Fucking Day: Superhorse's Love Life
Added 2024-07-22 12:00:09 +0000 UTC
We need to talk about Superhorse's love life. The writers of Superman were very concerned about Superhorse getting laid. "How can he be both a superhero and a horse and not have a girlfriend?" They seemed to think. This horse is too dope not to get smooches.

So, to understand Superhorse's psyche, you must first understand that Comet the Superhorse is not a horse and is not named Comet, although Supergirl does continue to call him that long after learning his origin story (rude). He was born the centaur Biron in ancient Greece.

Biron saved Circe's life when he saw an evil sorcerer mixing up a potion to poison her, so she offered him a wish as thanks. And he wished to be human so he could have a shot at banging her. Luckily, she seemed pretty into Biron even as a centaur, so if that plan had worked perfectly, he might have had a shot. Biron's only mistake was falling in love with such a clumsy woman. It turns out Circe was a real Mr. Bean.

She brewed not one but two potions– one that would turn Brion human, and one that would make him fully a horse. They didn't really need that second potion but she thought it would be a fun bit. Unfortunately, she was real loosy goosy with her potion labeling and well…

So now that Biron was stuck as a horse, irreversibly, forever (that was also part of the potion apparently, which is so weird), Circe decided to give him another potion that granted him immortality and superpowers, including flight, as an I'm sorry gift. I, personally, would not have taken any more potions from Ms. "Whoops I guess you're a horse forever now, my B," but Biron was not a discerning potion taker.
So now Circe has this loyal immortal horse guarding her forever, and the sorcerer who tried to kill her earlier is not having that, so he creates yet another potion that banishes horse Biron to space where he is trapped alone for centuries. Then one day, the rocket containing Supergirl on her escape from Krypton flew by and somehow scienced that ancient sorcerer's magic to pieces, freeing Biron, who was so grateful he decided to become Supergirl's horse and not even complain when she kept calling him Comet.

So unlike Superdog, Streaky The Supercat, and Beppo The Supermonkey, Superhorse's powers have nothing to do with Krypton, or Kryptonite, or being an alien in any way. He's basically a horny old man trapped in a horse's body. This backstory is important to DC. They released a children's book in 2022 called DC Super-Pets! Comet! The Origin Of Supergirl's Horse, and I thought they would take that opportunity to retcon this absurdly horny horse story. Friends, they did not change a fucking word.

That is the most lecherous centaur smirk I've ever seen in an easy reader. They also repeat this story in the multiple comics where Biron turns into a man and romances both Supergirl and Lois Lane. It feels like they think the horse actually being a centaur makes this less weird. I personally think it makes it more weird when they make out with the horse.
When Superhorse is not in horse or centaur form, he's a human man who goes by the name Bronco Bill, Bronco Bill Biron, or Bronco Bill Starr. Wait, I thought you said the magic spell that made him into a horse could never be undone! Oh, it can. It actually can be done in a lot of ways. His sorcerer buddy made it so that whenever a comet passes near earth he can become human for a while.

Once he ran back in time and found Circe again and was like, "Remember when you said the horse spell could never be reversed? Hear me out, what if it could be?" It turns out Butterfingers McSorceress is actually totally able to turn animals into humans, whoops!

Also, when they retell Comet's origin story in later issues, they added a retcon where it was the evil sorcerer who switched the all-human potion for the all-horse potion. It seems like even making the all-horse potion and putting them in similar bottles was the huge mistake, but at least this version of the story makes Circe competent enough to receive repeat business from Biron. The point is, they thought about and tinkered with this story quite a bit and it's still barely not just sex with a horse.

Whether Brion is in horse or human form, he is always way into Supergirl. She's riding him to her dates, treating him like he's a damn Toyota Prius and he's silently pining for her as she tongues down Aquaman's nephew.

When Comet is able to become Bronco Bill it's he who gets to mack down with Supergirl. Yes, Supergirl is super into the human version of her horse. Whenever they cross paths she is down to make out with the horseman, both in her secret identity as Linda Lee Danvers, and as Supergirl.

It happens so fast you might think, "Wow, these two have instant chemistry. They are truly soulmates. Why can't Supergirl simply marry this immortal horse/centaur/man?"

Here's the thing, that's how Biron is with every woman. When he's a man, he's ready to fall in love with any old gal that comes along, as evidenced by his brief fling with Lois Lane. That's right, Superhorse stole Superman's girlfriend once.

This occurs in issue number 92 of Superman's Girlfriend Lois Lane, a comic they almost had to rename Superman's Sidekick's Horse's Girlfriend Lois Lane. This horse will not stop making out with people associated with Superman. Jimmy Olsen better watch out.

