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On gently defending being a mature, intelligent, intellectual, grown-up adult fan of "My Little Pony: Friendship Is Magic" (via LJ comments on a post describing how a group of male "bronies" at a brony convention were being asshole douchebags to non-fans):
My friends call me a "brony" because I watch the current show (repeatedly) and I own two of the current pony dolls (plus a few 1980s and 1990s pony dolls for nostalgia). But I can't see myself going to a convention; no amount of benzodiazepine drugs could help me feel relaxed enough. Conventions are wonderful wonderful things, especially with how they bring people together. But the one time I went to a small convention, I found myself hiding near restrooms for hours, freaking out over the noise and the crowds. I wish i could say I love going to conventions. I can't. I have nightmares about them.
I have a few close friends who quietly express their joy with me, and we rarely do it outside of our personal gatherings.
I've not yet met any "brony" who was horrid to "non-brony" fands, and I hope I don't.
This sort of creepy thing makes me want to cover myself in a heavy black cloak and hide. Like, "I am in no way associated with this! Leave me out of it! I want to watch my cute cartoons in peace! And when I eat Cheetos I'm usually watching Futurama anyway! If I'm watching My Little Pony I'm usually eating cake! Or salad! Or ice cream!"
(Should I mention that my friend B. and I call each other "Pinkie Pie" (her) and "Fluttershy" or "Twilight Sparkle" (me) in private? Seriously, though screw those conventions.)
Whenever I have a depressive episode or an anxiety attack, I actually go to YouTube and pull up that "Smile Smile Smile" video with Pinkie Pie because it really does make me smile. I tend to quote Fluttershy and Twilight often. My friend B. and I have inside jokes about that "house-sitting for Harry the bear" scene in the "Party Of One" episode. But deeper fandom is so intense and often so frightening that I stay far away. The most I do is read a few fanfiction stories if they're written well (like one where Fluttershy and Twilight Sparkle fell in love with each other and the other characters wildly encouraged them and hijinks ensued). I enjoy the silly, weird, cute, "Dude, it's just a cartoon, lighten up" bits. But I stay far away from deeper fandom, because I have found that the deep dark parts of the brony fandom are full of fucked-up, scary, creepy cave-dwellers who pay lip-service to the whole "Love and Tolerate the shit out of people" thing.
I am a fan. But I am in the shallow end of the fandom. Whenever someone on Facebook tags me in a post about the cartoon and calls me Brony, I usually hide it from my public Timeline thingy mostly because it takes up space. I don't care if people call me "brony" and I do find it cute. I like staying in the shallow ends of the brony fandom. But with the way some parts of the fandom is acting up these days, I'm starting to get embarrassed, and I know other fans are as well.
And a comment by another person:
"There is something badly, deeply wrong when the fandom for a show aimed at the female, school aged demographic is inherently hostile to women."
All of this makes me facepalm and headdesk simultaneously and cry, "It's a cartoon show about talking ponies, you tantrum-throwing glass-headed wallabies! Quit taking it so seriously. And wear some deodorant!"
And that is all I want to say about that. I love this cartoon show. I love laughing about it, I love making fun and dancing around and being ridiculous and singing about the characters. I never, ever considered the idea that other fans of the gods damned cartoon show would be such giant empty-headed pricks. I really am embarrassed.
My friends call me a "brony" because I watch the current show (repeatedly) and I own two of the current pony dolls (plus a few 1980s and 1990s pony dolls for nostalgia). But I can't see myself going to a convention; no amount of benzodiazepine drugs could help me feel relaxed enough. Conventions are wonderful wonderful things, especially with how they bring people together. But the one time I went to a small convention, I found myself hiding near restrooms for hours, freaking out over the noise and the crowds. I wish i could say I love going to conventions. I can't. I have nightmares about them.
I have a few close friends who quietly express their joy with me, and we rarely do it outside of our personal gatherings.
I've not yet met any "brony" who was horrid to "non-brony" fands, and I hope I don't.
This sort of creepy thing makes me want to cover myself in a heavy black cloak and hide. Like, "I am in no way associated with this! Leave me out of it! I want to watch my cute cartoons in peace! And when I eat Cheetos I'm usually watching Futurama anyway! If I'm watching My Little Pony I'm usually eating cake! Or salad! Or ice cream!"
