House of R - 'Loki' Season 2, Episode 2 Deep Dive
Episode Date: October 18, 2023This pod has got some nerve! Mal is joined by special guest host Rob Mahoney to dive deep into the second episode of 'Loki' (08:54). They discuss the stunning performances and dangerous developments a...t the TVA, as well as predict which characters may be more than meets the eye. Host: Mallory Rubin Guest: Rob Mahoney Senior Producer: Steve Ahlman Additional Production: Arjuna Ramgopal Social: Jomi Adeniran Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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I know I'm the last person you want to see.
Correct.
I haven't come here to make trouble.
Then why are you here?
Uh, this is going to sound strange.
But there's been a problem.
It's complicated.
I've been pulled through time
between the past and the present.
I was in the past.
Oh, just get to the point, Loki.
Sylvie, I was in the past.
It was in the future and I saw you.
The TVA is in danger and you were there.
I need to know why.
So you see the future now. Cool.
It's not something I chose.
Look, as much as I'd love to see the TVA burnt to the ground,
I have no intention of going back there.
My life's here now.
And I'm not running. I'm happy.
Explain what I saw then.
I don't know. I don't care.
It's the future. It's going to happen.
Is it? Really? Because that's not running.
sounds a lot like the future's already been written.
And we both know that it hasn't, not anymore.
I made sure of that.
And welcome to House of Ar, a Ringerverse podcast on the Ringer Podcast Network.
I'm Mallory Rubin, and it is my absolute pleasure to invite you, not only back to
Broxton, Oklahoma, the apple pies warm, but also to our new House of our podcast feed.
Joining me today,
where's the rude boy off to?
Where's the fancy lad going to then?
Did you lose your tickets to the opera?
It's my house of our co-host for a day.
Rob Mahoney.
Wow, hello.
Can we just talk for a second about how crazy life is?
Can you and I just talk for a second?
Okay, Mobius.
Yeah, that makes me Brad, I think,
which I'm not sure I'm comfortable with in this scenario.
but it does mean we're sharing a lovely milkshake and a warm plate of fries.
So hard to complain, I guess.
Rob, hello, welcome back.
Thank you.
It's great to be with you.
We last podcasted together in depth, deep dive in about Loki season one.
We did a couple of the Loki season one pods together.
It was an absolute thrill to talk about Loki with you.
We both loved the finale.
You said it was one of your five, five,
I recall five favorite Marvel things ever, season one.
And so...
Still stands, by the way.
I can't say there's been a lot of competition since,
but still looking pretty good.
When our beloved Joanna Robinson was unable to be here today,
caught in a time cube, you know, due to illness,
lost voice, book tour scheduling.
Joe has a bazillion things going on.
We miss Joe dearly.
we are sad not to have Joe with us today.
Joe is with us in spirit always.
But when Joe couldn't make it,
I knew that we had to bring you through the time door
so that we could talk about Loki again.
So thank you for being here.
And thank you to all of the House of Our Heads,
all of the bad babies for waiting the extra day.
We appreciate it as we got our schedule synced.
Appreciate it.
Yeah, I appreciate it.
As someone who had some boning up to do
to get out to House of Our Speed on this series,
which if there was going to be anything
I was going to jump back into this pod feed,
well, this new pod feed, but this pod four, it would be Loki, which as you, as you said,
I love dearly, this story, this execution, these actors, these characters, this stuff means a lot
to me, more than I even expected given where we started with season one, but man, I'm so glad
season two is back.
Okay, I can't wait to hear all of your thoughts on the episode on the season so far on
where we are with our beloved pals and variants.
We have so much to get to today.
But before we debate whether recording this podcast is a higher priority than preventing it
poor will meltdown,
which I would say it is.
Yeah, I would say so.
Seems fair.
Some quick programming reminders.
I will be back on the House of Our Feed on Friday with Benjamin Limburg,
and we are dipping our toes into the Walking Dead waters.
We watched the Walking Dead Darrell Dixon.
I was thinking, what is either starting or ending this week?
what would be a good thing to chat about?
And I had really lapsed as a Walking Dead viewer over the years.
And I was genuinely intrigued.
Like, is this a time where you can opt back in?
Whereas Ben has watched every second of the Walking Dead that has ever aired.
Yeah.
Just every single second of it.
And so that'll be a really fun check-in to do.
I'm looking forward to that.
Then Joe and I will be back on Monday for our deep dive into Loki season two, episode three.
Things are also popping over on the ring reverse.
Pods of plenty.
Ben and Jess are cranking out a new button mash every like three days right now.
It is peak video game season and they are on it.
Right now, you can find the anticipated initial impressions of Marvel Spider-Man 2.
This is like the spoiler-free, just the taste, and also their revisitation of Marvel Spider-Man and Spider-Man Miles Morales.
And then they're going to have the full Spider-Man 2 pod breakdown at the top of next week on Monday.
So get hyped for that.
The Midnight boys.
Piu-p-poo!
See, man.
It's been a while for you in the ring of verse, but you're ready.
You were right on time with the P-Pu.
It's like you never left.
They will be with you on Thursday night, Rob.
Instant reaction to episode three.
You don't even have to wait.
It's going to be right there for you.
Incredible.
Incredible stuff.
And then Jessica will have a splash page video breakdown of that episode
heading into the weekend.
Rob,
yeah.
What can everybody look for from you?
on the eve of NBA season here.
Anything you want to plug?
Group chat?
Well, yeah, as you know, we are in the throes of NBA preseason.
All that stuff is well and good.
Follow us on the ringer.com.
Follow us on the ringer NBA feed.
Group chat, the show that I am a part of,
we'll be going twice a week, Wednesdays, and Sundays.
But I feel like we miss some significant steps.
We forgot to tell people, subscribe to this podcast.
Yeah.
Find it.
How can they do it?
Yeah.
Dedicate your life to it.
Yeah.
Follow all the social channels.
hashtag save Jomey's job,
Instagram, Twitter, TikTok,
the whole thing.
You're right, man.
You big on TikTok?
Absolutely not.
No.
Not going to happen for me.
I've just accepted it.
The world is passing me by,
but I'm going to cling
to my dying social media platforms.
But Jomey is there,
and that's the important thing.
He's there for you in the ringer
versus there for you.
You can also send us your emails.
Keep them coming.
Keep them coming about Loki.
Keep them coming about anything.
Apple Wars,
whatever's on your mind,
sign it with your pickle.
Hobbits of Dragons at gmail.com.
Last programming reminder, it's the same one as always.
It's the friendly neighborhood spoiler warning.
You might be wondering, what's going to come up today?
We're glad you asked.
We're going to talk about the episode of television
that you have clicked into this podcast to hear us discuss.
Who knows?
That is Loki.
Season 2, Episode 2, Breaking Brad, written by Eric Martin,
directed by longtime VFX supervisor,
Dan DeLue, also on the table, anything from the first episode of Loki Season 2,
anything from Loki Season 1, anything that has ever happened in the MCU,
and some Marvel Comics canon as well.
You have your spoiler warning, you have your programming reminders.
Let's quit with the magic and fight fair.
It's time to pod.
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Opening snapshot.
Steve, I already forgot how moody the new music is.
I love it.
Okay.
Rob.
We just want a little taste.
We're going to go through every single scene in the episode.
We're going to go beat by beat.
But give us that Rob Mahoney and Moose Bush.
How did you feel about episode two?
But also, give us a little taste of how you're feeling
about season two of Loki so far.
I just love this show.
And I think this season has been pretty terrific so far.
It's so well made.
And it hits for me in a way that nothing else in the MCU does.
Like mostly because it's more.
more interested in self-discovery and the weight of free will than, I don't know,
like whether Loki's magical powers are stronger than some other character's magical
powers. That stuff is ultimately not important, and that appeals to me. But also because of
that, there's always interesting things going on under the hood of these episodes. I feel like I can
trust the ideas, the arcs, the plot mechanics, like all that stuff is really working for me in
season two so far. And I really dug this episode. Like, the whole show, it, I don't know, it's like
It's a marvel to me, to be honest with you.
It's a wonder to me.
It is people talking in rooms, this episode especially.
Yeah, the old Tyrion, Lannister.
We're back.
But you know what?
It never, ever feels small.
And that is a hell of the thing to pull off.
So I love where we're at.
And I'm very excited to see where we can go with three and beyond.
But what did you make of episode two?
I just love listening to you talk about Loki.
This is such a treat.
Such an absolute treat.
I really enjoyed episode two.
I liked it more than episode one.
I thought it was a stronger overall episode in part because of what you're identifying.
I thought that we return in a pretty crucial way to that Tyrion Lannister,
great conversations and elegant rooms, substance and heart.
There were still plenty of time-y-wimey plot mechanics that we'll talk about as we go,
certainly.
But on the whole, I thought this was a really enjoyable second installment.
It's set the table in an intriguing way for the hunts to come.
looking for Miss Minutes, looking for Renslayer,
a lot of Tempad McGuffin action
in this episode. But when we got to these
really prolonged conversations
between Loki and our Guy Brad Wolf,
between Loki and Mobius,
Loki, Loki and Bobius and Bradwolf, etc.
I was like, this is what the show is.
