Little pony gay

6 Cartoon Couples Allowed to be Lgbtq+ at the Very End

So this is a thing. And it’s surprised me that I’ve been capable to find six examples to build this list. But the series finale of She-Ra and the Princesses of Power provided the last piece of the puzzle and I finally finished this article. It’s a sign of the times. There have been multiple instances where a cartoon show’s series finale finally allows certain characters to come out of the closet and be true to their gay, female homosexual and/or bisexual selves.

I think it’s great! But it’s still weird that it’s only allowed to happen in the series finale, right?

Give us some series premiere action!

Some sunlight, we are going to get a show where the main character and their love interest are both openly queer. Or are both somewhere on the LGBTQ+ spectrum. It’s gonna arise . Some day we’re going to acquire a lesbian Disney Princess. Some morning, a big think of company is going to purchase the rights to my own self-published gay comic, Gamer Lady & Vixen, and turn it into a popular, award-winning show! And no, that’s not the only reason I’m doing this list! I just wa

‘Bronies,’ male fans of ‘My Minute Pony,’ defy assumptions


Emily Miller Correspondent |  The Gainesville Sun

What started as plastic pony toys in the early 1980s has evolved into an entertainment franchise with an unlikely fandom.

The cartoon series "My Little Pony: Friendship is Magic" is the newest generation of the My Little Pony franchise. Now on its fourth season, the friendship-centered TV show has gained a large following of older viewers, predominantly male teens and adults, who call themselves "bronies" or bro + pony.

"It's not the first thing I advertise, mostly because there's a big misconception about it," said Corey Nickels, 20. "People consider bronies are weird, but they're not. We're just normal people who like to watch cartoons."

Nickels, who has been a brony for about two years, is a member of Bronies of Gainesville, FL and Beyond, a group formed to bring together fans of My Little Pony. Although on Facebook the organization has about 200 members, Nickels said about 10 to 15 bronies show up for meetings in Gainesville every one to two months and at events such as SwampCon 2014, a multi-genre fan convention at the Reitz Union on Jan. 18 that focused on

They may only be on screen for about two minutes, but Aunt Holiday and Auntie Lofty’s appearance in this Saturday’s episode of My Little Pony: Friendship Is Magic is a great deal. Why? They’re the first homosexual couple to arrive on the animated program. Airing smack dab in the middle of Event (though it aired earlier in Europe), “The Last Crusade” will make for the TV debut of the couple — and fans are already celebrating.

Aunt Holiday and Auntie Lofty have been canonically in a sapphic relationship since their appearance in the book My Minuscule Pony: Ponyville Mysteries: Riddle of the Rusty Horseshoe, according to writer Michael Vogel:

"Nicole and I thought this was a great opportunity to organically announce an LGBTQ couple in the series, and we asked Hasbro and they approved it," Vogel told BuzzFeed.

Now, the pair (who sometimes care for the character Scootaloo while her parents are away) are heading to the petty screen. While their romance onscreen doesn't pour out as much PDA as the book does (in it, Holiday kisses Lofty on top of the head and calls her “dear”), their mere appearance on the demonstrate is a beat for some fans.

Take a look at the excitement already bu

LGBTQ+ themes in My Petite Pony

This article is a topic. It is meant to illustrate a theme, motif or recurring element throughout the My Minuscule Pony franchise. As such, it's not truly an in-universe or out-of-universe article, but more of an essay of sorts.

"With Josh and Nicole running the final season together, it was something we all wanted to perform — bring this out couple into the terminal season and make them [LGBTQ+ people] ‘officially’ a part of the MLP world. My Little Pony has always been about friendship and accepting people (or ponies) that are different from you. So it just felt enjoy something important to do."
— Michael Vogel[1]

As societal norms change and progress, LGBT representation in My Little Pony progressed greatly. In the after time 2010s, numerous characters were confirmed to be Homosexual and a handful of new ones were introduced. In an out-of-universe perspective, My Little Pony was the target of numerous anti-LGBTQ+ controversies and strikes, due to its depiction of rainbows and other iconography attributed with Gay culture in the earlier seasons, to outrage regarding same-sex couples in the later seasons.

LGBTQ+ histor