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KeenBlade
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Anonymous
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Jesse Coffey
My Little Pony 912 – The Last Crusade
[source] 912 - “The Last Crudase” Written by: TBA "Unexpected visitors to Ponyville threaten to break up the Cutie Mark Crusaders forever." Streams DerpyTV BN Theater Brony Network (Channel 1)… (More)
My Little Pony 911 – Student Counsel Episode Guide
[source] 911 - “Student Counsel” Written by: TBA "Starlight Glimmer relishes her role as school counselor and encourages the students to come to her anytime about anything, but she becomes… (More)
My Little Pony 910 – Going to Seed Episode Guide
[source] 910 - “Going to Seed” Written by: TBA "Applejack's plans for an orderly harvest go awry when Apple Bloom becomes obsessed with catching a magical creature she thinks can… (More)
My Little Pony 905 – The Point of No Return Episode Guide
905 - “The Point of No Return” Written by: Gillian M. Berrow "Twilight realizes she never returned a book to the Canterlot Library and may have caused her favorite librarian… (More)
My Little Pony 904 – Twilight’s Seven Episode Guide
904 - “Twilight's Seven” Written by: Nicole Dubuc, Josh Haber "Twilight and Shining Armor pit their wits against each other to settle a long-standing sibling rivalry, but they soon discover… (More)
Star vs. 406 – The Ponyhead Show!, Surviving the Spiderbites Episode Guide
[source] 406 - “The Ponyhead Show!; Surviving the Spiderbites” Written by: Kristen Gish, Amelia Lorenz; Gina Gress, Cassie Zwart "Star asks for Pony Head's help to increase Eclipsa's popularity.; Star… (More)
All of the magic in Equestria has stopped working for some reason. The Mane Six suspect Tirek and head to Tartarus to get some answers. Meanwhile, eager helper Cozy Glow… (More)
A test is coming up about friendship’s effects on Equestrian history and the Young Six are having their troubles. Gallus and Smolder have trouble with the course material, Silverstream is… (More)
MLP Review: A Rockhoof and A Hard Place
Well, that was a unexpected. Rockhoof is trying to find his place in the modern world after being in limbo for 1,000 years. His “traditional” methods of unearthing artifacts clashing… (More)
The episode begins with Scootaloo fast-tracking the meeting of the Rainbow Dash Fan Club with a new Washouts fan group—which makes an eavesdropping Rainbow Dash worried that she has competition… (More)
MLP Review: “Road to Friendship”
In a brilliant ode to the Road Trip movies of Bing Crosby and Bob Hope, Starlight and Trixie go on a road trip to Saddle Arabia. It’s similar to “Pinkie… (More)
We have an interesting question in class asked by the Young Six: How can two ponies with very divergent interests such as Rarity and Rainbow Dash be friends? Rarity and… (More)
Help! My Heart is Full of Pony! – The Duality of Pony
Source: MLP: FiM, “Pinkie Pride”
“What a piece of work is mare – how noble in reason. How infinite in complexity…”
Everypony is always talking about how wonderful it would be to live in Equestria. While I’m inclined to agree, I suspect my reasoning might differ from other folks. I don’t see it as a world without pain. I see it as a lesson in how joy can triumph over pain.
Take Pinkie Pie. The bounciest pony in the bunch – the one most dedicated to spreading joy to her fellow pony. Laughter is more than just her Element – it’s her lifestyle, philosophy, and mission. Between Party of One, Friend in Deed, and Pinkie Pride, however, we see a certain insecurity – a desperation that suggests that Pinkie not only wants you to Smile, Smile, Smile, she needs you to in order to validate her very existence. The mere title of “Super Duper Party Pony,” for example, is Pinkie’s entire identity, (and her forfeit of it to live up to her promise to Dash is proof not only of her dependence on such labels, but of her profound dedication to the be-smile-ment of the equine race).
Now I am not trying to paint a dark tint to Pinkie Pie. While discussing the pain and insecurity beneath the surface of Pinkie might seem like a bummer, it’s actually that very lack of fluff – the defiance of children’s television stereotypes – the duality of pony – that makes the show so compelling in the first place. The brilliance of My Little Pony: Friendship is Magic is in it’s character development – its explorations of the contradictions within an archetype such as “the clown.” Examining Pinkie Pie’s Ponyacci-esque tendency toward sadness actually illustrates the very beauty of her soul. Every laugh – every smile – every song is a victory march, and one that has potential to inspire us all.
Joy – real joy – comes not from a life free from pain, but from our conquest of that pain. Pinkie Pie rose from a rock farm – gray and dull – and taught her entire family the joy of parties – the meaning of pink!
That’s what My Little Pony: Friendship is Magic celebrates, (whether it’s Fluttershy’s moments of bravery, or Rainbow Dash’s self-actualization beyond the approval of idols such as Daring Do or the Wonderbolts, or Rarity’s rise above the trappings of her own ego) – the little victories that make life worth living.
In the show, we are treated to a series of mostly believable happy endings, not because Equestria is a utopian paradise, but rather because these six beloved characters learn how to conquer their demons – to grow as moral beings – to experience the joy of coming together in support of one another. To know the magic of friendship.
That magic is something we can learn to incorporate into our everyday lives, even if the colors we see when we look out the window don’t always seem quite as bright as they do in Equestria.
—Sprocket
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