And I applaud the ambition
to do something,
little bit different stylistically. I think the fact that this season is more of a, you know, Charles
has been talking a lot on Midnight Boys, Poo, Poo, about how much he's enjoying the like workplace
comedy structure and framing of this season. And I, I genuinely think it's a good thing that season
two is trying to do something a little bit different in terms of its approach on an episode by
episode basis. In episode one, it worked a little less well for me, even though I enjoyed episode one
quite a bit and was just delighted to be back with our pals on the TVA talking about our human nature
and what we're what we're capable of. This episode felt a little more in balance with that new
structure and plot approach, but that heartbeat of can people change? What is nature? What is
nurture? Who do we need to surround ourselves with in order to think about that?
at all. That was here at the four in a way that, like, I consider elemental to what I love about
the show. So I'm really excited to go beat by beat and talk about it all with you. I feel like we're
going to need a snack break at some point. We're going to be talking about pie so much, but we'll
see. Very pie heavy episode. Many pie thoughts to come. I can assure you. I hope so. You're a big
food. You're a big foodie. You're a big food guy. I try. I dabble. You do. Yeah. You may not be on
TikTok, but you are on Instagram posting a lot of gourmet photos of you. You're a lot of
your resplendent meals. So I'm excited for all of your food talk. I can't wait to tell you how
much McDonald's I've consumed in the last few weeks. Just cannot wait to tell you. We need to talk about
that too. But again, everything in its time. Okay. Let's dive deep. London.
Nowhere better to be. Nowhere better to start.
1977, the sacred timeline. Mobius and Loki are out looking for Sylvie Rob.
They're tracking a hit on a tempad that belonged to Hunter X-X-5.
quote, before it went dark.
And folks, they are dressed to impress the tuxedo game
in this opening scene.
We've got bow ties.
Brad Wolf is wearing an incredible scarf.
Loki is basically in the puffy shirt from Seinfeld,
and yet he's making it work.
He's pulling it off.
We've got a FitWatch category.
Joe's not here.
And so we would never dream of doing Wickwatch in Joe's absence,
but we will be doing a fit watch later.
Is there anything that you would like to say
on the fit front wall right here?
I mean, was there any doubt
that Loki was going to spring for the ruffles?
I feel like it's a perfect character beat,
a perfect character moment,
and not to jump ahead too far,
but just the way this guy buttons and unbuttons
his suit jacket with ease.
I mean, he was clearly born to wear it.
This was, I'm calling this double O Loki.
Like, this was the Tom Hiddleston, James Bond stretch.
This is the tape.
This is the audition tape, honestly.
Specifically what you referenced,
like the one hand unbuttoning of the jacket
as he is strutting down an alleyway
in pursuit of his foe?
Well, plus, I know you guys have been all about Loki's 40 time
and the way he's been hoofing it so far this season.
Let me tell you, the chase we're about to get into
in this episode, our guy is in 1970s men's dress shoes
on cobblestone streets
and is the fastest human I have ever seen.
I could not be more impressed.
It was incredible.
I really enjoyed the quick back and forth
about whether Brad really thought
that he was going to be able to escape Loki,
who let's not forget,
was raised as an as guardian god
and is a frost giant of Yodenheim by birth.
So I'm not surprised that the stride work is there.
We've talked a lot about the 40 time.
I am now really curious about how Loki would perform
in some other drills at the combine.
Yeah, like a shuttle.
Like what do you think he would?
would excel.
Three cone.
Because it's a lot about the nimbleness, the quick, responsive movement, thinking on the fly.
He's very light on his feet, you know?
Our guy, Tom, I mean, he's got a bit of like a dancer's physique.
You could see him really working those cones.
Absolutely.
Absolutely.
Mobius was really trying his best as well.
Absolutely.
It's all that jet ski living that he doesn't remember coming through in the clutch here.
Reflexes, hand-eye coordination.
we get, before we get the chase,
we get something interesting,
which is that sacred timeline ID.
So Sylvie and the Stinger last week,
when she appeared in Broxton,
we got a branched timeline ID.
And here we get the sacred timeline ID.
So this is just a helpful thing to know
about the season,
that we're going to get these markers
and it'll be useful not only for the characters,
but for us as viewers to track.
Are we on a branch?
Are we on the sacred timeline?
Especially knowing how many characters
like docs are in pursuit of the pruning still,
knowing whether we're on a branch is going to be an important thing
in terms of how safe we feel at any given moment in time.
So that was interesting.
Instantaneously, those dress shoes that you mentioned,
they touch down on the pavement,
and Loki says, without hesitation,
Sylvie's not here.
It's too safe.
It's not her style.
And there were two things that I loved about this.
One, I thought this was very sweet,
you know, that he thinks truly,
that he knows her so fully and so well
that he would be able to deduce in an instant
whether a place felt like something
where she would seek refuge.
But of course, the other thing I love about it
is that he's wrong.
Oh, so wrong.
She is in Brockston,
specifically because, like, that safety,
that normalcy, as he will later see,
and as we will get to discuss later in the episode,
that is precisely what she's after.
There's a very interesting arcing thing happening there
where over season one,
Sylvie and Loki are just getting closer and closer
together, obviously,
and intimacy and understanding each other,
but also like ideologically, right?
They're getting on the same page.
And then they get to the end of time
and they meet He Who Remains
and they just bump so hard off each other
with Sylvie.
Yeah.
I thought if we were going to get Loki
and Sylvie bumping so hard off each other
in the finale,
it was going to be a completely different scene.
But sadly, we're still waiting.
Not for Disney Plus,
but I'm sure available somewhere on the internet
if you so choose.
But yeah, like,
Okay, you really do have to get used to these drops.
This is the Steve Alman soundboard.
You got to be ready.
It's a different life out here on this side of things.
But with the way that they kind of ricocheted ideologically speaking again off each other,
we now see them kind of careening in opposite directions where Loki thinks he knows who Sylvie is and what she wants.
But she's moving into a pretty different place.
Like she's kind of gotten the thing she wants.
And now it's about figuring out what to do with it.
Right.
And I think similarly, Loki is moving not only away from Sylvie, but away from where he was so deeply entrenched for the bowl of season one, which is something that I've really been fascinated tracking in the first two installments of season two.
They enter a theater.
A theater where Zaniac is premiering.
First of all, incredible marquee.
I will be procuring this poster at some point.
I would also watch.
Alpops Hunter X5.
He's rocking longer hair, Rob.
He's got that scarf on that we mentioned,
and he is living lavishly
as actor Brad Wolf.
Very, very quick,
very quick, comics canon corner.
Brad Wolf, Zaniac, these are comics characters.
The gist of the thing you need to know
about the comics canon,
who knows how this will come into play,
if at all,
show is that actor Brad Wolf played a serial killer named Zaniac.
This was a character that he played.
And then he's exposed to radiation from the Manhattan Project.
I don't know what's wrong with me or why I'm laughing as I say this.
And also bonds with a creature from the dark dimension.
Shout out the homie Dormamo now and always.
and he then becomes the serial killing Zaniac character that he had previously portrayed.
He makes energy knives from his hands.
Yeah, it's a big who among us.
A tale is old as time.
Situation.
Just because of like this initial glimpse of Brad and the Zaniac Theater and our guys and their tuxes and all of it,
I was curious to ask you like how you were enjoying the new settings that we're getting so far
in season one, we have this wonderful London stretch to open the second episode. We, of course,
have the Brockston, Oklahoma, Branch Timeline McDonald's stretch. We had, you know, complete with Sylvie's
absolutely iconic pickup truck. Obviously, we bounced around to new locations in season one. That's
always been something that the show affords us, right? We went to the Renfair. We went to the Rocks
store. We went to Lamentus. We went to Pompeii, et cetera, et cetera. But it does seem like really
bouncing around to new places,
new points in time, new locations that are going to give us
different costumes,
different vibes, different interactions
is going to be like central to
how season two
flows. Is that something you've been enjoying so far
and something that you're looking forward to seeing more of?
Oh, definitely. I mean, it's one of the great joys
of time travel shows in general, but I
would say the other side of that and where we're
different from season one is
season one, the transport of quality
of those scenes is we're looking for
a variant who lives in this place.
Now we're looking for variants who showed up in that place.
And as a viewer, we don't really know how long X5 has been here inhabiting this life, right?
What it seems for us could be years for him.
We just know that they're tracking this tempad trace.
I imagine we're going to get similar things down the line when we're searching for Miss Minutes as we're going to talk about.
And when Victor Timely ultimately factors into this show, we just have no idea what these characters' backgrounds are in that space.
And so coming into these new environments
and also not really knowing
how much these people are bonded to those spaces
like that's part of the fun too.
Yeah, it's a great point.
Like the distinction between,
okay, this is somewhere we need to get in and out,
set of charge, prune,
try not to get killed.
Versus we are either,
we are with a character
who is seeking to find a life
or are in pursuit of a character
who has made or rediscovered a life.
That is like a fundamental distinction
that makes the time we're spending
there really different.
It's a great point.
We get a little,
the only time frame thing we really get with Brad
is that line from the press scrum
about the insights into his dating life.
Brad Wolf big on 1977 TMC
about that meteoric rise to fame.
Yeah.
But the press scrum is not complete
until Mobius joins it.
This is so funny to me
the way that Brad is making his way through the reporters
then all of a sudden Mobius is there to confront him.
Brad basically does his best Thor Ragnarok
cosplay. He's like, he's a friend from work.
It's fine. Nothing to see here.
