Bridge Bunnies



""Is this a ship of the Valkyries?""

- Q, Star Trek: Voyager

Someone other than The Captain needs to actually run the Cool Starship, which is where the Bridge Bunnies come in. They're a pair (or trio) of young, attractive twentysomething women (see Office Lady) who practically live on The Bridge, and deal with opening hailing frequencies, giving orders to the pilots of the Humongous Mecha squadrons, reporting that the Readings Are Off the Scale, activating the Applied Phlebotinum, repeating whatever the computer is saying, warning of Negative Space Wedgies, and the like. A staple of Japanese Anime shows that feature large capital ships.

Off duty, they're frequently romantically paired with minor characters, or can be the Girl of the Week. They're invariably female, although a token male junior bridge officer may be sufficiently intimidated by them to serve as Comic Relief. Token males in this position will also likely be swinging their bat the other way, unless someone else on the crew fills that role.

Less common in Western shows these days, where bridge personnel are more likely to be competent professional officers of both sexes. Women on the bridge aren't necessarily Bridge Bunnies per se, nor are junior officers doing menial jobs... but a bridge full of young, pretty female junior officers, and on which the senior officers with real authority are male, is a textbook example of the trope (compare Office Lady).

A specialized version of Mission Control, with all the twists therein possibly applicable. They occasionally serve as Those Two Girls, commenting on the action and what's going to happen next.

Anime and Manga
"Mokuba: You have a harem big bro? Kaiba: Yes. I created them to shun them with my cold indifference."
 * Super Dimension Fortress Macross / Robotech
 * Kim, Shammy, and Vanessa are ye originale Bridge Bunnies, for whom the term was coined by fans.
 * The novels by Jack McKinney have Kim, Shammy, and Vanessa affectionately referred to as "the Bridge Bunnies" by the rest of the crew.
 * Macross II, a sequel to Super Dimension Fortress Macross made without the original creators, included three young female mecha pilots (Natasha, Saori, and Amy) who fulfilled a similar function.
 * Sally and Miho from Macross 7
 * Macross Frontier has a team of bunnies on the job on the Quarter, as well as Bobby, the male helmsman who is Gay enough to count.
 * The American-created sequel film to Robotech, The Sentinels, gender-flips this trope by having the Commanding officer of the SDF-3, Admiral Lisa Hayes-Hunter, select a trio of handsome men to fill the same roles on her bridge.
 * Martian Successor Nadesico's bridge crew were competent ship-runners supporting their Genius Ditz commander. Ruri and Megumi, particularly, had several focus episodes.
 * All series of the Mazinger trilogy (Mazinger Z, Great Mazinger and UFO Robo Grendizer) featured Bridge Bunnies. They used to be a male trio, though, and wore white uniforms. They performed the ordinary functions of Mission Control, collecting and interpreting data and reading it to The Professor or the pilots of the Humongous Mecha, as well as sending them orders or receiving their messages. The trio of UFO Robo Grendizer Bridge Bunnies were called Hayashi, Yamada and Aoi.
 * On Simoun, the Arcus Prima had them, but the Messis didn't. Of course, given the Simoun universe, it's possible that some or all of the Bridge Bunnies could have been young men who hadn't lost their female secondary sex characteristics yet.
 * Gundam Seed Destiny: the lone female bridge bunny (Miriallia Haw aka Milly who was also one in the previous series) plays a relatively large role in the story. In the original Gundam Seed, after going from Rich Bitch to Fallen Princess, Fllay Alster becomes a bridge bunny under Natarle Badgiruel's orders in the Dominion. The Archangel, meanwhile has the female (acting) captain Murrue, Milly herself, and a group of male bridge bunnies leaded (sorta) by Sai Argyle.
 * Mobile Suit Gundam had Sayla Mass, Frau Bow, and Mirai Yashima (who actually was the pilot of the ship, making her The Lancer to The Captain Bright Noa). Sayla eventually gets promoted from Bridge Bunny to fighter pilot. Subverted in Zeta Gundam, where the bridge bunnies that helped Captain Henken Beckner and later Captain Bright are male.
 * Magical Girl Lyrical Nanoha: Amy Limietta for the Asura in the first two seasons. The third season has Shario Fineeno, Alto Claette and Lucino Lilie for Long Arch. In both cases, the commanding officer is also female, along with almost everyone else in the show.
 * Most of Kaiba's monitoring staff during the Battle City tournament and Kaiba Corp Grand Prix arcs (and they All. Looked. The. Same. Except for their Hair Colors). Hilariously lampshaded in Yu-Gi-Oh the Abridged Series:


 * Tenchi Muyo! GXP: Yamada Seina's constantly-growing harem effectively serves as his bridge bunnies. Earlier, Those Three Guys filled the role before being Put on a Bus.
 * Starship Operators focuses on the Bridge Bunnies. Naturally, most of the cast are female. This was handwaved, since they're essentially a renegade "government-in-exile" ship funded and filmed by a television company who demanded that they switch the crews of the three bridges to all-female except the Captain (eye-candy for the viewer, both in real life and in-universe).
 * Idolmaster: Xenoglossia: Naze, Sorewa, and Nareba.
 * Ah! My Goddess surprisingly had this in The Movie, with Peorth having three subordinates in overseeing the Yggdrasil system: Ere, Ex, and Chrono. (Chrono later appears in the manga, as well.)
 * Digimon:
 * Digimon Tamers features the Hypnos operators Riley/Reika and Tally/Megumi. Riley advances to Ascended Extra status (due to her relationship with Yamaki), but Tally's role never expands beyond "We've got another Wild One; deploying tracer."
 * Digimon Savers brings us another set: Miki and Megumi. (Yes, another Megumi with short blonde hair and no, she doesn't get any more character development. Be sure to check them out when the episode is animated by the 'fanservice' team.)
 * Savers subverts it occasionally, when they actually go out and assist in the battle. The two PawnChessmon seen doing minial chores around the base belong to them.
 * Ghost in the Shell
 * There is a line of mass-produced female Bridge Bunny androids. Different organisations use different models, but every bunny-bot in the organisation is identical - Section 9 have brunete androids in a pink blazers, and the army seem to use models with short black hair and glasses (Glasses? On an android? (Well, yes.)). Not only can they man the control centre, they also come in handy when in one episode, two are used as sexy twins to distract the guards.
 * Besides serving coffee, Section 9's operators are also the sole pilots of the unit's tilt-rotor aircraft, and can even take care of children.
 * Neon Genesis Evangelion has Maya Ibuki, Makoto Hyuga, and Shigeru Aoba. There are a bunch of others as well, but none are given names, distinctive character designs, or personalities.
 * Played for laughs in The Melancholy of Haruhi Suzumiya. The immensely popular episode "Day of Sagittarius" has our Five-Man Band thrust into the roles of space battlefleet commanders, and their ships are all staffed with Bridge Bunnies of their own imagining.
 * Haruhi's ship has assorted aliens.
 * Itsuki's ship is staffed with Henohenomoheji, actually a simple drawing exercise using hiragana characters to make a face.
 * Mikuru's ship is staffed by stuffed animals - which really originated from doodles that Haruhi's voice actor Aya Hirano left on her scripts.
 * Yuki, the unimaginative one, has staffed her ship with nothing but clones of herself.
 * Only Kyon's ship has the more traditional Bridge Bunnies if you ignore their uniforms.
 * Belvedere Coco, Celtic Midori, and Amarone Slantheav from Vandread. Subverted to a certain extent, because the only male on the bridge is the ship's navigator. In a further subversion, most of the female bridge crew are wearing relatively conservative outfits (one is pregnant, one dresses in a full-body bear outfit, and the captain is an old woman), whilst the guy is obliged to be naked in quite a number of scenes. Finally,