A comet passing by Earth causes Comet to assume his human form shortly after rescuing Lois Lane in the desert. Knowing he will need food and shelter as a human, he poses as the most shameful of professions, a magician, and gets a job at a hotel where Lois happens to be staying. They meet and end up falling for each other, and Superhorse is just like, "Guess what, I'm Superhorse," which Lois LOVES. She's not weirded out by the horse thing at all. She's super horny for learning someone's secret identity since a certain caped crusader has been so withholding.

So once again, Biron calls through time to Circe and asks her to make him human, BUT Circe is out of her cave and misses the call, which is then intercepted by none other than the diabolical Maldor, the evil sorcerer retconned into being responsible for Superhorses's horse state. Instead of turning Biron human, Maldor turns Lois into a horse and gives her superpowers for some reason. Making someone your enemy and also a giant wall of muscle that can fly seems like a bad idea, but the sorcerers in this comic are famously bad at their jobs.

Weirdly, this kind of works out in Biron's favor, though, because he can't stay human forever without Circe's intervention, and even then, as we all know, Circe is not that reliable. So, when the comet passes, and Biron becomes Superhorse again, he and his horse Lois frolic through space together and have a great time.

In the end, of course, Lois is changed back and forgets the part of the incident where she became a Superhorse. She does remember Biron's secret identity as Superhouse and promises to keep his secret, which will get real awkward for her if she ever runs into Supergirl with her boyfriend.

Biron might have had a fling with Lois but whenever he returns to horse form he is still fully into creeping on Supergirl. It's not like he can't tell Supergirl he's actually Bronco Bill. They can communicate telepathically, but not once does he say, "Stop calling me Comet," or "We made out twice," or "I am your boyfriend." He pretends to be a regular horse who has never frenched Supergirl under a rainbow because that might make things awkward!

Superhorse truly has one of the strangest and most tragic backstories, and DC is weirdly attached to it. Do they think a secret horse boyfriend is integral to Supergirl's identity? They've mostly written Superhorse out of modern comics, which makes me mad because "flying horse" is a fun concept. But it's difficult to disentangle Superhorse from his tendency to try and bang Supergirl. Supergirl's pet has two distinguishing features: flight and the fact that he sometimes becomes a man and kisses her. Unfortunately, in a universe that gets reset and rewritten every several years, superhorse sex is the one thing that can never be changed!