Definitely not freaking out.
He offers to get Mobius and Loki a whiskey.
Loki does not want to drink.
If it is not as Guardian Mead and or the figgy port from the Lamentus train, he's not
going to partake.
Mobyus really wanted that whiskey. He's like, we're still working.
It's fine.
Well, I mean, Mobyus, a lot of questionable things happening here.
For one, if you're part of the, you can't be part of the scrum and a long-term friend of the person you're interviewed.
Like, a lot of journalistic ethics questions happening here.
Do you think Mobius ever took Comlaw or any sort of journalistic ethics class?
No?
I simply cannot imagine it.
But look, if that's what his other timeline life turned out to be, I would love to see that spin off.
We'll be revisiting later the wonderful mailbag theory we discussed in week one about whether Jack for McDonald's is in fact, Mobius.
but now I am considering whether, like,
Mobius was one of my classmates
at the S.I. Newhouse School of journalism and communications.
Maybe he's a Syracuse guy. Who knows?
Brad dips.
And we're learning a lot in real time about Brad,
but one thing we know to be true immediately
is that the only thing bigger than X-5's augmented temp pad
is his ego.
Because B-15 so easily ensnars this doofus
into stopping for an autograph,
anything for a fan,
and then disarms him.
This was so funny to me.
He manages to break off what we think based on how it's behaving
and how he's using it after.
It's a time twister.
But imagine fleeing for your life,
fleeing to preserve this thing that you have built
and still stopping because someone says,
oh my God, incredible.
I feel like this is much more of a Mallor Joe situation.
You're telling me if a bad baby in desperate need of an autograph
reached out to you as you were running down the street
for an autograph. You wouldn't stop for them?
No, you're right. I probably would. Yeah.
I have like, wow, you want to
say hi? This is incredible.
How surreal. How touching. Thank you.
And that's how they would mug you of your temp at, I'm sure.
Mobius Corners Brad.
Who implores him
and impassionably here. Come on, Mobius, you're going to
ruin my life here. Your life here?
We don't get to drill down quite yet
on that idea. Because Loki comes in
and he blasts him and the chase is afoot.
the score here, one of the great things about Loki always is the Natalie Holt score.
It was popping.
Aces.
Aes.
Unbelievable.
We need to get like a collaboration one day between Natalie Holt and Steve Holman.
That score with the soundboard.
I mean, can you imagine?
Can you imagine?
Name a more iconic team up.
Loki Lace is trap rob for the rude boy with the fake throng.
plays with this food a bit here.
So unsophisticated.
You're doing your own stunts now?
Disarms him with ease.
Takes the time to a stir away.
Brad's whining.
You quit with the magic and fight fair.
And Loki literally sighs.
There's an incredible amount of sighing
from Loki in this episode,
but this was my favorite sigh.
It's not a fair fight.
And I shouted aloud, genuinely.
Flex my king.
Because it's fun.
It's fun to be out of the TVA
and see Loki get to use his
magic again, but also I think more than that, it's just fun to see him in a kind of like vintage
and classic Loki way boast and strut.
Yes.
Without being a heinous villainous monster who is shouting you mule and quim at Natasha.
Like, this is a fun Loki.
This is a good Loki in pursuit of things that we can root for.
And we get to see that energy from him inside of that context, which I really enjoyed.
Totally.
And Tom Hittleston, he really gets.
to walk and he does walk such a tightrope on this show between giving us the payoffs of what we
eventually came to love about Loki thanks to all that like fast-tracked montage character video
development in season one. So he's kind of, he kind of knows what happens to Loki. But he's also
very much still that earlier vintage. And he he relishes on this show in this part in the mustache
twirling parts of Loki a little more than we saw in like certainly Ragnarok or at the beginning of
Infinity where he's a different version of that character.
And him playing with his food here is a perfect example of that,
but really the way he kind of corners Brad with the shadow play is really where it comes out.
Okay, I wanted to ask you about the shadow play for a couple reasons.
First of all, we should know these are new powers.
Like, we have that great stretch in season one where Lucky enumerates the differences for the TVA
between illusion projection and duplication casting.
So we've gotten some insights there.
But, I mean, we need to go back, like,
literally only mere minutes to see Brad swing the crowbar
through a cast, and you get that kind of the signature
wush of green light.
It's not really there.
You can think of, like, Thor throwing something at Loki
in Ragnarok, and it goes right through him, right?
So to see a projection that he is casting,
a shadow in this case, actually interact with a physical world.
is new. But I think perhaps even more notably, because like powers evolving are us getting to
glimpse some of new ways is fun. It feels very like a natural progression inside of this show because
like we got to see Loki learn how to enchant in season one and really embrace the idea,
talking about how Frigga taught him magic. Like it's on his mind, how his powers function of what
he could try and maybe learn for the first time. But the horns, the shadows sprout, the signature
iconic Loki horned helmet. And here's my question for you. Was your response to them? Was your response to
Fuck yeah.
This is just a purely fun and enjoyable
classic bit of Loki iconography.
My guy is in a real,
I can change,
but also wear the horns headspace
and I support it and I love it.
Or did any alarm bells flare for you
because we associate those horns
with Loki's villainous days?
No, it's honestly just sick.
I'm very into it.
Look, of course there are characters,
concerns, and really it's kind of setting us up for this whole episode, right?
Like in a very subtle way that Loki still has the horns on.
Here is him and his behavior now, and isn't he still kind of villainous, so that we
ultimately get to the interrogation scene later in this episode, and even the audience is
wondering a little bit, what's real and what's act, which is a great bit of staging.
But also just like, give me this stylized magic over generic energy blast every day of
the week.
It's just more interesting.
And this is a kind of a deranged pull,
but I don't know if you've ever seen the movie Killer Clowns from Outer Space,
but there's a very...
I mean, it is what it sounds like.
It's all right there on the 10.
It's all right there in the title.
Yeah.
There's a scene in which one of these alien clowns does like a shadow puppet thing
to delight some people until the shadow puppet turns into a T-Rex
in which it somehow actually eats them.
And it felt kind of similar and evocative in that way.
Like this idea of mirage, this idea of...
this idea of illusion interacting with reality, right?
Like, Loki creating that kind of magic,
that particular kind of manipulation,
I think it's just great for his character,
and it's certainly great in the scene.
Right, and I also, I love that,
and I love the idea that like a shadow,
like what is a shadow, right?
It's a manifestation of a certain aspect of you,
but because we know that Loki is casting
and is choosing to convey something,
like this is something that he's trying to tell somebody,
about himself.
And so there's something
really interesting there to parse.
I thought it was also interesting
that Mobius can't tell
who the real Loki is.
And there's like the plot mechanic aspect of this.
Like where will that prove relevant
later in the season?
But of course,
much more richly,
there's like the symbolic,
thematic aspect of this.
Like, does Mobius know Loki?
Does Loki know himself?
Do we know Loki?
When can we feel confident
and comfortable in our read
on who he is.
So this was just an absolutely delightful opening scene that I loved.
This is what I'm talking about, though.
Like that level, like this is a show that warrants that level of analysis, right?
Of the idea of if you really know someone or not, because those are the ideas the show is playing with,
if you do that same exercise with the staging of a scene in Falcon and Winter Soldier,
with all due respect to Falcon and Winter Soldier, it's not going to hold up.
It's just not created that way.
So some of the, I'm sure some of the extrapolations are things.
that we are putting on the show, things that we are seeing in the text, I'm sure, inevitably.
Our prerogative is podcasters.
You know, it's really what we do here.
But the show, again, has enough going on in its own head that I think we're hitting close to the mark on a lot of those things, because it's really right there on the page.
Absolutely. It's definitely inviting that level of assessment.
Let's talk about some tempads, man. It's tempad time.
We're going to go through a few different scenes here that are all in sequence as we pop back to the TVA.
all of which center in some way on tempads.
X-5's a prisoner now, TVA prisoner.
He's in that khaki jumpsuit.
He's got the time collar.
And Loki is in
the most fabulous new coat
on top of his TVA garb.
It made me think back so powerfully
to one of my favorite exchanges from season one
in episode three
when Sylvie said,
what exactly makes Loki
Loki?
Locke refined
Independence Authority
Style
Like,
Mobius has
He looks,
Mobius looks
you know,
fine,
but he's in this
just utterly
drab brown
blazer and
Loki pops in
with his version
he's adhering
I think
to the dress coat
he's got his brown
coat.
Yes.
Slightly darker brown
than Mobius is,
you know?
A little good
cop back,
cop stuff coming.
Yeah, a lot of buddy cop action in this episode.
So I just thought that was amazing.
B-15 asks about X-5's augmented tempad.
This really sparks the episode-long emphasis on the tempad augmentation.
Brad is a gigantic dick here, really earning that rude boy nickname.
And just not helpful at all.
So B-15 sends Mobius and Loki to consult OB on the tempad.
and I want all your OB thoughts.
I'll set the stage here to say that they find him on the floor of his workshop talking to himself saying,
oh, man, I'm good.
I will use the word iconic.
Like the over under for how many times I say iconic per pod is probably said at like 17.
And I think most people probably take the over.
Oh, man, I'm good.
It's just a pantheon.
This is so funny.
Obie.
How are you feeling about it?
Obie so far. How are you enjoying your time with this new character? He fits the show like a glove.
