>> |
04/19/11(Tue)02:23 No.25242435 File1303194200.jpg-(130 KB, 550x440, suniamdisappoint.jpg)
How about we talk about our ideas for episodes?
Opening scene: Twilight entertaining Rarity at home, with Spike, who gets a letter from Celestia. The Princess is very pleased with Twilight, and thinks she can be trusted with new kinds of magic. She asks Twilight to respond with information on when she can be ready to receive her sister, Luna, to teach her. Twilight immediately starts panicking, but figures with the travel time from canterlot she can be prepared, so she say's she's available any time, not wanting to keep a princess waiting. But, whoops! Moments after the sending, Luna just teleports in beside her! Cue opening.
Twilight learns from Luna over the first half of the episode, but she's not the same kind, nurturing type of teacher as Celestia, and Twilight gets stressed out when she gets no positive feedback. At the same time, Luna is freaked out by the ponies of ponyville, who try the same formal servitude that they do with Celestia, not realizing Luna is uncomfortable with it and stressed at having to keep up the regal behaviour. She responds by just being more aloof, which makes the ponies try harder.
Twilight tries to work even harder on the new magic by going out and practicing at night, and in the process accidentally rouses the hydra of froggy bottom bog. As it rampages towards ponyville, Luna saves the day by transforming into another giant monster, wrestling it back to its home and getting incredibly dirty and messed up in the process. With that, Twilight confesses her guilt in waking the hydra and languishes over her failure to succeed with Luna's teachings, and Luna finally responds that Twilight is actually doing excellently - she just never felt she had to say it.
The moral for the episode is that just because someone doesn't act friendly, they're not necessarily mean; give them space to be comfortable and they might respond better. |