//------------------------------// // Episode 1 // Story: Now It's Our Problem // by SisterHorseteeth //------------------------------// The EweChannel video begins in medias res. Well, if ‘in medias res’ meant ‘before the camera was supposed to start recording’. Pre medias res? The editing interface of a slideshow presentation program lurches nakedly onto the screen, spoiling the first half-dozen or so slides. “Are we going?”, asks the dull, nasal voice of a woman who sounds like a deeply-bored, middle-aged professor. “I still have no idea how this thing works.” The last time she spoke on this channel, about three-and-a-half years ago, she was a preteen girl who still somehow sounded like a bored, middle-aged professor. “Seriously?! Did we not just rehearse this?”, hisses a shriller voice, straining to vent her critique while simultaneously making as little noise as possible. “Don’t start the recording if you’re not ready.” “I wanted to make sure everything else was working, too.” silicapacket99 hovers between the programs in her taskbar, hunting for something and eventually pouncing on the screen recorder, which opens up to reveal a recursive spiral of delayed screen-captures that can only lead into the primordial void before creation. “Ah, good. It’s recording.” “Yes, I know it’s recording, dearie. The red dot on your taskbar told me as much. How many years have you done this without figuring that out?” “Oh, I already knew. This is what is known as a ‘joke’.” “I’m not laughing.” “That’s intentional. Frustrating and infuriating you on purpose is the–” “–Is the most reliable legal way to get me to come out of my shell. Yes, yes, I know; you’re right; thank you, Dottoressa. Well. I suppose ‘co-host’ is a speaking role. Now, would you be so kind as to quit wasting your own hard-drive space already? At least until the rest of us are here?” The host clicks over to Clarity, the audio editor, where two screen-names can be seen in the audio feed: “MysteriousFlareDoWell” and “podcast”. MysteriousFlareDoWell’s equalizer bars flare up as the chiding continues, “And, forgive me my pride, but remind me why on Pedes I’m not in charge, again? You know, since you always come to me for tech support, anyways?” “Because you’re such a neurotic perfectionist that you’d never finish editing,“ Professor Podcast plainly answers. “You remember the Chance to Prance.” “…Ugh. Granted, I’d certainly prefer not to be mugged at pendantpoint again, all for an unfinished MP4 file – but we can’t put out something this sloppy. What happened to upholding CPA’s excellence?” “Awh, how adorable!~ You sound just like your mother!”, interjects a third girl, with the worst mic quality you’ve ever heard. “Shame that attitude led to her resigning in disgrace.” “Can I not go five minutes without being compared to her?”, the mama’s girl mutters. “And hey! What is with your audio quality?! Why aren’t you on Clarity?!” “I would also like to know why you’re shouting into my mic from across the room,” the host says, nonplussed. “–She’s what–?” “Oh, MoMo wanted to borrow my mic for her garage band, and, delightful friend that I am, I let her!~ Then she lost it. Under my name.” FlareDoWell lets out a withering sigh. “And the librarian won’t let you borrow another, I presume. Look, how about we tell our guest to postpone for another thirty minutes? I’ll run over and loan you one of my spares, and as a plus, I’ll bring my mic so the three of us can all record in the same room.” Suddenly, a third name pops up in the audio feed: CranberryCommissar666. “No need!