And a lot of that is the world building. It's the set design. It's his place and all that stuff.
But also, I mean, he's like the Willy Wonka of IT professionals. What is not to like about that?
And in particular, this exchange where they have brought him this tempo. They know that OB is basically
trying to do his damnedest to keep the entirety of the time stream intact. And they're like,
hey, can you also, like, fix my phone while you're at it?
Yeah, I've got a cracked screen.
I can't figure out which of it's giving me two options for the iOS.
I'm being, which do I pick?
And he basically gives them the equivalent of the, like, have you tried turning it off
and turning it back on again?
And he's right to do it.
That easily gives them the, like, do you know how to Google that reply, which is just perfection?
Yeah, I can definitely get into it.
Do you think this is a higher priority than preventing a temporal meltdown in their response?
Yeah, yeah, yeah. Seems prudent.
I don't think OBS the bandwidth for all that.
Like, let's go, let's deprive the tempad situation.
Let's hand it off to another department.
Like, clearly he's got other fish to fry.
I have great news for you.
You don't even need to go to another department.
He has written everything you'll ever need to know about a tempad in Chekhov's TVA guide book,
which Joanna and I talked about a lot last week because it was so conspicuous in its
prominence. And it was even, that was even truer in this episode. It continues to rear its
orange head. We are reminded of Obey writing it, of Casey consuming it and memorizing it, of Mobius
not really being able to like parse. It seems impenetrable to Mobius when he's trying to read
through it in the next scene. Do you, do you want to share any TVA guidebook theories in real time
right now? Are you into
the idea that I floated in
episode one that maybe the TVA
guidebook became Miss Minutes?
Do you like that theory?
Honestly, inspired.
Genuinely inspired. In the age of
audiobooks, you know, what is Miss Minutes but a glorified
AI audiobook? Yeah.
This is, I mean,
I love this. I love this.
We are getting to conspicuous
levels of book knots.
In a way that I don't mind.
Like, it is conspicuous, but ultimately,
within this kind of storytelling,
I think still pretty elegant.
Like there's always a reason
why it is being brought up.
It's not just somebody flashing around their copy
just so.
Yes. I think this is truer so far
for the TVA guidebook than some of the tempad stuff,
but I agree with you on the guidebook for sure.
So there will be a payoff,
even if that payoff is,
as you and Joe alluded to last time,
the three of us purchasing a notebook version of the,
yeah, it's inevitable.
Something is, some seed is being planted.
it is either plot or purchase.
I'm not sure which one may be both,
but we'll see where we're headed.
As you know, I love merch.
So I love merch.
Upstairs, B-15,
swings by Casey's desk,
and asks about the trace on
Renslayer's tempad.
Casey thinks that this is a secret mission,
B-15. It's like,
my guy, why does this be a secret mission?
Let me list all of the transgressions
that Rvona Renslayer committed
in season one.
whether or not it's a secret mission,
it is taking forever
because no miss minutes means running these traces by hand.
Did the very prominent ink stain on Casey's pen pocket catch your eye here?
My eye kept being drawn to this,
and I was wondering if it was to ensure that we knew
which Casey was our Casey, Casey Prime,
as we bounce around time later.
It definitely sticks out.
It is a very convenient marker for cross-time line travel.
it's also you know like clearly Casey is the level of dweeb who would get the ink stain but not the level of dweeb that would have the pocket protector right that's like OB level is pocket protector Casey is just I just got pens in my pocket and so it I mean look it certainly sticks out it's it's quite conspicuous we got to get my guy a tied pen.
They've got to have a tied pen in one of those drawers that was full of all the infinity stunts that they were using his paperweights they've got to have a tied pen around somewhere they have to Casey's got some good
news. Not for laundering his garb, but on the tempad front, Renslayer erased her tempad. Okay, that's
unfortunate. But he was able to find out who sent her the last message. So they set off to go
find Mobius and Loki to tell them this. And so this brings us to Mobius and Loki who were
working to crack the riddle of X-5's tempad. The god of mischief.
is sitting at a desk with a screwdriver,
working on a little machine as his pal reads a manual.
And this is like a true, true, true 10 out of 10 no notes thing for me in the show.
Like, I love how tactical, how tactile this is.
Yes.
I love how routine this is.
So like there's just something about seeing the god of mischief doing this menial, manual,
gum shoe work and labor
that is so good
and so effective.
He could not be genuinely
more out of his element here
and yet it feels so right
to see him working with Mobius in this way.
Did you enjoy this little
framework here?
Of course.
And I'm totally with you
on the tactile nature of the show in general.
And really these two scenes
kind of highlight and even the ink stain
in the pocket kind of highlights it.
This is a very pen and paper,
dial and knob,
tangible physical space.
and that is brought to beautiful life
in the production design of the show
but also without miss minutes around
now it's like everyone has to actually push the buttons
for themselves and actually do all the things manually
and we get this explanation about
why it's taking so long to find Renslayer
it's like we've got to run these traces
individually by hand effectively
I love that dynamic of reducing them
to their instruments at this stage in the game
like we have these great sets like let's make the sets story
great point
Great point. Love that.
Casey tells them
Miss Minutes is helping Rentzlayer.
This Nal explains
to the characters.
You know, last episode,
Mobius is like trying to call up
Miss Minutes for help, right?
Miss Minutes is MIA.
Here's why.
But it does something else.
It triggers Loki's memory.
And he tells them
about the recording
that he heard of the conversation
between Rensleyer and he who remains
last episode from the past.
When he was in the past,
He says it sounded like they were partners.
Mobius is like, my guy.
Maybe he should have brought it up.
To mention this.
Yeah.
When?
Fair complaint.
It's a great note.
It is a valid bit of feedback from Mobius to Loki.
It's so funny.
I love their dynamics so much.
So this coupled with Obie's temporal loom containment door need for Miss Minutes gives us
clear, we have not seen episode three, we don't actually know this, but this gives us this
very clear setup for what the next mission is, right? The mission of the week for episode three
has got to be, and we get the ping, they find, they get the ping on Rvona's tempad toward
the end of the episode, searching for Rensler, searching for miss minutes, that's got to commence
in earnest. Okay, I have to get to one of my nipicks for the episode. Please. If you'll,
indulge me for a moment, I'm curious to hear your opinion on this and whether or not you agree.
Casey spots the tempad on their desk, he asks about this rigged device that they're working on.
Despite not knowing what a fish was last season and contributing a sounds dumb insight to the grand sprawling tesseract assessment discourse,
he is certain instantly.
He doesn't know what it is for and he offers to look, but he is certain that it is not for.
blocking the trackers, that that cover story from Brad Wolf is a lie. Now, I really like having
more Casey in the show. His sudden tech genius feels a little dea sex Casey to me. Now, I think like a lot
of it you could say they're chalking it up, including in this episode, to his like TVA guidebook tutelage,
right? He's worshipping at the altar of the TVA guidebook. He is paying attention in a way that many members of the TVA aren't. And so he genuinely does no things that they don't and have awareness that they don't. I think that's fine. If you accept that, that's fine. You could quibble, but like I can make my piece with that pretty quickly and talk myself into it pretty quickly. The thing I actually bumped on more is that Mobius and Loki don't ask any follow-up questions. And that just felt a little flat and like a slightly out of character to me. Like,
They don't say, why are you so sure?
Or how do you know that?
Or can you explain that to me?
And they're just not like ask no follow-up questions, guys.
They just aren't.
So I thought that was strange.
And it's like a little bit indicative of one of the things about season two
that feels slightly, slightly sub the season one level to me through two episodes.
Did you bump on this at all or not so much?
Not so much.
I think it is without question a matter of convenience.
of getting Casey into the story, of giving him something to do
that kind of makes sense within his capacity at the TVA.
I also think there is like a he's book smart but not street smart thing happening.
They could explain some of like,
oh, I have this very specific lane of knowledge
as it relates to my workplace and that is it.
For sure.
As to whether Loki and Mobia should have been asking questions,
this I find very explainable, very relatable.
And it's if you have ever been,
they're embarrassed.
Sitting around trying to assemble or disassemble something
or tinker with something until you figure out,
out how to unbreak it.
And someone else comes along and says,
oh, hey, actually, I can fix that for you.
You're like, yes, please take it away from me as fast as you can.
Pure relief.
100%.
Especially two guys who are thumbing through the guidebook and twirling around,
they're like IKEA screwdrivers.
Like, they just are so far in over their heads.
They are, I think, just ecstatic to have it off their plate.
Okay, fair.
Fair.
Fair.
You've provided a read on the situation that I,
I'm willing to embrace.
We'll take it.
Much like Mobius and Loki are ready to embrace,
taking a big run at Brad Wolf.
It's buddy cop time.
They're so hyped for this.
Before Mobius, Loki, and B-15 enter the time theater
where Brad Wolf awaits,
Mobius channels his inner Eric Taylor and offers up
what I thought was an exceptional
clear eyes, full hearts caliber pregame speech. He says, okay, keep it simple. Where's Docs? Where's Sylvie?
And what did he do to that tempad? That's all we need to find out. Okay? But of course, Brad knows us.
And he knows our tactics. But that's what makes for an interesting chess match. Okay. Most of all, Brad's an asshole.
So don't let him get under your skin. Okay. This is a little. This is a little bit of you. This is a little bit of,
was so wonderful and just like such a perfect little Mobius moment.
