adiwan wrote:He has really climbed to villain status whereas he was only a questionable motivation coach before.
He's at least as villainous as late-stage capitalism is. Which is to say, very.

After having seen the movie just yesterday, I'm highly inclined to compare Twilight here to her role there, but that's still under the spoiler moratorium. So instead, considering her concerns about being a good princess, I find it interesting now how she's willing to extend that even to the point of doing a good job at being a smiling figurehead. I remember way back in Twilight's Kingdom when she would've utterly dismissed such duties were it not for the fact that she kind of
had to undertake them, so to now see her being concerned about doing that well too speaks to how she's considered all parts of her role since then. Had she, instead of Starlight, been the main one involved in the events of A Royal Problem (another episode that talks about how even professional smiling figureheads like Celestia aren't constantly like that in their personal lives), I wonder if maybe she might not have volunteered herself quite so readily as she did here.
Mr. Big wrote:From the autograph book Twilight signed:

Signatures aren't always all that legible, but boy howdy is Twilight's bad.