~”, the Commissar declares, her audio quality only marginally improved. “I found a spare in my desk.” “That’s better,” state silicapacket99. “Is it really?”, whines FlareDoWell. “The quality, the unpreparedness… this is podcasting poison.” “I’ll cut it all out in post,” she assures her histrionic cohost. It was not cut out in post. “Are we ready now?”, she asks, tabbing over to the slideshow again. “No! We’re waiting on our–” The boop of another connection signal cuts FlareDoWell off. As the host tabs back over to Clarity, the fourth guest, PhoenixRising, apologizes, “I’m sorry, everybody! There was a ‘First Guest Spot On A Podcast’ surprise party waiting for me when I got home. I tried to slip away as soon as I could!” The clinking of flatware on a plate is just barely audible on her feed. “Get us some leftover cake and we’ll call it even,” the host states. “Deal.” FlareDoWell claps. “Alright, dearies, are we all ready to start?” The other two hosts and the guest establish that they’re all more or less ready-to-go whenever in a crash of crosstalk. “Then now, you may resume the recording.” The host once again tabs over to the powerpoint, and this time she actually hits the play button. A plain picture of a suburban highschool fills the screen. “We’ve been recording for the last three minutes.” A muffled groan bleeds through FlareDoWell’s hands, while Phoenix and the Commissar snicker at her pain. “…Let’s just roll introductions.” “Yes. Let’s,” silicapacket99 says. “Hello, and welcome to ‘Now It’s Our Problem’: a podcast about magical disasters.” “Which is, incidentally, also a disaster,” the Commissar cheerfully volunteers. FlareDoWell clarifies, “Of the distinctly non-magical kind.” “Yes,” affirms the host. “It also has a slideshow component. My name is Sugarcoat and I am the owner of this EweChannel account. My pronouns are she, her, herself, and so on. I am a senior at Crystal Preparatory Academy in Canterlot and, over the course of my education, I have personally witnessed a number of magical incidents. I also like to hear myself talk, so starting a podcast about it was only the logical next step.” Sugarcoat turns to the Commissar in real life and says, “Your turn,” her voice quieted by literally speaking away from the microphone. “Why hello there,” the Commissar coos, “I’m Sour Sweet!~ Pronouns are… whatever, she/her. I’m Sugarcoat’s dorm-mate at Crystal Prep and when I heard she was going to do this podcast without me, I threatened to kick her ass bluer than it already is.” The blue girl is utterly unfazed. “I was going to ask you anyway. You just ambushed me in the girls’ locker room before I could do so.” “How thoughtful. Aren’t you just the sweetest?~” “I am.” “Anyhow,” grumbles Sour, “I was there for the Friendship Games Fiasco of 2015 and have craved that kind of chaos ever since. Could you imagine if Crystal Prep got magic powers, too?” The guest audibly shudders. “Yeah, that’s right! Quiver in fear! The Commissar of Laughter is here!” “I think that’s why Harmony didn’t pick you guys,” Phoenix proposes. Sour doesn’t seem to notice. “…It’s not fair. Your girl can just turn cupcakes into hand-grenades, but if I want to do some, to quote MoMo, ‘sicknasty Eagleeye shit’ with exploding arrows for funsies, I have to have awkward conversations with federal agents at my door asking me questions about the recipes I’ve been looking up online…” “Moving on,” FlareDoWell interjects, “I’m your third host, Sunny Flare (@scareflare on Ritter and you will never learn my MyStable handle). As for pronouns… she/her, for the time being.” “Awwwww, you and ‘they’ had a falling-out?”, teases Sour. “Give ‘them’ a month,” grunts Sugarcoat. “‘They’ will come crawling back.” Sunny resignedly confirms this. “‘They’ always does. –Do. –Ugh. …This is why I dumped ‘them’.” Dramatically sighing, she continues, “I am, of course, also a senior at Crystal Preparatory Academy, and was likewise present for the Friendship Games. The three of us were, in fact, among our school’s top five competitors fielded for the competition, for which we all bear a significant degree of culpability in the disruption thereof.” “This is not a confession of legal guilt,” Sugarcoat hastily insists, “and we bear no legal responsibility for the irresponsible actions of one former Principal Abacus Cinch, on account of we were dumb teenagers and she was a grown woman placed in direct responsibility of her students.” “…Right,” Sunny uncomfortably agrees, her voice much quieter. “Ever am I grateful for quality headphones. I do believe Mother’s downstairs right now, and it would be most unfortunate were