I love the recurring.
Perfect coach Taylor there at the end in that he also needs to ultimately follow his own
speechifying advice.
Of course.
Very coach Taylor move.
Absolutely.
The recurring tendency to like call somebody an asshole made me think of the
just kind of an asshole and a bad friend.
Knock on Loki and season one.
I just love hearing Mobius say asshole.
It's absolutely wonderful.
Fantastic.
We find Brad inside, Rob.
he's sitting on a stool.
He's the picture of tough guy arrogance.
Yes.
He really knows and believes that he is in charge,
that he has nothing to worry about,
that he's going to be able to get the upper hand here.
Our guy loves an org chart,
loves to point out rank,
loves to point out protocol.
He's like Hu Yang and Asoka.
Standard Jedi protocol.
I'm here to tell you all about it,
even though the order fell.
That's the thing.
I'm not sure the org chart applies
if the people who are at the top,
of it were Chuck E. Cheese robots.
Maybe tell Brad if he's doing this.
Like, you, that, but also you dipped, so you don't get, you don't work here either.
Brad, you don't get to invoke all of this.
No pulling rank anymore.
Legendary hypocrisy, just a tremendous stretch from Brad Wolf in this episode.
Really an incredible performance. Wonderful.
Mopeas asks what Brad was doing on the sacred timeline.
And he says,
making movies.
Life on the big screen, baby.
I loved this.
He concedes very quickly that the tracker blocking gambit was a lie.
Here's the thing about Brad and here's the thing about this scene.
Brad may be an asshole.
Mobius is correct.
But he is wielding some sound.
Air Diet logic.
He says to be 15, worry you on blabbering on and on, again, rude, about how we all had
lives on the timeline?
Well, I went down and got my life.
What exactly are you mad at me about?
Now, of course, we understand inside of the episode what they're after, right?
They need to gain intel from him on Sylvie's whereabouts.
But he's right that ultimately, did he abandon his post?
Sure.
is he being a dick, sure. He did what they championed and maybe what they're afraid to do,
which is something that will come up quite soon. What does you think of this initial posture
from Bradwolf? Well, if we can kind of go down a timey, whimey detour for a second.
Let's do it. Absolutely. So all the people working at the TVA are variants, right?
Yes. So when X5 goes down to the sacred timeline. Yeah. And takes
he's taking over somebody's life,
I guess, like, his variance life on the sacred timeline.
This is a thing I think the show has done a genuinely pretty bad job of clarifying for us.
Yes.
A show that I absolutely love.
I agree.
I agree.
And people should, you know, it's possible that we're missing something, but I think, like,
not to use this as an excuse if we are missing something,
I don't think it should be this hard to, like, figure out the answer to your question.
either.
And this is where I was really hanging on that
like meteoric rise line
because it implied, I think,
that Brad's acting career was a relatively new thing
on the sacred timeline.
So the TVA members are variants, as you said,
of people from the timeline.
Okay, so
if he's going back,
like they're encouraging Mobius to do,
to see his life,
then that would imply
that Brad Wolf was there already.
Like, that he went back to a point before the branch,
before the variant spawning incident.
And then there are two brads.
Like, is the other Brad in a closet somewhere?
That doesn't make sense, right?
100%.
He has a sock in his mouth in a closet somewhere.
He's tied up.
And we're going to get some great comedy later.
To the moment of the variant spawning.
And, like, is it like if Loki had gone back to,
the lobby right
during the time heist
before he picked up the test track
like he's gone back to a key moment
and then is living his life from there
is that your read on it
or is he just going back to where
is there another Brad Wolf out there
somewhere living a different life and this is the life
that this X5
has created but that that I don't think that
last option tracks thematically with the like
I have discovered I have rediscovered and
erase the life that I was meant to be living
I think it has to be that so it's just a question of the
when and the how then right
And this is where the show is kind of talking out of both sides of its mouth about it,
where Sylvie's whole backstory, right, is the idea that she was this child,
she was taken from her life and her world, and that world was erased.
Like her parents, everything she knew was destroyed.
That's like the whole point of why the variants have like this tragic station.
And so the idea that they can just-
Their branch timelines.
Right, they're pruned.
So the idea that they can just jump back in and, you know,
erase jet skis or become movie stars or do whatever it was that Sylvie was meant to do.
it just doesn't track with what we've been told
about the rest of the show.
I think there's also,
this is like a little bit different
than the point that you're raising,
but it's reminding me of it
so I'll bring it up here
while we're on the timey-why-me
question front.
This is the time.
And again, I think it's entirely possible
that I think you're a very smart person.
For me, from my perspective,
I'm like, it's just entirely possible
that I'm just a fucking idiot
and like can't follow this stuff,
but I think it should probably be clearer.
Hard disagree.
Okay.
Later, not to jump way ahead, but later, during the defense against Docs.
Yes.
Final action stretch of the episode.
The mass bomb to prune the branches at scale.
And we get that initial, like, they've already pruned 30% of the branches line,
and then they keep pruning from there before they're thwarted.
And it's like, well, we know they didn't prune every single branch because Sylvie goes back to Broxton.
So some of the branches survived.
and in theory,
more can always sprout from there
because that is based on our
intro to the TVA in season one
and that animated opening we got
from Miss Minutes,
like maybe you were just late
for work, right?
Remember?
Like, the number of things
that could spark a variant
and then do you hit some sort of,
like, what are they trying to do?
They're trying to prune the timelines
as this is before everything
that happened in the finale.
Avoid the nexus event,
maintain the sacred timeline
will now everything.
Branch is a plenty.
Okay, there's a difference
between branches of plenty
in infinite branches, and it just should be infinite branches.
I slacked our beloved pal and colleague, Zach Graham,
and I was like, I need your help.
Because I has such a vivid memory.
Zach is a huge fan of multiverse stories and also is a math genius,
but I have such a vivid memory of one of Zach's when we were working on Bindemone
Marvel, one of Zach's notes, which is like really stuck with me because it had never occurred
to me until he brought it up.
The famous Dr. Strange 1 in 14 million moment,
Zach is like 14 millioners just not even close to enough.
Oh.
Not even close.
And I was like, no way.
Right, of course.
Yeah.
So this should be, the branches should be infinite.
And like, I get that from the TVA's perspective, from Doc's perspective, that's
perspective, that's the mission to prune when something pops up.
But there's a difference between what popped up on a one-on-one basis, like, okay, somebody
did something.
Loki picked up the test track, branch, go a prune.
in it, which again, there would still be more than you could wrap your mind around happening every instant.
But Sylvie stabbing, he who remains in the finale, the multiverse cracking open, branches upon plenty.
Like, when we were talking through, it's like, it's not just branches of plenty.
It's each branch then spawns branches, right?
And it's exponential, the scale.
It just shouldn't be possible to capture on a, on a, on a,
a monitor and to hit 30% and then to go beyond it,
it just shouldn't be possible.
When the character-driven moments in season one,
I think the timey-wimey stuff was tighter in season one,
without question.
But I think when the character moments are so central,
you are able to just simply like focus on that more.
For sure.
Season two is more time-me-wimey plot-centric.
And so for that stuff to not be totally clear and tracking to us,
I think some of it can be, well,
let's be patient and they'll explain it over time.
That's like the tempat thing to me.
Does the multiverse work this way is a little bit different?
Like, do we understand what it means to go back and find your life?
Like, that's different.
We actually have to have that as a sturdier foundation, right?
I think those elements have to be sturdier and ironed out over time.
There's some things that are just going to have to be simplified, right?
There's no way to display on-screen infinite possibilities.
That's fine.
But telling us that someone is already eliminated 30% of them and is about to maybe get rid of them all, it's like, wait.
Yeah.
What?
My assumption on that is that we're talking about basically the branches that have spun off to a degree that would require pruning, not just every conceivable branch that has started.
So it's only things that have reached to like, oh, Loki is an alligator, right?
Like only these levels of deviance from the timeline that according to the TV rules cannot be accepted.
You're right, though, about like, if the camera.
Character moments are what matter that overpowers that stuff.
I think what the show also does pretty effectively to counterweight some of the time you I mean nonsense is it makes us feel the stakes of the multiverse better than anything else than the MCU does right now.
And, you know, it's one of those weird quirks of multiversal storytelling where what the audience wants and what the characters want are not always the same thing when you have a multiverse involved.
I always think of no way home, like the ending of that movie when the fabric of reality is tearing.
and it's like, oh no, we might get all our favorite villains coming through the multiverse.
How, you know, bend them in the MCU.
How terrible would that be?
Yeah.
Versus in this episode, I think we do get a sense of like, oh, these are lives.
These are people.
You know, we may not understand every dynamic of who is being snatched from where and how they can replace themselves on the timeline, but it's like people are dying.
Yes.
And there is a group of people at the TVA who are trying to figure out an alternative to the system that they knew.
And if nothing else, we have the emotional weight of that.
driving us more so than, oh, on a mechanical level,
I totally understand what's going on with the multiverse.
Absolutely.
That I agree with completely, and I agree with you that in season one,
it's not like there weren't questions about what we were seeing
or how it was working in season one.
I mean, I think we gained a lot of clarity over time,
but I remember even like the discussion of,
okay, well, you know, and season one came out before no way home,
but like thinking just in general about that early era,
multiversal storytelling in the MCU and like,
okay, well, when we use the word variant,
like the three Peters,
those are multiversal versions of Peter Parker, right?
