🐱 “Pinecone & Pony” Gives Us the Animated Queer Nonbinary Couple We’ve Been Waiting For - Why do all these things look the same

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I don’t know about you, but I’ve been starting to panic a little bit about where I’m going to get my gay cartoons and superhero stories, with Netflix pulling the plug on so many animated things, the CW doing an entire Queer Culling, and The Owl House‘s second season coming to a close. Hark! A Hope! Kate Beaton’s New York Times best-selling book, Pinecone & Pony, has been adapted by DreamWorks Animation and First Generation Films for Apple TV, and it features queer story editor Taneka Stotta, nonbinary writers Pilot Viruet and Gigi D.G., and a queer/nonbinary storyline between Rachel House’s Gladys and her partner Ser Anzoategui‘s Wren!

And, friends, it is C U T E.

Pinecone & Pony, like all the best cartoons, follows a plucky heroine on magical adventures as she faces down dragons, giants, trolls, and all the hard parts of growing up, like figuring out how to share your friends and conquer your insecurities and be the best you even when things are tough. If that sounds like little kid stuff, that’s because it is little kid stuff. Unlike Steven Universe, Adventure Time, She-Ra and the Princesses of Power, and Legend of Korra, Pinecone & Pony is aimed at younger audiences. Even younger than The Owl House. Like My Little Pony: Friendship Is Magic audiences — and there’s never been a better time for it, as old school homophobia and a dozen new ways to legally persecute trans people make headlines all over the world. And, you know, Disney’s general bullshit.

In episode six, “In Plain Sight,” Pinecone and Pony show up to (magic) school and find out it’s plant day. Their teacher, Gladys, is especially excited about the wacky horticulture they’ll be learning because they have a special guest instructor: “They are talented,” Gladys beams. “They are glorious! Their warmth outshines the sun! Please welcome: my partner, Wren!” Everyone cheers, including me. I’ve been missing Ser Anzoategui fiercely since Vida; it is so great to see them back on my screen, even the animated version.

“In Plain Sight” is as stress-free and low-stakes as every episode of Pinecone & Pony. Pinecone wants to work with her best friend, who gets paired up with another student and a Timberwolf puppy, which is a log that acts like a little dog! She and her partner, who she doesn’t know and thinks is weird, get a snake plant that feels boring by comparison. What’s worse, Pinecone’s best friend bonds with his new partner and tells her about their secret waterfall. In the end, Pinecone learns that her partner, Fauna, is actually very cool too. She saves Pinecone’s arm, which gets stuck inside the snake plant, and Pinecone invites her to join them at the waterfall too.

Wren and Gladys are both super proud when Pinecone gives back her plant badge and says that Fauna did all the work, and she’ll earn her badge another time, fairly.

I meant to just watch the one episode of Pinecone & Pony, but once the theme song got stuck in my head — “You’re a waaaarrrior!” — I blitzed through all eight of them. You, too, can stream them right now, for a chill and adorable good time, on Apple TV! (And, for more nonbinary animated rep for a slightly older audience: Steven Universe, always.)

 
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I see the so-called "journalists" are trying to learn French, now.

It's spelt "oui", and it doesn't mean what you think it means.
 
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I once was sitting back one comfy saturday morning. Just watching the old Tom and Jerry. Dad walked in and said "Why are you watching this. You're 14 years old start acting like an adult and watch something for grownups." Being a Baby Boomer he changed the channel to History (when it was the Hitler Channel) where they were playing a 20 part series on Erwin Rommel.

Dad would scold me today if he knew I spend precious freetime chit chatting with randos about internet trainwrecks on a Moldovan Gossip Forum. But he'd surely be relieved knowing his son wasn’t a total manchild watching Tumblr garbage.

I'm not the best, but I take comfort that I'm nowhere near the worst (like whatever the fuck this writer is).
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I once was sitting back one comfy saturday morning. Just watching the old Tom and Jerry. Dad walked in and said "Why are you watching this. You're 14 years old start acting like an adult and watch something for grownups." Being a Baby Boomer he changed the channel to History (when it was the Hitler Channel) where they were playing a 20 part series on Erwin Rommel.

Dad would scold me today if he knew I spend precious freetime chit chatting with randos about internet trainwrecks on a Moldovan Gossip Forum. But he'd surely be relieved knowing his son wasn’t a total manchild watching Tumblr garbage.

I'm not the best, but I take comfort that I'm nowhere near the worst (like whatever the fuck this writer is).
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Thanks for your post.
 
Just watching the old Tom and Jerry. Dad walked in and said "Why are you watching this. You're 14 years old start acting like an adult and watch something for grownups."
Tom & Jerry is timeless. When I was a child, they were still airing episodes from decades ago, I'll still watch Tom & Jerry now and I'll still laugh at it because it's a good show.

These queer shows will be forgotten in a year because they'll age like cheese on a summer day.
 
Again, I’d be willing to give these a try if some more effort other than I’m gay was put into them. The animation from the still is awful. This whole fucking “derpy” fad in animation needs to die.
I liked Kate Beaton's Hark! A Vagrant! stuff, even though she obviously was pozzed. Her art style was derpy, but it was also flexible, and the humor she could get out of it was good. And I'm a sucker for history humor. But still. She's pozzed to hell.

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Tom & Jerry is timeless. When I was a child, they were still airing episodes from decades ago, I'll still watch Tom & Jerry now and I'll still laugh at it because it's a good show.

These queer shows will be forgotten in a year because they'll age like cheese on a summer day.
Oh for sure. And I still love to zone out and watch old Looney Tunes from time to time.

But the generational decline when it comes to entertainment is so damn depressing. There's nothing wrong with being a full grown adult and watching a silly cartoon every now and then. Albert Einstein claimed to have watched Beanie & Cecil (a really dumb cartoon honestly). But adults used to read novels, sure it was commonly pulp writers like Raymond Chandler but still it was actually sitting down and reading. Now you clearly do have a real percentage of people who just watch meaningless crap. It's depressing.

Look at the films society watched a generation ago and compare it to crap we get today. A decent Billy Wilder movie has more worth than the entire MCU.
 
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