she to overhear the things that may be said about her over the course of these programs. I did not agree to this venture just to have a platform for defaming my mother in the comfort of our shared home.” Dropping to a whisper, she adds, “Not exclusively, at least.” “But before we can dive deep into all of our numerous psychological hangups,” Sour announces, “we have a guest!” “We have a guest,” agrees Sugarcoat. “Guest, introduce yourself.” “Uh, hi!”, stammers PhoenixRising through a mouthful of cake, her fork clattering loudly onto her plate. Swallowing, she continues, “I’m Sunset Shimmer! She/her!” “Why are you here?”, growls Sour. “…Because you guys asked me to be here?” In a reassuring tone of voice, Sunny says, “Tell us your qualifications, dearie.” “Oh! Right. I’m Pedestria’s foremost expert on Equestrian magic and lore, though I’ve definitely got some close competition.” “Attagirl, Wily-Twily,” Sour interjects. “She’s amazing,” Sunset says, warmth spilling out of her voice. “Now, personally, I had a couple of reservations about being on this podcast, but when you guys explained the idea behind it, I realized my expertise could really help you do some good.” “For which we must thank you dearly,” Sunny gratefully purrs. “This would have been a comedy of ignorance without you.” “You’re welcome. Also, I attended the school that’s on the screen right now. That’s Canterlot High School.” “The enemy,” Sunny states, 180-ing almost as sharply as Sour Sweet. “The enemy,” her cohorts agree, chanting on instinct. “…Go, Wondercolts,” Sunset awkwardly counters. “But yeah. I’m here to explain the ‘magic’ part of a magical disaster.” “But before we can talk about magic,” Sugarcoat continues, moving on to the next slide, “first we have to ask ourselves: what is a horse?” A prime example of Equus ferus caballus, plucked straight from Giggle Image Search, flashes onto the screen: black of coat, with dull sandy hair, standing alone in a windswept field of dry grass. “Hey, where’d you get this photo of me?”, demands Sunset. “Those were private!” “It doesn’t even remotely look like you.” “Besides,” adds Sour, “I thought you were one of the special horses.” “Horses Plus,” as Sunny politely rephrases it. “Ah, you got me,” Sunset admits. “I’ve never seen this guy in my entire life.” “You can tell he’s a stallion, dearie?” “Uh, yeah? …You can’t?” Before Sunny can explain, Sour asks Sunset, without an ounce of shame, “So is he hot?” “Sour!”, Sunny pleads. With a snort, Sunset just as casually says, “Nah. All the equines here look weird.” Then, hastily, she adds, “Wait, scat, that isn’t pseudo-tribalist, is it?”, with an urgency like her entire self-worth hinged on the answer to that question. “I don’t think he cares,” Sugarcoat assures her. “Anyways, we still haven’t answered the question. Define ‘horse’ for me, please.” There’s a bit of crosstalk, as the other three all give their answers at once: “You invited one as your guest speaker,” says Sunset. “Fifteen-hundred pounds of hooves and health problems,” Sour answers. Sunny also suggests, “Meg Carthy’s most neurotic creatures.” Catching what the others said, Sunset grumbles, “…I wish I could say either of you were wrong.” “These are all correct answers,” confirms Sugarcoat, “except for the part about Meg Carthy. This is a Faustian podcast.” “To each her own–”, Sunny tries to say– – Before getting cut off as Sour leans in close to the mic and lustily growls, “Hail Hasrro, the Infernal Toymaker!” She ends up blowing out her microphone, so the rest of her rant comes through Sugarcoat’s. ”We all go to His workshop when we die!” Sunset chuckles. “Wow, I almost cut myself on the edge there.” And Sugarcoat joins in. “Yeah, get a real religion, Sour.” A few seconds later, her microphone picks up a meaty slap. “Ow,” she performatively grunts. It doesn’t sound like she was actually hurt at all. “Hey, you guys are friends, right?”, Sunset asks. “Yes, dearie.” “Obviously, yes.” “Of course!