 * Xenosaga:
 * Mary and Shelley are the Bridge Bunnies of the Durandal.
 * The half dozen or so 100-Series Realians that were engineered to look exactly like Jr's (the captain) first romantic interest. Physically they are 12-year-old girls. The girls had added combat value against Gnosis, due to their ability to activate the Hilbert Effect.
 * Mobile Suit Gundam 00 has both female (Christina and Feldt) and male (Lasse and Lichtendal) Bridge Bunnies, but the girls, along with Bunny Ears Lawyer captain Sumeragi, get much, much more attention. Presumably, this is because they, like most all but two women in the series, have...er...rather prominent bosoms.
 * The survival rate is.
 * , and Anew Returner join the crew as bridge bunnies. The first two mentioned only filled the roles temporarily, as they promoted themselves to Sixth Rangers (complete with Combining Mechas) by joining the Meisters in action ( works with Allelujah,   works with Setsuna). Anew became the love interest to one of the Meisters
 * Almo and Coco of the Galaxy Angel gameverse.
 * Ryouko, Saki and Megumi in Dragonaut: The Resonance. Besides the standard Bridge Bunny duties, they also handle the Post Episode Trailer.
 * Geneshaft "justified" this with the explanation that, thanks to Genetic Engineering, society now consists mostly of women, and only a controlled number of men (to cut down on violence). This is just the beginning of the utterly stupid science in the series.
 * Ayame Futaba, Ichijiku Hinata, and Mutsuki Minase from Code Geass R2. One magazine lampshaded this by saying that the girls were carrying out "the long-standing robot anime tradition of the trio of operator girls".
 * In Sakura Wars each of the three theatre/combat troupes has a set of Bridge Bunnies. The original Tokyo Team has the Kaze-gumi, who coordinate the attacks from headquarters with the male general and female major, run the train, airship, and of course serve as bridge crew for the larger airship the Mikasa. The girls also work as office ladies in the theatre, two of them doing paper work the third working the gift shop. The Paris team has Mel and Ci (a pun on the French word Merci), who dress in maid uniforms, have the same theatre duties as their Tokyo counterparts, and similar battlefield duties. The New York Team has the Rainbow Division, who again serve the same roles.
 * Gall Force is what you get when you make a team of Bridge Bunnies into the protagonists.
 * Tsubael from Blue Drop is perhaps more the competent Mission Control type, but her role in the series fits this trope rather well.
 * RahXephon - In reference to an attractive female character, one male extra comments to another, "Whoa, check out the sweet new bridge bunny."
 * Godannar had a couple, who apparently got promoted to  by the end of the series.
 * Full Metal Panic! references the trope: Teletha "Tessa" Testarossa, Genre Savvy captain of the Tuatha de Danaan, is young and attractive. When Kaname first meets Tessa, she assumes she is a Bridge Bunny, and Tessa plays along for awhile.
 * Yuki (Nova) from Space Battleship Yamato.
 * Outlaw Star has the trio of Melfina, Aisha, and Suzuka. While the later two are competent and valuable warriors when on the ground, whilst onboard the Outlaw Star they are pretty much relegated to this.

