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Thread started 09/23/11 4:28pm

Militant

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Bronies. Seriously.

http://www.oregonlive.com...grown.html

Part of me is like "What in the actual fuck". The other part is like "Good for them".

bronies.JPG
The latest incarnation of the My Little Pony franchise has attracted an unexpected demographic: Adult men. The men, who call themselves "bronies," have formed an extensive online community, including a roughly 100-member group in Portland.


So what if the target demographic for the television show and toys featuring brightly colored, sparkly equines is 6- to 12-year-old girls?

The nationwide contingent of men who call themselves "bronies" say they're man enough to admit they love "My Little Pony: Friendship Is Magic," The Hub television network's newest generation of the children's brand first popularized in the 1980s.

"Just because it's a kids' cartoon show doesn't mean it's not entertaining," says Jacob Schultz, a 20-year-old self-professed brony from Eagle Creek. "Ignoring the fact that they're colorful ponies, they have a good story and characterization behind them."

Schultz is part of a Portland-based group of bronies that recently began meeting to share their passion. The group's latest endeavor, July's "Northwest Bronyfest," attracted 80 My Little Pony enthusiasts -- mostly men, plus a handful of women -- for a two-day celebration of bronyism.

The phenomenon began taking hold soon after "Friendship Is Magic" debuted last fall. As the brony ranks grew, monthly viewership -- which was 1.4 million a month in November -- nearly tripled to 4 million by the end of the first season. The bronies expect another growth spurt after the show begins its second season today.

"We are getting new members by the day," says Nathan Shepard, 20, who helped organize the Portland group. "There's been a lot of buildup."

Shepard planned to wake up early this morning to catch the 6 a.m. premiere of the show, which follows a brigade of six kindhearted young ponies as they battle the forces of darkness. Such die-hard enthusiasm isn't uncommon among the bronies, who say they're just as shocked as the general public that the show has attracted such a fan base.

"About the fourth episode in, I had that moment that all college 20-year-old guys get: 'Wait, I'm watching a show for little girls?'" Schultz says. "Right after, I had that moment I was like 'Eh, who cares?'"

With the occasional exception, the bronies share a common profile. Talk to any of the 117 (and counting) members in Portland's network, and you're likely to get a similar story.

They're self-described geeks, nerds or video gamers in their teens to mid-30s. They discovered My Little Pony after noticing a glut of pony-related activity while browsing Internet forums. Curious, they checked out the show and got hooked.

"I've gotten raised eyebrows from friends," says Jim West, a 20-year-old brony from Olympia.

But don't call them girly men. Yes, some bronies are sensitive types. But they also rock climb and play sports, have girlfriends and maintain active social lives.

"I play video games and hang out with my (non-brony) friends; I still like fighting zombies and all that good stuff," West says. "It's not like the ponies are the only thing, but they have become pretty big for me."

Animation fandom is nothing new among the anime and gaming set. Past and present fads include "World of Warcraft," "SpongeBob SquarePants," "Transformers" and scores of Japanese anime cartoons.

But the bronies are different -- and not just because their obsession is peculiarly feminine and juvenile.

They're outspoken. Many bronies proudly display their pony passion with T-shirts, pins, posters and large figurine collections. One of the most popular Facebook pages on the subject lists Bronyism as a religion.

morebroniesJPG.JPG
Jacob Schultz shows off his extensive collection of toy ponies he keeps at his parent's Eagle Creek home where he lives. This is Schultz's collection.

"My favorite is Fluttershy," says Theo Truesdell, 22, a Portland State University student who has watched the entire first season at least seven times. "I'm a sucker for cute things, and she's a very shy and adorable character."

They're organized. Shaun Scotellaro started the national brony site equestriadaily.com in January, after My Little Pony's adult fan base reached a recognizable size. Since then, traffic to the site has climbed, to a current daily average of 500,000 page views. Bronies meet there to discuss the series and share art, writing and musical remixes based on the series.

