’ve got a degree in the worst flake magnet in the arts, and some bronies weird me out too.
But they seem to be on their way to mainstream pop culture. Once the far right stumbled across it, it was only a matter of time before Jerry Springer showed up. Really, think pieces in the Atlantic and the New Yorker are only a matter of time, probably about “shifting goalposts of masculinity” or some other load of crap.
So, love it or lump it, grown men who enjoy a cartoon aimed at preteen girls are about to have way too much ink spilled over what they “mean”, since this is largely Baby Boomers who, let’s face it, will take any opportunity to freak out over the behavior of twenty-somethings. So, for some of those confused and lost, here’s a step-by-step guide to “getting it”.
Step #1) Accept That The Show Itself Is Actually Pretty Good All-Ages Entertainment
I mean, we’re not talking earthshaking here. It’s not nearly as disturbing or cheerfully grotesque as, say, SpongeBob SquarePants or Ren and Stimpy. It’s not crammed full of jokes kids won’t get, although there are plenty of little blink-and-you’ll-miss-it nods to pop culture.
But it’s fairly witty, it doesn’t talk down to its audience, and it’s not really “gender-specific”, partially because Lauren Faust didn’t want to make a “girly” cartoon. The result is wholesome entertainment about funny animals along the lines of Mickey Mouse.
The one thing that truly stands out about it, and is likely the reason bronies exist, is the characterization. The characters are actually quite sharp and well done with strengths and weaknesses that make them relatable. Fluttershy, for example, might as well be the mascot for people with crippling social anxiety, and Twilight Sparkle manages to capture being a bookish nerd without being insulting about it. Faust makes a point of undermining stereotypes as well: There is a girly pony named Rarity, but instead of being a shallow twit, she’s a fussy workaholic. In terms of characters it’s actually better than a lot of sitcoms.
Step #2) Understand That The Writers Listen to the Fandom and Respond
Most TV shows, if the fans have opinions, the writing staff will occasionally acknowledge them in an interview.
On this show, fan memes will turn up as background gags. When a pony that looked vaguely like David Tennant showed up and was christened Doctor Whooves, the show responded by creating more of them.
Hell, this is a show that went out of its way to cast John DeLancie in a role because they knew the adult fandom would go nuts. In other words, people who love the show know people who write the show listen to them.
That’s powerful. It gets the fans invested in the show… and watching the episodes.
Step #3: Realize There’s a Strong Sense of Community Here
Some people want to bloviate about how people don’t want to meet face-to-face and deal with “real” people anymore. But the reality is this: meeting a person you really click with and can really get along with is hard. Finding any sort of community is a powerful thing in modern times. Communities are where you find them, and this tends to be a strong one, partially due to that writer feedback I mentioned.




Nope, sorry, bronies are weird ass people who wants to screw each other dressed up as horses.
Don’t get me wrong, I’m sure there are a few people out there like that, but… no.
That’s furries.
Hate to break it to you, but no. I’m a brony and find that a wholly disturbing statement.
I would argue with you, but you’re clearly too far up your ass to hear anything I say. Maybe if I write it down and stuff it down your esophagus, but that’s really improbable, seeing as I don’t know where you are, and the aforementioned head-ass-edness.
The only thing i understand is that those guys are, in the words of the immortal Patton Oswalt, gayer than 8 guys blowing 9 guys.
Ironically, most gay nerds I know aren’t into it.
so you’re saying it’s too gay even for gay people? wow.
Saw it on Netflix, figured my two year old daughter was a good enough excuse to watch it. It’s not bad. It’s not Futurama, but between that and my other options of wonder pets, and yo gabba gabba, I’d much rather watch the ponies.
Yo Gabba Gabba is one of those shows that really remind you the main difference between toddlers and stoners is that toddlers won’t eat all your Doritos.
Don’t bet on that, Dan.
The kids in my family can and will kill supersize meal with ease if you let ‘em.
Not that we let ‘em.
I buy Doritos in bulk. Ain’t no toddler alive that can eat my body-pillow sized bag of Doritos!
Gross.
and honestly,….[www.youtube.com]……sold me on it.
I love how cheap animation can be so easily cut together.
I was hoping this would provide me with some answers, but all I have now is more questions.
This is like the LOST of internet blog posts.
6) “Brony” is a dumb word invented by insecure guys who need to make their enjoyment of a cartoon targeted at little girls palatable to themselves. My 65-year-old mom is way past the age to be watching Hayden Panettiere cheerleader movies on ABC Family and she doesn’t give any fucks. Just accept that you’re watching a show for little girls and stop dressing it up as though you aren’t.
I’m sorry, you lost me somewhere around “Hayden Panettiere cheerleader movies”.
Yeah, sure, your *mom* is the one watching Hayden Panettiere cheerleader movies on ABC Family. Keep telling yourself that.
