While the lens of our interest is upon ponies (which, let's face it, it usually is), here's the opening song the recently started Japanese broadcast of My Little Pony.
Bronies and otaku are probably already the same demographic, but if there are any anime fans who have not yet joined the herd, maybe this will sway them. Now they can watch the show subbed.
I ought to be returning to regular blogging at Black Gate in the near future. It looks like I'll have a regular post, usually a book review, every other Wednesday, posted on the BG site. First up is either THE BLACK PRISM by Brent Weeks or CHILD OF FIRE by Harry Connolly.
The Treaty of Versailles, or maybe the Treaty of
Guadalupe-Hidalgo, or maybe even the Hawley-Smoot Tariff, established
long ago that accepted practice for an internet post was to first make
your point, then use a song from a children’s show to drive your point
straight into the eyes and hearts of your readers.
But
I’m going to flip that convention around. So, first, watch this video.
Then, read what I’ve written below, in which I unleash the goopiest of
my emotions.
All
right, so brief background for non-Bronies: Every pony has a cutie
mark, the symbol that appears on their flanks. They get it when they
first discover their special purpose in life, or the thing they were
born to do, and it represents that to the world. In this episode,
though, a misbegotten spell has caused Twilight’s five friends to get
their cutie marks switched around, and with that, have their destinies
altered. They can’t remember their special purpose or talents, and as
far as they know, they’ve always been doing what’s suggested by their
new cutie mark. So Applejack has forgotten her love of farming and
thinks she was put on this earth to sew dresses.
But they’re
miserable. They’re still the same people they were before. Fluttershy
is still an introvert, Rarity has no knack with weather, Pinkie Pie is a
partier, not a worker. And Twilight can’t figure out how to restore
their memories and their true selves.
But she remembers
that they’re still friends, and the one thing they haven’t lost is
their love for each other. So, in the song linked above, she goes
around to each of her friends and asks them to help another friend with a
task theythink they know nothing about. Fluttershy thinks she’s never
touched an animal in her life. Rarity thinks she doesn’t know the
needle from the bobbin.
Despite that, a plea of
“Applejack needs your help” or“Pinkie Pie is in trouble” is enough to
pull them outside what they believe they know. Why? Because
friendship. It is, after all, magic.
After all, we
might ask, what is it that makes a true friendship? Obviously, it’s not
mere shared interests or activities for the ponies. Part of the show’s
enduring beauty is that our six heroines don’t seem like people who
would normally be friends. Their vocations and personalities could
hardly be a wider spread. If their personalities were mapped out as a
Venn diagram, there’d be little in the center besides “Is an adorable
cartoon pony”.
They are friends, though. Good friends.
They enjoy each other’s company, share fun times together, climb
mountains and fight the hordes of evil together. Together they’re a
veritable juggernaut of girl power, a twenty-ton wrecking ball of equine
femininity.
The show portrays their friendship
solidifying as they learn to love one another for their unique
selves. Almost any episode demonstrates this. Rainbow Dash learns the
love of books and thus gains a fresh appreciation for Twilight. Rainbow
Dash learns that Fluttershy is, well, shy, but that with a gentle touch
and enough encouragement, she can do incredible things—and Fluttershy
learns that Rainbow can push her to do things she never imagined she
could. Rarity learns that, while Applejack is a touch uncouth, she has
plenty to teach about the value of family.
A true, true
friend isn’t just someone who’s fun to party with. It’s someone you
can learn from, whose strengths support you in your weaknesses, and who,
when you’re in a tight spot, won’t hesitate you offer you the help only
they can give. That’s really what’s going on in the song above. None
of these ponies is replaceable or interchangeable. Each of them has
something unique and valuable to give the others, and something to
receive in the return. Rarity can’t become Rainbow Dash any more than
Fluttershy can take Pinkie Pie’s place.
Friendship. Love.
In the end, it’s all the same thing, and it’s beautiful to
behold. Especially when it comes packaged with upbeat songs.