This article was brought to you by our fine sponsor and Hot Dog Supreme: ND, who was cursed by a Meat Witch to forever live as Super Ass, the donkey who's secretly hot!
You can read this article and every other one on the much better in every way 1900HOTDOG.COM.
Comments
I just realised the possibly accidental fittingness of a sometimes-horse called Comet being very sensitive to the approach of comets. Also the only thing I got to contribute here is how it's occasionally brought up that Superman and Lois Lane is technically an interspecies relationship. That apparently actually got brought up in-universe when a woman was dating Swamp Thing; she pointed out there's already precedent for a legally accepted relationship with a consenting, adult sentient non-human.
Swift Justice
2024-07-24 09:30:29 +0000 UTC1) The comet must pass at least 47,320,801 SFL (Standard Ferret Lengths) from Earth. 2)Zero times. 3)Because if you never try, then you never fail. 4)Because, in the DC Universe, being technically a sentient being trapped in a horses' body skirts around most planets' bestiality laws. And as we have seen in numerous Seanbaby articles, all super beings are the bad kind of pervy. 5)Barely paid artists+ worse paid writers+ unmeetable deadlines+ a wide variety of readily available mind altering substances= bug-fuck nuts stories, most of which are not going to be the good kind of crazy.
Former Fish Farmer
2024-07-24 00:56:40 +0000 UTCAlchemical herbalism requires balance. You can't craft a magic potion without also crafting its exact opposite. That's just natural philosophy.
Dave Dalrymple
2024-07-23 18:29:38 +0000 UTCSome of John Romita Sr.'s best work.
Dave Dalrymple
2024-07-23 18:24:23 +0000 UTCAnd given the vagueness of the conditions involved, wouldn't superhorse turn human whenever he, the horse named comet, crapped some dirt that had been previously described with a definite article? Seems like a small dietary additive could have solved this whole thing, but I might just be trying to justify the cost of my english masters. Well, this has been fun, but I need to leave for my minimum wage janitorial job at the rendering plant.
skjoldr
2024-07-23 05:35:02 +0000 UTCI once kissed my girlfriend while I was a superpowered horse. Though, I wasn't exactly superpowered, I was just a little drunk. And I wasn't a horse, per se, I was really hoarse after catching something from the bathroom air vent I stood under for ten minutes when I was hot. And she wasn't really my girlfriend if I want to be accurate . . . technically it was a picture of Winona Ryder I cut out of a magazine and taped to a popsickle stick. And we didn't exactly kiss . . . I mostly just tongued the mouth hole until I got a paper cut. Come to think of it I suppose it was a very different situation. That makes me sad. I guess I'll never be supergirl's horse, no matter how much I drink. But I'm going to keep drinking anyway because I'm not a quitter.
skjoldr
2024-07-23 05:20:42 +0000 UTCLook, KC Green told us everything we need to know about wizards: that they have no sense of right and wrong.
Swift Justice
2024-07-23 04:55:02 +0000 UTCSpider-man became instantly insanely popular for a reason.
Swift Justice
2024-07-23 04:51:56 +0000 UTCGreat article! Always amused to learn about another potion incident in DC Comics (the last one I remember clearly involved the future's fattest man accidentally drinking a potion because he put it right next to his beer while he watched Robot Ultimate Fighting Championship)
Mister Sinistar
2024-07-23 01:25:41 +0000 UTC“Secret Horse Boyfriend” does sound like a Silver Age romance comic.
Chris “Ace” Hendrix
2024-07-22 21:23:33 +0000 UTCA woman using a male character while enjoying his suffering through unrequited love may be the inceliest comic concept I've heard of.
Matt Edwards
2024-07-22 20:56:21 +0000 UTCThere's a difference?
Matt Edwards
2024-07-22 20:53:36 +0000 UTCDo centaurs live as long as humans? We don''t know how old he is, or if he's adult by centaur standards. These might be two teenagers who just happen to be from different species. And planets. Which is fine by normal DC standards. Alhough most of my DC knowledge comes from watching Teen Titans Go!, so take that for what it's worth.
Matt Edwards
2024-07-22 20:53:07 +0000 UTCYes I think I understand the man from snowy river much better now
sissyneck
2024-07-22 20:52:58 +0000 UTCI prefer to imagine the CCA calling on DC to get the story pulled, only for DC to pull out the rule book and do an Air Bud at them. "Ain't no rules says a horse can't kiss a teenage alien!"
Matt Edwards
2024-07-22 20:48:16 +0000 UTC"The marketing team says girls are bored by superheroes, but they like fairy tales, magic, horses, and romance. Add some of those in. You have eight pages to do it or you're fired."
The Parallel Viewmaster
2024-07-22 16:50:37 +0000 UTCI am imagining a Comics Code Authority checker in the 60s flipping through this script, flipping through the strict regulations of the CCA, and finally shrugging and saying "nothing in the rules about kissing horses"
Matthew Harris
2024-07-22 16:41:39 +0000 UTCIs the telepathy always on or do they have to direct it? Because if it's always on, that means Supergirl can hear the horse pining for her and she's either enjoying his suffering or doing her damndest to ignore it so she doesn't have to have that conversation.
FancyShark
2024-07-22 15:29:24 +0000 UTCYou spelled "rad" wrong there at the end.
Skebotron
2024-07-22 15:21:18 +0000 UTClove this delightful article 😁 exactly what I needed to reset my mind after workday full of bullshit... thanks 😊
TheEmptyMoneyBag
2024-07-22 15:13:30 +0000 UTCComic books used to tell important stories. Now they're just political.
Pee-Wee's Uncle
2024-07-22 13:58:54 +0000 UTCKnowing both how desperate writers get for stories and how Hotdoggers collectively know everything, I'd like to ask the following questions: how close does the comet have to be to count as "close"? How many times has someone tried to set up an orbiting comet to keep Comet human and failed? Why did they fail? Given all the magic users in the DC universe, how come (other than writers not wanting to change anything) no one has turned this horse into a human? Why are comics still so stupid?
Matt Edwards
2024-07-22 13:45:08 +0000 UTCSigh. Where would superheroes be without all the lies and insecurity?
Bonnybedlam
2024-07-22 12:54:11 +0000 UTCTo be fair, dating in the Silver Age was much more gross, disgusting, and horrible than it is today, and an adult man actively chasing a literal child was considered normal and healthy. I blame the lead poisoning.
Former Fish Farmer
2024-07-22 12:47:51 +0000 UTCHaving dated a horse girl, I can confirm that the staying power is thus: no man will ever compare to the bond with a girl's first horse, or possibly specifically I will never compare to a girl's first horse.
Brendan McGinley
2024-07-22 12:40:30 +0000 UTCYou forgot to mention that in the Silver Age, Supergirl was a highschooler, so it was an adult centaur/horse who was chasing after her.
Bill Culbertson
2024-07-22 12:26:31 +0000 UTCI would have enjoyed Cannon's Supergirl movie a lot more if she had had a talking horse sidekick voiced by John Candy.
Dave Dalrymple
2024-07-22 12:18:57 +0000 UTCDoes Superglue come from superhorses?
Dave Dalrymple
2024-07-22 12:17:35 +0000 UTCSomething something something Tom Hanks Movie From The 80's something something something.
Former Fish Farmer
2024-07-22 12:17:06 +0000 UTC