by MATTHEW GAULT
Back in 2013, a U.S. Air Force unit training to fly America’s most advanced military aircraft wore a patch inspired by the television show My Little Pony: Friendship is Magic.
The Air Force confirmed it: bronies were flying jets.
“We train world-class pilots who will go on to defend our great nation,” said 1st Lt. Tom Barger, a public affairs officer at Vance Air Force Base in Oklahoma. “Fostering camaraderie, morale and unity on a regular basis and through small means—like a tastefully humorous patch—enhances our ability to complete the mission when working as a team is essential.”
The pink and purple patch—first spotted by My Little Pony fan site Equestria Daily—and worn by 24 flight students from Joint Undergraduate Specialized Pilot Class 14-05, referenced the cable cartoon show about a team of magical ponies.
Although criticized by some as a cynical bid to get children to purchase plastic pony products (it was a reboot of a program from the 1980s), the show—which aired weekday afternoons on the Hub Network—became a cult phenomenon that spread to the armed forces.
My Little Pony was also perhaps one of the most talked-about subjects on the internet in 2013, with a fourth season on the way, a myriad of conventions, a Reddit presence containing dozens of subforums and thousands of memes.
It was also controversial. My Little Pony was not just popular with its target audience—young girls and their parents—but had an avid following among adult males known by the portmanteau of bro and ponies: bronies. A Facebook group for military bronies existed. But this appeared to be the first brony unit in the military.
“Talking with a class member, the patch was kind of a fluke,” Barger said. “During a slideshow presentation while previewing the different patch options, the presenter threw the ‘My Little Pilot’ patch design into the mix as a joke. For whatever reason, that patch made it all the way through the approval process.”
The patch wasn’t embraced by everyone in the unit. “There was at least one non-brony who straight up refused to wear it and I overheard another complaining to his mom about it,” said a commenter who claimed to be one airman’s stepmother. “But the flight instructor (who was a captain) was wearing it and he had no problems with his masculinity.”
But according to Barger, the students of the 14-05 didn’t see themselves as bronies at all. “The class never really wanted it in the first place,” he said. “They thought it was so off-the-wall that it was hilarious.”
Where Wonderbolts dare
Vance Air Force Base is one of the four U.S. training centers where commissioned officers become professional pilots.
Typically, it works like this. First, a unit completes 24 days of academics and then trains for 90 days on the T-6 Texan II training plane. Next, the class splits into two sections, or “tracks,” for 38 weeks of training on a more specialized plane.
One track is training with the T-38 Talon, which is used to train pilots who go on to fly the F-16 Fighting Falcon, B-52 Stratofortress bomber and the F-22 Raptor. Other students in the unit train on the T-1 Jayhawk, a more commercial-style plane similar to freighters, airlifters and tanker aircraft.
The Air Force is also no different from the other branches in terms of tradition. When a group of student pilots (known as a JSUPT) begins training at Vance, it picks a class patch. This patch is an esprit de corps; meant to bond the group in a spirit of camaraderie. And in order for a JSUPT class to get a patch, it submits a number of designs to the brass.
Many of the patches submitted include pop culture references: The Hangover, Facebook and the “Got Milk” ad campaign have all been adopted in the past. Because of this, the Air Force has to seek approval from the copyright holders. Sometimes the holders approve it. Sometimes they don’t. My Little Pony and the Hub Network’s parent company, Hasbro, approved. The other patch designs submitted by the 14-05 didn’t get cleared.
Hence, Air Force bronies.
But the humor of a group of Air Force students training with My Little Pony patches aside, it was actually quite fitting. The show made no bones about the magical power of comradery among a group of elite, flying ponies—friendship is ultimately the only way to beat the bad guys in every episode. The Air Force seemed to welcome it.
“They have embraced the irony and humor of the patch and in so doing have fostered closer ties with each other,” Barger said.
Though it was a fluke, the student pilots of the 14-05 could not have worn a more appropriate patch.
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