~ Ride-or-die.” “Just checking.” “M-hm.” Seeming to give up on naturalistic transitions from their tangents back to the subject matter, Sugar just goes for it cold. “The thing about horses is that there’s an alternate dimension in which everybody is one of those.” Sour snorts. “More like everypony. Eh?” “Yes, that’s… the word we use,” Sunset explains. “You’re serious? That’s funny. Cute, but funny.” Sugarcoat pushes forward. “Instead of Pedes, their planet is called Equus, and it’s inhabited entirely by talking horses. Is that correct?” “Nnnnnnnnnot quite. It’s more than just the horses that can talk. Not even just the equines; basically any ungulate can speak – and also some other species, for some reason? That’s one of the weird things about Pedes I’ve noticed: sure, crows, dolphins, and elephants are regularly as intelligent as humans – or at least, that’s what Fluttershy tells me – but only the humans get to talk. That seems kinda unfair.” “I would like to talk to Corvus,” Sugarcoat admits. “I wonder what he thinks of my family’s business.” “What’s your family do?” “Funerals.” “Oh.” “He’d probably just mock you for wasting good meat,” Sour teases. A bit apprehensively, Sunset suggests, “If you really wanna know, you should take him to Fluttershy. I’m sure she’d be thrilled to translate caw for you.” “That sounds fun. Anyways, the reason we brought you on is that you’re one of those talking horses from Equus.” “That’s right! Though, technically, one: for the sake of the viewers, I turned into a human when I got here; and two: I’m a pony. Not much real difference there; we’re just smaller.” Sunny rejoins the conversation with an excited, “Oh, my – is that so? Like the ones we saw through those fissures?” “Yep! Just a little pony.” “That’s adorable, dearie. Please tell me you have pictures.” “I… don’t have any on-hoof – er, hand – since we haven’t had a lot of luck bringing technology between worlds, but… maybe I can work something out?” A photograph of a smiling pony mare (looking a lot more cat-like than a Pedesly pony), with a coat of amber and a fiery mane, gets pasted overtop the original horse with the caption, |This is Sugarcoat in post. Sunset and the Twilights figured something out.| Notably, the pony form of Sunset has a pointy horn sticking out of her head. Her big, blue eyes sparkle with pride, and branded on her butt is a Meskiddan-styled sun with a sort of yin-yang flow between its red and yellow halves. “I pray that you do.” Then, a question occurs to Sunny: “Would you say that the pony is to one of Token’s dwarfs as the tall horses are to the tall-men?” “…A little less stone-mining and metal-smithing, and a lot more field-frolicking and carrot-farming.” “So, a halfling, then?” “…Maybe if halflings had uncontested mastery over the sun, the moon, the stars, and all the forces of physics.” There’s a certain cockiness to her answer. Sunny flare slaps her desk with her slender hands. “Oh my gosh. You’re a gnome.” Immediately, Sour fires out, “Sunset Gnomer.” “Sunset Gnomer”, echoes Sugarcoat, in agreement. Weakly, hollowly, as though the world has been ripped out from underneath her, Sunset mumbles, “…I’m a gnome…” “And what kind of gnome were you, Sunset Shimmer? When I asked why Rainbow Dash and Fluttershy get wings when the others don’t, I was told it had something to do with different kinds of ponies.” Shaking off the shocks, Sunset stammers, “Right, right. They’re called tribes, and there are… three or four tribes of them, depending on who you ask. I’m a unicorn, but there are also winged pegasi, strong earth ponies, and some ponies consider alicorns a tribe of their own. Allegedly, there were also sea ponies at one point. I thought they were just a myth until I met the sirens, but now I’m not so sure.” “An alicorn – those are the King-Gnomes, correct? Describe them for us.” “Well, it’s funny you call them kings, since they’re actually all female and style themselves as princesses instead of queens. An alicorn is a very rare kind of pony that combines all three tribes into one immortal, powerful being. Except for pony Cadance’s kid, they’re created by some powerful spell used on a regular pony.” “Dean–” Quietly, so as not to be