Talk:Rarity/@comment-26258430-20151206223533/@comment-25559529-20160125235344

One prime example is in Canterlot Boutique, in which the conflict is that Rarity makes business decision that she herself is unhappy with. In her song, she treats her personal interest as an obligation for success and acts on it throughout the rest of the episode, even to the point of yelling at the pony meant to market the dresses... for marketing one of the dresses.

In the episode, Rarity grows intrusive. When Rarity is unhappy with her own decisions, she projects that onto an innocent employee. And that's it. She projects herself into her success, but when she has problems caused by what she decides, she frames her employee as in the wrong for doing her job properly. This is not the first nor the last time that an episode's plot bends over backwards to suit Rarity's ego. When Rarity was upset, it must be the fault of others involved because her ego demanded it.

Rarity then tries to go out of business without any consideration for how much work her employee has put into the job, and instead of the perfect opportunity to drop the ego for the sake of getting her job done, the Rarity becomes even more self-entitled.

It''s fine that Rarity is unhappy with her lackluster "creativity". But instead of trying to fix it, she projects her problems onto those around her. She is certainly a spoiled brat.