"People are pumping out stuff left and right -- fan fiction, videos, music," says Scotellaro, 23, of Arizona. "This sort of gave a place to show it off."

In addition, local meetup.com brony groups have cropped up across the country, including in Portland and Seattle.

They're an industry. The Hub is a joint venture of Discovery Communications and toy company Hasbro.

The Hub sees "My Little Pony's" online following as an added marketing tool, says Jayson Thiessen, the show's supervising director.

"There's a demographic there that they can use that they haven't really seen before," he says. "I don't think anyone expected a candy-colored show about sparkly ponies making friends with everybody to be as entertaining as it turned out to be."

The show's creators have latched on to the craze by creating special commercials for the bronies and granting interviews on equestriadaily.com.

Perhaps most notably, execs for The Hub don't yank unlicensed episodes from YouTube.

"The main goal here is to sell toys," Scotellaro says. "It's free advertising for them."

Many bronies expected the buzz to die down during the four-month gap between seasons 1 and 2, but it's only grown more intense. But they struggle to pinpoint a single reason why "Friendship Is Magic" has garnered such a following among adult men.

For some, it's the show's catchy music. Others laud the positive message, the flash animation or the show's ability to appeal to an adult sense of humor.

Scotellaro says it's likely also a matter of exposure. "Friendship Is Magic" generated buzz within the male-dominated online gaming world, so men were more likely to come across the show.

"I'm sure there's going to be some crazy research project in the future that will tell us all why," he says.

And that quirky nickname? It's anybody's guess who coined the term brony, Scotellaro said. Someone popped it into an online discussion board, and the name stuck.

[Edited 9/23/11 11:21am]

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Reply #1 posted 09/23/11 5:07pm

XxAxX

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My Little Pony Corrals Unlikely Fanboys Known as ‘Bronies’

http://www.wired.com/unde...tle-ponys/

The fan videos might be the main reason anyone outside the brony community knows the show as a meme. Nerd blog Topless Robot, for example, is committed to following My Little Pony fan videos. One YouTube user posted an 8-bit chiptune anthology of songs from the show, and the A.V. Club recently called the trend of mashing up My Little Pony clips with movie trailers a “meme champion.”

“I believe the fan base for this new generation of MLP is one of the most amazing/unexpected things to come out of the internet in a long while,” Henri Yount, a 20-year-old from Virginia whose My Little Pony mashups with movie trailers have gotten nearly 350,000 views on YouTube, said in an e-mail to Wired.com (see his pony-riffic spin on Watchmen above).

“When I say ‘amazing,’ I’m referring to the crazy amount of content and the hard-working people who produce material every day, which I haven’t seen in many other fan bases,” Yount added.

To see that dedication, one need only take a quick look at a recent series of “Hitler Reacts To …” videos that show Der Führer as a dedicated brony infuriated over the removal of several My Little Pony videos from YouTube. Or the high school presentation one young man did on the physics of the show. (A note to other news outlets: Physics Brony’s name isn’t Stephen Magnet as has been reported. Stephen is right, but the last name is a reference to “Steven Magnet” — an inside joke amongst bronies.)

Shaun runs the My Little Pony fan site Equestria Daily.

YouTube isn’t the only place online creative communities are gathering in pony love. The online artist collective deviantArt had, at last count, nearly 90,000 pieces of My Little Pony artwork and hundreds more are going up each day (on one random day in May, about 330 pieces were submitted).

My Little Pony creations have taken off in other areas as well. On Equestria Daily, a fan blog that on first blush could be mistaken for a fifth-grade girl’s locker door, site curator Shaun (he asked that his last name be withheld) struggled to find a half-dozen pieces of art to post in a given day back in January. He now claims he can easily fill a post with 30 images.

Shaun isn’t just impressed with the amount of new content bronies are submitting to his site, he’s also amazed by his own fascination with the show.

“Honestly, if someone were to have told me I’d be writing a pony blog seven months ago, I would have called them insane,” the 23-year-old from Arizona said in an e-mail to Wired.com.