(Should I mention that my friend B. and I call each other "Pinkie Pie" (her) and "Fluttershy" or "Twilight Sparkle" (me) in private? Seriously, though screw those conventions.)
Whenever I have a depressive episode or an anxiety attack, I actually go to YouTube and pull up that "Smile Smile Smile" video with Pinkie Pie because it really does make me smile. I tend to quote Fluttershy and Twilight often. My friend B. and I have inside jokes about that "house-sitting for Harry the bear" scene in the "Party Of One" episode. But deeper fandom is so intense and often so frightening that I stay far away. The most I do is read a few fanfiction stories if they're written well (like one where Fluttershy and Twilight Sparkle fell in love with each other and the other characters wildly encouraged them and hijinks ensued). I enjoy the silly, weird, cute, "Dude, it's just a cartoon, lighten up" bits. But I stay far away from deeper fandom, because I have found that the deep dark parts of the brony fandom are full of fucked-up, scary, creepy cave-dwellers who pay lip-service to the whole "Love and Tolerate the shit out of people" thing.
I am a fan. But I am in the shallow end of the fandom. Whenever someone on Facebook tags me in a post about the cartoon and calls me Brony, I usually hide it from my public Timeline thingy mostly because it takes up space. I don't care if people call me "brony" and I do find it cute. I like staying in the shallow ends of the brony fandom. But with the way some parts of the fandom is acting up these days, I'm starting to get embarrassed, and I know other fans are as well.
And a comment by another person:
"There is something badly, deeply wrong when the fandom for a show aimed at the female, school aged demographic is inherently hostile to women."
All of this makes me facepalm and headdesk simultaneously and cry, "It's a cartoon show about talking ponies, you tantrum-throwing glass-headed wallabies! Quit taking it so seriously. And wear some deodorant!"
And that is all I want to say about that. I love this cartoon show. I love laughing about it, I love making fun and dancing around and being ridiculous and singing about the characters. I never, ever considered the idea that other fans of the gods damned cartoon show would be such giant empty-headed pricks. I really am embarrassed.
no subject
Date: 2012-08-22 09:44 pm (UTC)I watched a bunch of "House" episodes so I could get an idea. They overhype everything, the climactic scenes are pointless, the actual diagnoses and treatments are irritating, and the commercials for the episodes, with their ominous music, make me roll my eyes. But, hey, it's popular enough, who am I to scream about it? It's also the way I feel about all the Law And Order shows, and the other similar shows with all the spin-offs and such... I can't even think of the names. I don't understand them. But they've been on the air for ages, so obviously people love them. *shrug*
I don't even judge people who watch those New Jersey reality shows, or those Real Housewives shows, or... gods help me, even those Kardashian shows. People love what they love.
Yeah, fuck everything right now. The smallest things on the internet are setting me off. I need to stay away from websites I rarely go to anyway. I'll just stick with FB, LJ, and some of my favorite blogs, and if I see any stupidity, I'll remind myself that people are assholes on the internet, and things would be so much more interesting if every single nasty, stupid, bullying person found themselves exposed with their real names, addresses, and real photos, whenever they posted something douchebaggy.
no subject
Date: 2012-08-22 10:42 pm (UTC)House just doesn't do it for me. It is over-hyped and doesn't reflect how the medical world actually works at ALL. Do I hate people who like it? Nah. But I just don't want it shoved in my face, if you know what I mean. And yes, I definitely feel the same way about Law and Order, especially SVU. I've already lived through that stuff. I don't need to watch a show about rape and murder attempts and so forth when I could write the script.
People will always love what they love, and I might not understand, but I don't judge the person. Yes, I'll roll my eyes if someone tells me how AWESOME Twilight is (because seriously...) but I don't dislike the person. We all judge to a degree, because we'd all be liars to say we've NEVER judged anyone EVER, but I don't mock people for their choices.
That aside, yes: Fuck All The Things right now. Even FB and LJ are pissing me off to a degree. But that's the fun of the Internet: People think they can be assholes because they are hiding behind a computer screen. In person, most wouldn't be so bold. I always try to remember that when I read something some asshat says.
no subject
Date: 2012-08-22 10:54 pm (UTC)I think this is why I watch so many TV shows with fantasy themes, science fiction themes, or supernatural themes. I get enough real world drama. If I'm going to watch medical or crime shows, I'd rather they have a fantastic (literally) twist.