Comic Books

 * Jayne's fantasy sequence in the Serenity comic Better Days involves him commanding a ship crewed entirely by Bridge Bunnies.
 * The Marvel Mangaverse version of the Fantastic Four has Alicia Harkness and Agatha Harkness serving as Bridge Bunnies to Reed Richards, as a sort of homage to Neon Genesis Evangelion.

Fan Works

 * In The Sage of Toad's ARSENAL, the Nightshift Bridge Bunnies from The Ikari Shinji Raising Project are actually Gendo Ikari's sleeper agents who try to wrest back control of NERV from Shinji after he takes over. These methods include steadily Bloodier and Gorier acts of terrorism, assassination attempts against Shinji and his friends, and steadily escalated acts of violence and just plain insane action sequences. But looking at them, you'd never suspect a thing...
 * In addition of Maya, Makoto and Shigeru, Ritsuko in Aeon Natum Engel and Aeon Entelechy Evangelion has her own little army of MAGI technicians (Maya being the senior) who, unfortunately for dear Dr.Akagi's nerves, frequently end up starting Tachikoma-like arguments with each other.

Film
"Villain: This is our headquarters. Hero: [Eating the Eye Candy view of a bridge bunny's posterior] Looks more like hindquarters to me!"
 * Ever since Aliens' homage female transport pilot, this particular variety of the trope has shown up countless times afterward (StarCraft, Halo. etc...) while remaining Older Than They Think.
 * Galaxy Quest plays this trope snarkily straight. Gwen DeMarco's official capacity is inherited from her character in the Show Within a Show, Tawny Madison. Her job is to repeat everything the computer says, word-for-word. Lampshaded into a pile of smoking ash about three-quarters of the way through the movie: "Listen - I have one job to do on this ship, and it's stupid, but I'm gonna do it!"
 * Likewise in the Star Trek parody Star Wreck: In the Pirkinning, where the primary job of the helmswoman is to look darn good and make fun of the Captain/Emperor. The extras at the back of the bridge are also all female (and all in high heels).
 * Star Trek: Despite having been a clear Bridge Bunny in the original TV series (and subsequent movies), Uhura in the 2009 reboot of Star Trek is portrayed as smart, competent, and an aversion to this trope.
 * In Arena, the control room of Logan's illegal gladiator combat broadcast is operated by Kawaii and Kaneko, a pair of attractive young women who spend half their time responding to barked orders by hitting buttons on consoles and the other half of the time being eye candy.
 * Marlene and Charlene from Spaceballs. "Chew your gum!"
 * Lampshaded in Carry On Spying. The captured heroes are taken to the villain's Elaborate Underground Base, which is full of catsuited females bustling about.


 * Space Mutiny had Bridge Bunnies who were downright Playboy Bunnies. They were wearing singlets and everything. (Granted, some other bridge staff wore actual uniforms, but still...)

Live-Action TV

 * Lt. Gay Ellis, the Moon Base commander in UFO (1970), becomes more like an office assistant when any male cast members visit the base.
 * Star Trek
 * Yeoman Rand from the first season. She is not shown doing much. She is useful mainly for getting kidnapped and making coffee with phasers.
 * Uhura started under this trope, complete with short skirt and the old-timey phone operator headset. In the animated version her character started to show signs of breaking out of this role, handing off her Bridge Bunny duties to M'ress, the Bridge Kitty; and once the movies roll around, she ditches this completely and takes multiple levels in badass.
 * Quark: The Bettys, played by two of the Doublemint Gum twins. One of them was a clone (the pretty one) and they both lusted after The Captain Quark.
 * Original Battlestar Galactica: Flight Corporal Rigel (played by Sarah Rush), though Athena tends to work in the bridge as well.
 * Remake Battlestar Galactica: The three main bridge operators are a woman and two men, Dualla, Gaeta, and Hoshi, respectively. Lt. Dualla is a classic Bridge Bunny being young, pretty, and subordinate. The male bridge officers, Gaeta and Hoshi, are eventually revealed to be in a relationship ... with each other. Fans of these three characters have enthusiastically claimed the "bridge bunny" moniker.
 * Stargate Atlantis:
 * Major Kevin Marks, who always seem to be around the currently visited ship. He was present on every US-made ship so far—even being in two places at once. His role is a bit hazy; due to the Daedalus-class' bridge configuration it's unknown if he's pilot, weapons officer or something else. The only time he's shown doing anything else is when he's hacking his own console to regain control of the Daedalus before it crashes. He fails. Sort of.
 * Walter Harriman. He has one job, consisting of repeating which Chevron is encoded and lock, and damn, does he do it well. He also opens and closes the stargate's iris. Lampshaded in the seventh season episode "Heroes".

Literature

 * Robert A. Heinlein's Starship Troopers - Most pilots are women, since they're apparently better at it than men. There is commentary on the effect that this has on morale.
 * Starships in David Weber's Honor Harrington cycle tend to have a high number of females aboard, but the author usually avoids invoking it as this trope. One female character, however, is called out in-story on the disproportionally high number of bishonens in her bridge crews.