overheard by her mother, Sunny corrects herself. “Principal Cadance had a kid?” “Princess Cadance, Alicorn of Love, had a foal, yeah – and assuming Princess Twilight wasn’t playing a prank on me, that foal was a naturalborn alicorn.” “With who?”, demands Sour. “‘Whom’, dearie.” Thanks, Sunny. “And I can only assume it’s the pony analogue of Security Officer Shining Armor.” Though she says his title with some disdain, she takes no issue with the man by his name. “It would be a cosmic sin to part the Innamorati in any universe.” “You’re pretty much spot on, other than him being the Royal Guard-Captain before he became a Prince-Consort.” “I knew it.” “Everybody knew it,” Sugarcoat says, dismissively. “They made Jet Set and Upper Crust look like loveless Spuritans. I should know; Rockville’s full of them.” “I’m just now realizing,” says Sunny, “that that makes fully three principals who just happen to be immortal alicorn princesses on the other side. Please, oh please,” she begged, “don’t tell me my mother’s an alicorn princess, too.” “Take it easy, Sunny,” Sunset says, in a soothing voice. “There’s no Princess Cinch in the history books, as far as I studied them.” “Then I needn’t pray for her subjects.” Sugarcoat speaks up. “We should probably mention that everybody has a doppelgänger on the other side. Although we have no idea who our own alternates are, apparently, for each of Sunset’s friends here, our Twilight’s pony double has one of their doubles for a friend there.” “Except for you, Sunset Shimmer. What did you do to human Sunset?”, accuses Sour. “Killed and ate her. Next question.” The hosts burst into a fit of laughter that they take a solid minute to recover from. Sour is the loudest, wheezing and cackling like the lovechild between a rabid hyena and an asthmatic pig. Meanwhile, Sunny Flare has a high-pitched, whickering snicker that it sounds like she’s stifling behind hands crossed over her mouth, lest some jailor of hers catch her having fun. Sugarcoat’s nasally snorting rounds out the lower end of the spectrum, sounding closer to someone just saying “Haaaaah” over and over again than actual laughter. Still, this cacophony is contagious, and Sunset gets in on it, too. Her laugh is… somewhere in the middle: heartier than Sugarcoat’s, freer than Sunny’s, and less deranged than Sour’s. When she was finally able to talk, Sunset explained, “For real, though, I did some research – I’m told she went to Crystal Prep actually?” “I remember,” confirms Sunny. “She was only there for part of her freshman year, while I was still in middle school.” Sugarcoat handled the explanation where Sunny might have needed to hush herself again. “She tried to fistfight then-Principal Cinch, so after she got expelled, the foster system transferred her to Rockville Military Academy to learn some discipline.” “Yikes. Sorry to hear that. I hope she didn’t rough your mom up too bad, Sunny.” Her apology comes as if she was responsible for her double’s actions. It was, however, Sour that replied, not Sunny. “Are you kidding?~ Withered old hag versus snotty dweeb who thinks she can fight because she plays violent video games. I’d be surprised if either of them walked away with more than a light bruise.” “…I guess she didn’t have anything equivalent to a natural talent for magic and years of Royal training.” “Actually, that leads me to my next question, dearie. Pardon me, but how did you come to know an alicorn Princess, exactly?” “We – Cadance and I – both grew up in Princess Celestia’s palace. She took the both of us in and made us her students.” Sunset sighs. “I was a huge nag to her – ‘nag’ is the pony equivalent to ‘bitch’, by the way.” “Oh, hell yeah. Tell me all the pony swears,” demands Sour Sweet. “Okay, lemme just pull up my handwritten list of all my favorite speciesist slurs, which I will now read live on air:” Sunset then just says “Beeeeeeeeeeeeeeeep” for a solid twenty seconds, until she needs to catch her breath. By the end, Sour is cackling again. “I have a soundboard,” scoffs Sunny. “I think–” She hits a silent button, and it makes an