Whereas like Loki, R.MCU Loki picking up the Tester Act,
that's the same Loki has become a variant of himself.
And like conversations like that and people trying to wrap their minds around it,
people were working through that in real time,
or then later when we got new information,
but that was okay because the absolute wallop
of seeing Loki interact with a variant of himself,
with Sylvie, seeing Loki watch the events of his life
and thinking through the ramifications of the things that hadn't even happened
to yet, but we're going to.
Like, seeing him interact with classic Loki
and having that conversation with Classic Loki about how he missed his brother
and, like, our Loki having to think about, well, what if, like,
the one version of us
who managed to avoid the
Thanos fate
ended up stepping back out into the open
because he missed Thor.
That just is such a rich text.
And so that other stuff you were just able to say,
we'll figure out eventually.
I'm like 99% still there.
I think there are just more moments in season two
that were bumping on some of those questions
than there weren't season one.
But if the character and thematic heft
and heart is still there and gripping us,
which in this exact scene,
it is, then that just carries like a more, that's just a weightier thing for us as viewers.
So like we get into this conversation with Brad Wolf and we're getting a little bit of the
buddy cop back and forth, you know, answer the question.
Mobius chiming in when Loki's in the lead.
But like when Loki says there are lives at stake rather than engaging with the substance of
Brad's, what are you mad at me about, point?
and Loki and Brad begin to fence
and Brad goes for the jugular,
it is riveting.
Steve, can we hear this clip?
They're lives at stake.
There are lives at stake.
Oh, you've got some nerve.
They're alive's at stake.
Everyone here knows what you're doing, you know.
You're just trying to make up
for all the terrible, awful shit you've done in your life.
you pathetic little man.
Okay, that's enough.
Here's this.
No, no, it's, uh, it's riveting.
Keep going, I want to him all.
See, everything you and Sylvie have ever done
to try to help has only ever made it worse.
Is that right?
See, I've read your file.
It's you.
You're the problem.
Every time we've ever found a you.
The problem is you think you're special,
but you're not.
So it doesn't mean you.
matter what outfit you put on, play dress up or a little lies you tell your friends or even
the lies you tell yourself. At the end of the day, you just make everything worse. For Mobius,
for B-15, for your mother. Because that's what you do. Lose, you're a loser, loki,
Stop trying to be a hero, man.
You're a villain.
You're good at it.
Do that.
To borrow from our friend Mobius,
did you feel bad for our little ice runt?
Oh, man, I thought you were going to ask,
do I think Brad Wolf is a Swifty.
Like, it's me.
I am the problem, just amending the lyrics.
Somebody knew exactly what they were doing with that line.
Absolutely sublime.
It's hard not to feel bad for our beloved little ice run here.
My goodness.
This is real.
This is the stuff
Linal territory for me.
Like this speech,
this exchange,
this scene.
I just thought this was perfect.
This is like vintage Loki.
Centering a conversation
on assessing someone's core nature,
like questioning our capacity as people
to fundamentally,
truly change.
I loved this.
And I think the thing that was like
the most,
deft and brilliant about this is it's not just a withering indictment that's going to make us
feel bad for our beloved little ice ron. It hits on so many of the story beats from season one
that were central to Loki's arc. So he's reminding Loki of his past because he's trying to
spark a backslide, right? He's trying to get under his skin. It's trying to make him do something
that Loki doesn't want to do. But in trying to achieve that, he's actually just removed.
Minding Loki and us as viewers of what Loki has already worked through.
So let's go through these.
There are a few buckets here.
The first one, and this is just below the belt beyond the pale stuff from Bradwell.
Frege.
The gloves are off.
This is savage.
He brought up.
Frege can't do it.
You mentioned Loki watching his life on fast forward in season one.
I mean, where do the waterworks really begin to flow in earnest?
the way that he cried and wept seeing her death in season one,
his guilt,
his shame.
The way, though, also that he talked about Frigga with Sylvie on the train in episode
three, like explaining how she taught him magic,
the way that he said she was the kind of person you'd want to believe in you.
Or like a moment in Thor the Dark World,
can't go a Loki Pod without mentioning Thor the Dark World.
God forbid.
Frigga says always so perceptive about everyone but yourself.
This is like one of the key lines in the history of the Loki canon.
So again, Brad thinks that he's trying to utterly destabilize an unmore Loki here.
But is Loki going to be sad and guilt-ridden and destroyed?
Or is he going to think about all of those moments where he found a deeper connection
and sense of purpose and reflecting on his mother?
It's a great question.
I think Brad has a very keen sense of the fact that part of the Loki Cortez,
is that he is a huge mama's boy.
And he's just hitting the pressure points, right?
Like you're going to go through the full list of these other kind of themes he touches here.
But I think he's just rapid fire hitting all these different kind of emotional pressure points just to see what happens.
But ultimately, this whole exchange is very like Loki as Mind Hunter.
Like the swiftness with which the interrogation flips on Loki and then flips on Mobius when he comes up to bat.
Brad is just playing a different game
than these guys are
at this particular point in the story.
Brad had his tweet thread ready.
It's just incredible stuff from him.
This idea of like shaking off
the insecurity that
Loki is a loser
and also that Loki is a villain.
There were a lot of
central exchanges about these ideas
in season one, including right at the beginning
of the season. On the loser front, we got that
that, it's funny for someone born to rule
you sure do lose a lot.
You might even say it's in your nature.
Barb from Mobius and Loki's like,
didn't work out for the last guy.
Said that to me.
Shout out, Phil Colson.
We miss you now and always.
On the villain front,
you're building inside of the premiere
or the show last season
to desperate play for control.
You do know yourself.
A villain.
That's not how I see it
in that I don't enjoy hurting people.
I don't enjoy it.
Really emotional breakdown at the end.
all of which builds toward the bridge that they build
in this friendship in the fourth episode
when Mobius calls back to those earlier exchanges
and says to Loki,
you could be whoever,
whatever you want to be even someone good.
I mean,
just in case anyone ever told you different,
referring, of course, to himself.
So like,
this is exactly at the heart.
Bradwell is just a few minutes away
from telling Loki that he needs therapy.
It's like this was Loki's therapy.
These conversations with Moby's,
and with Sylvie in season one.
This is where he worked through
the trauma and the insecurity
that had to find his life
and came out stronger on the other side.
Brad stopped reading the file too early.
I mean, but clearly he loved season one.
You know, clearly he was plugged in
on all the mechanics, all the themes of season one.
I think he loved the Infinity Saga, you know?
I think maybe that's true.
But I do love him preying on
the insecurity of Loki 2,
not just because it's well explored in season one,
but to me, like tonally speaking,
it's something different than we get anywhere else
in the Marvel stuff right now
that Loki isn't an arrogant genius,
he's not a super soldier,
he's not perfect,
he's just like a little old orphan
wrestling with who he really is,
and that's in all the stories, right?
Every variation we have seen
of him in the MCU so far
is wrestling with those things.
And so, again,
pretty good pressure point
to push down on pretty hard.
Yes, there's a reason
that when Mobius put him in the,
time loop, time prison in season one,
the thing that he kept reliving was Siff
telling him, I hope you know you deserve to be alone
and you always will be.
Like that genuine fear and doubt
that he is worth the love and appreciation
that he sees other people give to each other all the time.
Making up for the bad shit that he did,
this was one of my favorite parts of this
because this is one of the areas
where Brad is actually right.
This is why Loki is doing this.
And he, Brad is trying to make that a weakness.
And for Loki, that's a source of strength.
Like, one of the really powerful and poignant moments of season one came in episode five when Loki said to Sylvie, I betrayed everyone who ever loved me.
I betrayed my father, my brother, my home.
I know what I did.
And I know why I did it.
And that's not who I am anymore.
Okay?
I won't let you down.
Like, every time he tries to be there, yes, it's because of how it feels about her.
but it's also because he is genuinely trying to prove to her
and to himself that he's not that person anymore.
Him flipping, Brad flipping the Loki,
like your ledger is dripping with red on him in this moment.
Yes.
Just brutal stuff.
He is really miscalculated.
Like he's,
he's arming just practically Loki with ammo for future scenes, right?
He's setting up the cube torment with like,
well, yeah, I'm a villain, remember?
Look at all the awful shit I did, remember?
But he's just like basically playing the greatest hits playlist,
reminder set of all of the progress that Loki has made in all of the ways that he has grown,
which was just tremendous.
So Loki doesn't say that, of course.
He's not like, ah, let me tell you how much progress I've made.
He laughs.
He leans in.
And even though he's deploying it here as a tactic and he's trying to weaponize Brad's view of him against him
in order to like break through Brad's resolve,
he does voice the thing that ultimately on some level,
despite all of the growth, despite the arc,
we're always a little bit afraid
that we will hear Loki say again, right?
And that maybe we will hit a point one day
where he means it again and believes it again.
It's the real me, a loser,
always have been, always will be,
and perhaps I've been holding something back.
Perhaps I've just been biting my time.
Don't want to backslide?
This is great.
Like, this is just good fucking writing.
Like, the dual use of, again, you're getting all this emotional exposition for the audience, for the show.
Like, and it doesn't feel like an info dump.
It feels like something organic to the scene.
And at the same time, you're getting all these beats from Brad where he seems like he's in control, Brad does.
