CommandSpry wrote:I agree, I also believe that all World of Warcraft players like to shove their remotes up their ass and destroy monitors because of changed passwords.
He's got a point though.
When it comes to a large gaming community, people already know that there's over the top gamers that punch through their monitors when something goes horribly wrong with their game. Usually segments like these are simply shown for entertainment purposes, vs educational purposes.
The segments about bronies on the other hand, are usually new and something people don't know about, so to create more feedback, they'll probably show something like this:

This was taken at the most recent anthrocon IIRC.
Now, I've got absolutely nothing against furries, or sonic fans, or pretty much any other fandom, but considering how relatively new our fandom is, I think it's important we try to avoid the mistakes other fandoms have already made.
Which sort of goes into the whole thing about love and tolerance. There's a delicate line between deliberately oppressing people's freedom to do what they like, to letting everything slide and not giving a care about how others view us.
It might be pretty easy for a teenage kid to be like, "Why are saucy images such a big deal on EqD?" when that kid is living at home, and keeps his brony status to himself. For someone like him, it doesn't matter what PR bronies have, because it doesn't affect him.
On the other hand, there's people like me, who are open about liking the show, and show things about the fandom to family, coworkers, and friends. You start caring more about PR when you're explaining the show to somebody else who's opinion of bronies is nothing more than the bad publicity.
For example:
- In May I had to explain to a pilot at my squadron how MLP is not about r34. Up until then his only experience with bronies were ones that posted porn on a forum he visited.
A fandom shouldn't be something that requires an explanation. A Star Wars/Star Trek fan doesn't need to worry about people freaking out when they mention they are a fan, or try to show others the movies and/or show.
With MLP, it's already hard enough to explain the quality in the show, but trying to explain that is much easier than trying to explain that you aren't into kinky horses.
So yeah, for those of us who are open bronies, PR is a pretty big deal.