Video Games

 * In Mega Man X Command Mission, you don't start with a base, so one chapter is spent taking someone else's base. When you find that it doesn't come with a Bridge Bunny, the next chapter is spent doing the most logical thing - taking someone else's.
 * Mega Man X8 brought in Layer and Palette as the new bridge bunnies to accompany Alia, who has been in the series since X5.
 * The Resistance Base has a pair in Mega Man Zero; the Guardians' airship base has a full trio in Mega Man ZX.
 * Super Robot Wars Original Generation:
 * Rio Mei Long and Eita Nadaka for the Hagane and Eun Hyojin for the Hiryu Kai. Rio becomes a pilot early on, and Eita gets a de-facto promotion to second-in-command after  Poor Eun never gets any spotlight.
 * Bit of trivia, while most nameless human character (like Mook and Red Shirt) either have their eyes cover with a gear or shade. Nameless Bridge Bunnies are given proper portrait similar to named character. Super Robot Wars Original Generations given proper portrait to all characters, yet the Bridge Bunnies still get special treatment for there are portraits of two different Bridge Bunnies.
 * The other Original battleship, W's Valstork, has Shihomi and Akane Ardygun, and the male Horris Horaian. The Captain in this case happens to be the girls' father.
 * Star Trek Online gives your character a collection of Bridge Officers who crew the various stations on the ship. Naturally some players choose to make them Bridge Bunnies. Just like in this video Of course gender equality applies so it's equally possible for a female character to have a collection of male Bridge Bunnies.
 * The Trilogy gives us Mary and Shelly Godwin, made even better since every third phrase out of their mouth is "Little Master". Or, in Mary's case in the first game, "Little Maz-da."
 * The prologue of Xenogears features a cluster of Bridge Bunnies with exotic hair colors shouting about a vaguely-defined catastrophe.
 * Orbulon in WarioWare: Twisted!. It plays the trope as to have literal Bridge bunnies, (Though they were space bunnies)
 * Mass Effect 2: Shepard's yeoman Kelly Chambers is a Bridge Bunny. She is a omnisexual Green Eyed Red Head. Kelly's secondary duty is as the crew's psychological counselor, and as she puts it, a little passion makes people open up to you.
 * Cerberus probably put Chambers there specifically for Shepard to hit on, and to keep Shepard and the rest of the crew under control. In other words, to be the perfect Bridge Bunny. A ship the size of the Normandy doesn't really have any clerical work that can't be done by computer, especially since the ship has an AI on board, and the Normandy Mark I had a conspicuous lack of yeomen/Shepard wranglers.
 * In Mass Effect 3, there's a Bridge Bunny by the name of Specialist Samantha Traynor instead of Kelly Chambers.
 * In Pokémon Ranger: Shadows of Almia, there are three ladies in the ranger headquarters who sit before a huge computer monitor on the top floor. They have to keep track of the rangers, they confirm quest completions, and other stuff.
 * Command & Conquer: In Tiberian Sun, Kodiak and Montauk were commanded by McNeil and Slavik (both male) respectively. But both had one male and one female as their supporting officers. The game split the difference: In Kodiak, Chandra had the speaking roles and in Montauk, it was Oxanna.
 * Terran dropship in StarCraft have a bubblegum chewing female pilot who quotes Aliens' dropship pilot.
 * Terran dropship in StarCraft have a bubblegum chewing female pilot who quotes Aliens' dropship pilot.

Web Comics

 * In Sluggy Freelance Zoe and Gwynn take on this role during the "Stick Figures in Space" arcs.
 * Subnormality - "I did establish a 50-trillion dollar interstellar fleet of exploration for solely the purpose of viewing thousands of female cadets in jumpsuits of a tightly-fitting nature! And I did personally design those jumpsuits, and your Honor they did hug and cling as as though a koala in a windstorm! And I did leer! How I did leer! Never have you seen such leerings!"
 * El Goonish Shive - Ted decides not to play Star Trek Online since he can't have a crew of bridge squirrels.
 * Outsider - The bridges of Loroi warships are populated entirely by attractive female elvish-looking individuals, but that's largely because male Loroi are rather less common than female ones and to place them in danger would be a little wasteful. The whole of their military would seem to be female.

Western Animation

 * In the Legion of Super-Heroes animated series, Triplicate Girl serves as a three-person Bridge Bunny team.
 * L'Etranger from Max Steel has his submarine, the Akina, staffed solely by female SIRENS in full-body (yet form-fitting) armor and helmets.
 * In Phineas and Ferb, the Fireside Girls sometimes become this when they have to help pilot inventions.

Real Life

 * At law-enforcement precincts/detachments/headquarters, we have the dispatchers, who are responsible for keeping track of officers, information, and messages. They are (stereotypically) predominantly female.
 * Modern civilization depends on armies of office bunnies to handle all the paperwork and most of them are women.
 * Might not qualify as this trope because only a small fraction of them are either young or pretty.