But he also betrays the fact that he's kind of scared of Loki.
Right.
We get this great shot where when Loki's walking towards him, the way Loki is kind of leaning over.
over Brad and Brad is craning backwards.
And it's the kind of shot that it just so clearly illustrates like perspective and power
and tension.
And like,
we'll get it later when Loki walks into a room or does something.
Actually, it might be in this part of the scene when he's approaching and Brad is kind
of shooting side eyes at Mobius and B-15.
Like, are you going to, are you going to do something?
Are you going to stop him?
So he has the therapy line at the end of the day.
Yeah.
But he's too obsessed with her.
I mean, which is great.
So what incredible.
But he does give up the game a little bit
that maybe he is more afraid of Loki than he lets on.
You're so right.
He's actually really working from the Loki
pre-season one breakthrough playbook,
a desperate attempt at control, right?
It's a cruel elaborate trick conjured by the week
to inspire fear.
But if it's a trick,
if it's an attempt to control,
it means you know on some level
that you don't have it,
that you're not in control.
Speaking of not being in control,
it's Mobius' turn.
and there's a lot of heavy shit here,
but we do get an all-time singer
before we get into the heavy shit
and I would love to hear it, Steve.
I got a little tense.
Hey, you want to hear a good one?
Knock, knock.
Who's there?
Brad.
Brad, who?
That's show piss.
Absolutely hysterical.
I'm not sure.
Loki's my favorite, obviously,
but I'm not sure there's a character
I enjoy watching more than Mobius.
This is so funny.
He's so good.
And the Owen Wilson charm offensive is just hitting on all cylinders right now.
His face, his expression when he says that's showbiz.
Oh, my God, incredible.
He tries to leverage this fear of being forgotten against Brad.
Brad is not in the mood to comply with this.
Listen, you give us what we want.
We'll make sure you can get back to that life that you're not forgotten.
And he turns the tables on Mobius.
He says the TVA is not your real home.
Mobius isn't even your real name.
Well, it's what I answered to.
Do you have any idea what kind of life you might have left behind?
Who might be waiting for you back there?
I mean, do you care?
You know they took us.
You know they took our lives and you're still here.
He calls him a nowhere man and then Mobius slaps him in the face.
Very satisfying to watch.
Again, it is hard to argue with Brad here.
We are going to talk about this question of why Mobius doesn't.
Want to go back why he is afraid what is on his mind here in a minute because this comes up in the next scene between Loki and Mobius.
So we'll just talk about all of our like reads on that there.
But we've got to get some pie rob in order to break this down.
Oh, we absolutely do.
To the pie cave.
You're walking in front.
I'm just following you.
They storm off to the lower levels.
They wind up in basically a key lime pie dispensary.
They have no idea how they got there.
Some of the best conversations from season one happened in a cafe.
So it's like, we're back with our boys sitting in a cafe as they talk about the meaning of life.
Couldn't be happier.
I am thrilled.
Big pie episode, as you noted earlier, we've got this.
We've got the apple pie at McDonald's.
I want to know how you felt about the way this key lime pie looked and the way that Owen Wilson and Tom Hiddleston approached pretending to eat the pie.
They had very different tactics, which I thought was absolutely hysterical.
And also I would just love to know how you feel about key lime pie.
One, not a key lime pie fan.
I would think of all the infinite possibilities of the universe,
you could do better than wall-to-wall keyline pie.
But before we get to pie, let's rewind to the format.
We have this beautiful automat.
Incredible.
How do we not have an all-pie automat at our office, Mao?
And can we get on that?
Let's pass the suggestion along.
Daniel?
I think it's the only way to go.
Absolutely.
Our office downtown is very close to
Grand Central Market in downtown L.A.
Where fat and flour
pie shop
the most sensational
key lime pie that you could ever have in your life.
I'm going to sway you on the key lime pie front
next time you're in L.A. We're going to get a slice of
key lime pie of fat and flour and you're going to be converted.
You will.
We'll get it, but can we also get like
a coconut cream backup pie?
pie just in case the key lime pie is trash.
We get every pie.
I'm on board as long as their key lime pie is not this color green.
This was distressing.
This particular hue of green and also the thickness.
Like something just seemed off in terms of the texture.
It looked like a jello multamine.
I love jello.
I'm not sure if you know this about me, Rob.
My bot mitzvah theme was jello.
What?
And every table was a different flavor.
and my head table was lime
because lime jello
was my favorite
when I was a kid
but I don't want
my key lime pie
to look like lime jello
I don't
this was off
can we unpack
can we unpack some of that
for a second
how did we arrive at jello
as your your bod-mitzvah theme
so
it was just a thing
I really loved
and I wanted a theme
I will say the whole
the planning phase
was a
it was condensed
and compressed
and kind of accelerated
because I had sort of decided very late in the game to do it.
And so just thought, what do I love?
Jello.
Wouldn't this be fun?
Wouldn't this be weird?
Wouldn't this be an honest reflection of myself and the things that matter to me?
And, uh, you know, a lot of people did like T-shirts for their giveaways and I gave out,
I gave away boxer shorts.
And there was like an illustration of a jello mold on the ass cheek.
And it said I wiggled and jiggled my way through Mallory's bottom.
It's fun.
The little graphic design like moved when you walked.
It's great stuff.
In fucking.
Thank you, man.
Yeah.
Honestly, this is, this is, what a beautiful story.
Thank you.
You know, I, I love pie.
I love jello.
I love, I love dessert.
I love baked goods.
I think it's clear that both Loki and Tom Hiddleston don't.
I can't say actually know what Tom Hiddleston's dessert preferences are, but he was, I'd say,
I'd say it as a parent that he was not digging this.
Oh, and Wilson was doing, doing the work here.
He was taken full heaping spoonfuls.
Tom Helson, like, just kept moving his spoon around the whipped cream and, like, gently licking a little bit of whipped cream off the spoon. And that was it. Oh, yeah. And it made me think back to the exchange in season one. Like, do you, this was about the cablooie? Do you, do you have candy on Asgard? Yeah, grapes and nuts. No wonder you're so bitter. Like, grapes and nuts are delicious, but that's not candy. So what sort of confessions?
has been a part of Loki's life.
I really, I have so many questions
after seeing his response to the key lime pie.
The way he said it is
after Moeus said it was really good.
He looked so pain.
So pain.
No Paul Hollywood handshakes.
No Hollywood handshakes for Woki on the pie.
No Mary Berry scrummies from Tom Hiddleston on the pie.
But I am positive that some bad baby out there
has already clipped.
Loki licks his sport clean.
dot jiff.
Like, that is going to make the rounds.
I know how this goes.
It's a matter of time.
You're a jiff guy, not a GIF guy.
Interesting.
I'm a Jif guy.
Yeah.
Interesting.
Do you think some of your variants say GIF?
Undoubtedly.
And I pruned all of them.
They're gone.
They're gone now.
But yeah, Tom Hidleston,
whipped cream only, did not touch his pie
throughout this entire scene.
He did, however, showcase a rather elegant Chelsea boot.
You know, really, really strong posture, cross-leg,
like, look at me.
Look at me in my full TVA regalia.
The way that he, we get such a great look when he is standing, first, like, leaning
against the McDonald's porch and then standing as Sylvie sits on the bed of her truck.
Flawless.
Just the whole, the whole fit.
Drip Lord.
Absolutely.
Add it to the moniker list.
God of mischief, Prince of Lies.
Drip Lord.
the sun, drip lord.
Well, let me, before we move on from the pie,
tell me if I'm reading too much into this scene,
because you talked about, you know,
Loki coming from a world of fruits and nuts as desserts
and how that would kind of inform your perspective.
Yeah.
There is something about the conversation that they are about to have
about Mobius not wanting to visit the version of the life he could have had
that kind of ties into,
I'm eating this shitty key lime pie and I'm telling myself that it's great.
versus Loki as someone who's like,
I've been out there,
I have seen shit,
I've been across the universe.
I know this is not good.
No, absolutely not.
Well,
satisfaction is not in his nature, you know?
Surrender's not in mine.
Yeah, what a great to throw the dark world
coming up again.
Can't go more than 30 minutes
without reference again.
I love it.
Yeah, I think you're right.
Like, what routine,
what level of semi-mediocrity
do you need to talk yourself into
to go about your day.
And even if we think back
to like the conversations
from the first episode
of this season
about what Mobius remembers
and doesn't remember,
forget his real life
about his time at the TVA.
Like he's like,
how do we get here?
Where are we?
Well, how many times
has he sat in that room
and had a piece of pie
and had a conversation
with somebody before
that he can't even recall?
Like, this isn't a life.
It's a thing he's clinging on to
out of fear,
which is a very human,
relatable thing.
And we get a,
a quite moving exchange with,
we had a moving opening.
Loki is really concerned.
He's like,
are you okay?
I've never seen you like this.
He's worried about his friend.
This was beautiful.
He is seeking,
before we get to the heart of it again,
we get some interesting comedy,
some dark comedy here.
He is seeking to find common ground
as Mobius is inhaling this pie
and opening up by talking about
the battle in New York.
Steve, can we hear this?
It happens.
You know, sometimes a rage.
builds up and you're just gotta let it out.
You remember that time?
I was so angry with my father and my brother.