And that’s where you’re wrong. The herd started on an image board website called 4chan.org (extremely NSFW), where some guys watched the first few episodes of it to make fun of it, only to realize they liked it. It started to catch on amongst the 4chan boards, and as to call themselves something, they came up with /b/rony (/b/ is the random board), and /co/lts (/co/ being the comic and game board). Obviously, /b/rony won out. So, no, it is not to try to seem masculine for liking a show aimed at kids and their parents (Faust herself has said it is also aimed at parents), it’s just a little internet thing, almost like a meme, whereas it’s an inside joke. See you thought because it had “bro” in it, we cared what morons like you thought of our masculinity. But nope, there’s back story to it. Personally, I think you struggle with your masculinity, seeing as you’re attacking normal guys who just like a cartoon. I watch a talking pony cartoon, I freaking love My Little Pony: Friendship is Magic. I’m not ashamed at all to admit that. I’m also an 18 year old USAF Combat Control poolee. Learn to educate yourself before you go off on a blind tangent. Good day to you sir.
When did our network become Pronie?
JOIN… USSSSSSSS….
In all seriousness, I’m mostly trying to stop the retarded think pieces in their tracks.
In my view, MLP has the bronies because of 4Chan. The hive mind that there can really support the brony culture.
That’s absolutely true.
Is there an Adventure Time Community I can join? (Besides Brandon’s Best and Worst posts, I mean?)
You know, how that show doesn’t have a massive adult fan base I’ll never understand.
It does. They just don’t call themselves by a nickname and pretend it’s a lifestyle.
Either way, I think that cartoon show with the cat and his fish-brother is the better of the three. (Just looked it up, Amazing World of Gumball).
My son got me into Gumball, Adventure Time and The Normal Show. All very well done.
There’s an avid fan following on 4chan’s /co/ board, the same place pony fandom started, as well as on Tumblr. But be warned, the hardcore Adventure Time fans in these places are at least as messed up as the pony fans there.
Ewwwwww… you watched Burn Notice?
What’s wrong with Burn Notice?
Yes. Yes, I did, with the full realization that every episode is exactly the same. Really it’s the cast that sold me.
You know that guy was in Blair Witch 2?
Redo some of the lead actors lines with a robot voice real quick… notice any difference? Also Gabrielle Anwar is now like 85% Leather.
Jeffrey Donovan actually has a pretty great range, in my opinion. Yeah, he was in Blair Witch 2, so what? It’s not like Bruce Campbell has nothing but a string of ingenious classics on his resume either.
My avatar notwithstanding, I don’t watch the show. But I do find the Youtube vidoes of the Ponies’ mental breakdowns very hilarious.
My opinion? If the Bronies love the show, let them. There’s a lot worse crap on television nowadays.
A very level and fair article. Though it seems quite a few of your commenters are still pretty determined to hate on it. I wrote my own article about why being a brony is perfectly natural if you’d care to check it out: [www.thegeekprofessor.com]
everything in this article is spot on. I only feel the need to add one thing. why are things such as rainbows and ponies considered by many to be girly? because those just happened to be things that were involved in the everyday lives of little girls for some period of time. but really that’s the only reason. people got set on that idea. but if let’s say teenage and twenty year-old males started enjoying some show and involved themselves in a fandom based on that show which both just happened to use those concepts, then it’s no longer just girly. when little girls watch it, it’s girly in one respect. but if teenagers and 20 year old men watch it, then it’s at the same time something else entirely.
What people forget is that things are called girly or manly depending on who’s associated with it. These are constantly changing definitions that we define. there’s no solid right or wrong, or girly or manly. If men watch a show, it’s manly. if women watch a show it’s womanly. if teenage boys watch a show it’s for teenage boys. if teenage girls watch a show, it’s for teenage girls. if little girls watch a show, it’s for little girls. but if men, women, teenage boys and girls, and little girls and boys all watch a show, then it is manly, womanly, girly, for teenage boys, for teenage girls, for little girls, and for little boys. is there a point in naming things based on who associates with them if people’s interest is constantly changing? I don’t see one. Just let people watch what they want. and if they want to express and celebrate a common interest, let them. there’s no rulebook on the subject. and no one’s hurting anyone else. everyone’s different. if people can be happy doing something different, let them be happy.
Good article. I think the pony thing has reached its peak if not gone past it already… but I guess that’s when the mainstream media shows up.
One little correction, Dr. Whooves was actually inserted by the staff before the fan memes started. There are lots of Dr. Who references in Lauren Faust’s previous show, Foster’s home for imaginary fans. They are doing lots of other fan memes like Derpy and Lyra/Bon-Bon pairing, though.
Foster’s Home for Imaginary Friends, I mean. My brain isn’t in gear today.
Haters gonna hate but that won’t stop me from loving this show