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Reply #2 posted 09/23/11 5:17pm

sunflower7

Wtf... falloff . LMAO!!!! Lawd really!!!....

Really boys... really... my little pony..

They really think women are gonna start sayin.. - All the good man are either, gay, married or a slave 2my little ponies...

flower .....
" I never saw an ugly thing in my life: for let the form of an object be what it may,- light, shade, and perspective will always make it beautiful."
- John Constable
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Reply #3 posted 09/23/11 5:19pm

XxAxX

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my little ponies are pretty neat. they're fantasy ponies for kids who never got to have real ponies. little pastel pony dreams. who hasn't had one???

[Edited 9/23/11 10:23am]

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Reply #4 posted 09/23/11 6:10pm

NDRU

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I'm seeing this as ironic fanship.

Sort of like the 17 year old guys I'd see in Oakland with sagging jeans wearing little pink Hello Kitty backpacks

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Reply #5 posted 09/23/11 6:30pm

sunflower7

XxAxX said:

my little ponies are pretty neat. they're fantasy ponies for kids who never got to have real ponies. little pastel pony dreams. who hasn't had one???

[Edited 9/23/11 10:23am]

I agree, My little pony is cute for kids...but we are talking about GROWN ASS MEN lol Did u read the article???

flower .....
" I never saw an ugly thing in my life: for let the form of an object be what it may,- light, shade, and perspective will always make it beautiful."
- John Constable
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Reply #6 posted 09/23/11 8:01pm

XxAxX

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sunflower7 said:

XxAxX said:

my little ponies are pretty neat. they're fantasy ponies for kids who never got to have real ponies. little pastel pony dreams. who hasn't had one???

[Edited 9/23/11 10:23am]

I agree, My little pony is cute for kids...but we are talking about GROWN ASS MEN lol Did u read the article???

lol yes i read the article. i'm being supportive. lol lol

say that reminds me you know all those folks in star trek costumes at comicon?? you s'pose bronies do that too??

[Edited 9/23/11 13:02pm]

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Reply #7 posted 09/23/11 8:08pm

lazycrockett

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http://www.equestriadaily.com/

I heard bout this on NPR a couple months ago and after watching a couple of episodes I can see its appeal. smile

The Most Important Thing In Life Is Sincerity....Once You Can Fake That, You Can Fake Anything.
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Reply #8 posted 09/23/11 8:14pm

whistle

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NDRU said:

I'm seeing this as ironic fanship.

Sort of like the 17 year old guys I'd see in Oakland with sagging jeans wearing little pink Hello Kitty backpacks

bloody hipsters...

everyone's a fruit & nut case
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Reply #9 posted 09/23/11 10:02pm

sunflower7

XxAxX said:

sunflower7 said:

I agree, My little pony is cute for kids...but we are talking about GROWN ASS MEN lol Did u read the article???

lol yes i read the article. i'm being supportive. lol lol

say that reminds me you know all those folks in star trek costumes at comicon?? you s'pose bronies do that too??

[Edited 9/23/11 13:02pm]

LMAO!! lol IDK...but I would luv 2see it wink

flower .....
" I never saw an ugly thing in my life: for let the form of an object be what it may,- light, shade, and perspective will always make it beautiful."
- John Constable
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Reply #10 posted 09/24/11 7:58am

kewlschool

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I'm guessing they live at home with their parents. But I am certain that they are not getting laid.

99.9% of everything I say is strictly for my own entertainment
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Reply #11 posted 09/24/11 8:07am

Militant

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kewlschool said:

I'm guessing they live at home with their parents. But I am certain that they are not getting laid.

I don't know about that. There's a lot of grown women fans of the show too, surely. Which isn't as weird so hence no news stories about it... but makes sense that they'd bone each other lol.

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Reply #12 posted 09/24/11 11:30am

FuzzyWitch

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o just look at that cute lill pony in his big man hands ... i am finding this guy extremely appealing 4 some odd reason boxed

Always remember you're unique, just like everyone else.
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