actual studio-style beep. “I can just do that. If you want to surprise the listener for a gag, just message me on Harmony when you need it.” “Thanks. But look,” Sunset continues, “maybe I’ll give you guys a ‘pony etiquette’ lesson about all the things you shouldn’t say sometime when we’re not putting our names and voices on EweChannel. It would be nice to know how not to make an [BLEEP] – oh, scat, that’s one of them, oops–” “You do have to warn me, though, dearie.” “I’ll bleep it in post,” grumbles Sugarcoat. “Regardless, it’s not a slur here, should any asinines be listening to this in the future,” interceded Miss Flare. “Among humans, that word is nothing more than an impolite word for the buttocks,” she says, with a blush you can almost hear, “when it is not referring to one of those donkeys here to whom Meg Carthy did not extend the gift of intellect.” “That really doesn’t make it better,” Sunset said, grimacing. “…We’re definitely gonna need both Rarities to write the rules of conduct, once we figure out interdimensional tourism. “But yeah, I should probably go on a Princesses-of-Equestria apology tour. I already apologized to Celestia for being such an awful filly, but I really don’t think it’ll ever be enough.” There’s an awkward moment of silence before Sunset continues with her original thread. “Okay, so, right, I was Princess Celestia’s personal magic student. Not to keep dwelling on the past, but I was a little brat who wanted to learn the secrets of magic that would let me become an alicorn. To make a long story short… Celestia showed me the Mirror Portal that connects our worlds, I got caught researching it in the forbidden archives, and Celestia banished me from the palace. Instead of accepting my punishment, I snuck back in and leapt through the mirror to find myself in a strange, new world and in a weird, new body.” “They don’t have humans at all on Equus, do they?”, asks Sunny. “There are some talking apes – I think that Storm King guy was one? Or maybe he was a monkey – but that’s as close as it gets.” Sour shudders. “I hate apes.” Sugarcoat is quick to point out, “You are an ape. Taxonomically.” “That doesn’t change anything.” Sunny says to Sunset, “It has to have been quite a shock to go from hooves to opposable thumbs.” “A little, sure, but the bipedalism, and the lack of a horn to cast magic with, threw me off far worse. Picking things up with these hands instead of magic was easier than letting go of the ability to set things on fire with my mind.” “…Sorry, I know I’m getting hung up on a minor detail, but how do non-unicorns manipulate things?” “Pegasi use their feathers.” “And these earth ponies?” “By mouth and hoof.” “Eurgh. That sounds unsanitary.” “I’m… not sure germs work the same on Equus as they do here? Don’t quote me on that.” “…Right.” “Anyways, I’m really lucky the portal thought to give me clothes. And a smartphone. And identification papers. And it turned the Equestrian bits I had in my saddlebags into a bunch of hundred-dollar bills, so that was nice, too. I would have been so screwed if it just spat me out buck-naked and flat broke in the middle of the suburbs.” “Girls,” Sunny solemnly declares, “I have an idea for a get-rich-quick scheme.” “More like an over-inflate-the-economy-and-get-the-revenue-service-jumping-down-your-throat scheme,” Sugarcoat counters. “Phooey.” “We can’t let Indigo know about that,” Sour adds, punctuated by the hiss-and-fizz of a freshly-popped carbonated beverage bleeding through her microphone. Sunny groans. “Seriously? You couldn’t wait?” “Hell no. Mama Sour needs her sugar.” When someone else’s microphone picks up the sound of a bottlecap popping off and rattling on her desk, Sour then shouts, “Drink check! I’ve got a nice cranberry Breezy.” Again turning to face her dorm-mate in real life, Sugarcoat says, “I thought that was a seasonal flavor.” You could hear the shrug in Sour’s voice. “Being friends with a lemon-lime-soda-heiress has its perks. What do you got?” “Nothing.” “Idiot. I’d hate to see you dry out…~” She got dangerously close to finding a way to say ‘