I went down to Earth and held the whole of New York City hostage
with an alien army, tried to use the mine stone
on Tony Stark and didn't work.
So I threw him off the building.
I mean, let me say something.
Wasn't tactical.
Yeah.
I don't lost it.
Sometimes our emotions get the better of us.
You can say that again.
I was like, I was in hysterics watching this.
The absolute gall of Loki to say this.
Incredible.
This gave me real Anakin in episode five of Asoka.
Is that what this is about?
Energy.
It's like, yes.
That's what this is about.
Loki, all the people who will never get to have even a mediocre slice of key lime
pie because of your alien invasion.
That's what this is about.
Plus, it is just amazing that like the Battle of New York
is the source of all of Tony Stark's deepest traumas
throughout the MCU and for Loki,
it was like, I had a cranky afternoon.
You know?
That right there.
That's the end game.
Who among us?
You know, shit with dad.
This was unbelievable.
It's incredible.
Okay, so he handwaves the invasion of New York.
We've all been there.
And then he gets to X-5's question.
He gets to what Brad was asking
about Mobius' life on the timeline.
Aren't you curious?
Mobius insists he's not.
That it's not his life, that this is, and not only that this is, but that he's glad, that he's
glad the TVA kidnapped him and put him here eating this shitty pie.
Look, Loki says, I understand, I get it.
You know, you might think twice in case it's something bad, and Mobius jumps in and says,
or something good.
Something bad I can handle.
What if it's something good?
You think I want to have that rattling around in here?
Of course not.
sure. That, what if it's something good, Rob, shattered me. This was just like, the scene with X5 and then this conversation with Loki about this idea with Mobius really hit this admission here that he's afraid to know what he had because that means definitionally knowing what he doesn't have, right? What he's missing, what he has missed, what he might not be able to ever really truly.
get back.
Like, how do you go through your day if you know what else might be waiting for you?
Joanna and I have been doing Dr.
Whoopods.
For Joe, it's a rewatch for me.
It's my first watch.
And this gave me such powerful Rose Tyler energy with the ninth doctor and Rose
sitting there at the cafe with Jackie and Mickey and saying, but it was.
It was a better life.
And like once she has seen that,
she can't go back to the way things were,
to what her day had been in the cafe with the pie
going about the time theater shenan shenan.
Like when you,
when your eyes have been open,
either in Rose's case to the possibility of the universe
or in the opposite way here,
this gets back to your earlier point
about like the small intimate nature
and how actually like almost unbelievably big
and vast that can feel in its profundity.
Like how do you go back?
It made me think too of like,
maybe think a little bit of cap of our guy Steve Rogers
and we build toward the culmination of his journey
and like I thought maybe I should try some of that life Tony was telling me to get.
How did that work out for you?
It was beautiful.
Like once you see that,
once you get to experience it,
how could you spend your time any other way?
And this was just heartbreaking to see Mobius work through this.
This is how I know we are so,
fucking back.
Like all the time
me-wimey stuff we brought up,
like how does it work?
How do you plug back in?
Yeah.
When you put these two in a room
or you put Loki and Sylvie in a room,
I just don't,
I really don't care so much
about the mechanics of any of it.
And when we're digging around like this,
this is the meat of this show.
This is what drives it.
This is what makes it interesting.
Those kinds of like mental hurdles
and how you could possibly come back
from that sort of knowledge.
And what it is that makes Loki want it
and what it is that makes Mobius not.
I think it's just such an interesting way
to put two people we really like
and two people who are working together
kind of not across purposes
but across perspectives.
Let me ask you a question about this.
I loved this conversation.
I loved this scene.
There are a lot of really like heart-rending moments
in the episode.
This Mobius one was probably like top of the list for me.
It was like really moved by this
and deeply saddened by it.
How are you recognizing
reconciling. Joe and I talked about this a little bit with a different thing in episode one where
Mobius seems to be in a different place in season two than he was in season one in a couple key respects.
So what we talked about last week was that, you know, his conversation with B-15, like, you think
people are going to be ready to hear that is not where we left him in season one when he was in a
burn it to the ground, thanks for the spark place with the TVA. And this is this is another example of this.
because in episode four of season one,
before he's pruned,
Mobius and Ravona have a really intense exchange
in the hallway when he says,
you know where I'd go?
If I could go anywhere,
wherever it is I'm really from.
Yeah, wherever I had a life before the TVA came along,
maybe I had a jet ski,
that's what I'd like to do just riding around on my jet ski
and she says prune him and they do.
So my question is, how are you reading this shift in Mobius's disposition and preference and outlook and goal?
Is it, like, did something actually change fundamentally?
Is this something with the writing and structure of the show in terms of where they want the character to be because then he has to work through something new?
Or are you viewing this as, okay, well, this is like the most relatable thing in the world.
You want something, but then you're actually like really afraid to try to go get it.
because it's hard, because it's scary.
Is this more of a fear-driven backslide to you
rather than like a disconnect
in where the character was season to season?
I don't see it as too much of a disconnect.
I think it's a couple of things.
One, some of it is the difference in
kind of interpreting where Mobius is
and why he's saying the things that he's saying
versus taking everything he says at face value.
Like that Rivana line's a great example.
To me, he's not really saying like,
I wish I could go back to where I was.
He's saying, I fucking know what's going on.
Right.
And I'm sick.
I know what you did.
I know what you're all doing.
I'm sick of this.
Like, I'm over this whole situation more so than actually wanting to go back to that place.
I think there are, you know, there are probably some line to line inconsistencies inevitably.
But to me, I think some of it can probably be attributed to what he has learned in the opening episodes of this show.
Especially as, you know, we left him at like what happened with the giant cloud, right?
Like, that was the end of his knowledge of Loki season one.
Yeah.
So even him knowing, like, what he who remains had to say from Loki and the fact that, oh,
the universe is in an even greater level of chaos than we might have understood.
Like, we knew the TVA was fake, but there is another dimension beyond that happening here of everything is now spiraling out of control.
And so when he says things like, how are they going to take our messaging around this particular point?
I think it's probably understand that he's a little shook up.
And so I think some of it is that.
Some of it is probably just season to season inconsistency.
Some of it is just like less differences in opinion and more just differences in the texture of how he's expressing those opinions.
Yeah.
And there's also some level of projection, right?
Because when he's like, you know, all your gods are dead and like this is actually what's going on.
Well, he's had his version of having to face that and grapple with it.
And it would be, I love that episode for confrontation between Mobius and Rensler and that stand he makes because it's such a,
dark indication of what not only like, as you noted,
what he has learned and gleaned and embraced,
but of the choice he has made, right,
to side with Loki,
to side with Sylvie to try to fight for something different.
Well, now you're confronting the reality of what that means.
Not only for you, but for everybody around you,
what does it feel like?
How does it change the fabric of,
forget the rhythm of your day, the fabric of your existence,
everything you know to be true.
So you can genuinely feel a desire.
to know and look and see,
while also as like a very rational,
practical person like Mobius is,
being really daunted by the prospect
of having to actually do that directly.
Like welcoming that unpredictability into your life.
I mean, Mobius is a creature of habit, right?
Mobius is a man of routine and rhythm
and the same outfit every day.
And he sat and he had his whiskey and talked to Rivona
and he commented on her trophies
and everything that has happened to him since.
Everything that has happened since Loki came into the TVA
has been a disruption of that norm.
And that's ultimately a good thing, right?
That's his great awakening.
Those are the scales coming off of his eyes.
But if it were easy for him,
that would actually be odd, right?
It should be daunting.
It should be something that he has to work through.
So this is a, this is a,
whether it's like a disconnect
or just a backside and a rewind
and we have to watch him work through it,
I'm ultimately glad that we get to see him work through it
in this season because it'll be a really rich journey
to take with him.
And maybe ultimately the way to think of it
is kind of as a slight pivot,
right, between the interrogation scene
and this conversation,
we're broadening out the themes
of Loki Season 1
of what is it that makes a Loki a Loki?
And now it's what is it
that makes any of us who we are, right?
People who have free will,
people who don't have free will,
people who get free will,
who were the people of the TVA,
are they the lives that they know
or the lives that they never knew
that they even had?
And I think it's so telling that we're kind of shifting in that direction and broadening our scope.
And we still ask a lot of questions about what makes Loki tick.
But so much of these scenes, emotionally speaking, are driven by what makes Mobius himself and what he wants.
Which we have to have.
Because if Mobius is this relationship that we love, the dynamic between Loki and Sylvie,
the dynamic between Loki and Mobius, like, for that to continue, it's been riveting for us.
Like, genuinely one of the master strokes of the MCU to date.
for that to continue to work,
we have to be as invested in their journeys
as we are in Loki's.
And so that requires that level
of introspection and interrogation
or the trepidation
to look in for them as well.
It's a really fun thing
to get to spend time
in this way with Mobius too.
It's just an incredible character.
They can't work through it all
in one episode, Rob.
They can't work through it all
in one conversation.
They've got to shift back.
I know.
We've got four episodes ahead of us still.
They've got to shift back
to X5 and Sylvie.
and they deduce that if he found her,
a few things must be true.
She didn't realize it because she would have bounced.
And he didn't tell anyone because then other people would know.
And why didn't he tell anyone?
Because he wanted to live his life on the timeline.
He wants more time to be Brad Wolf.
Who wouldn't?
So funny.
They need Brad to admit this.
They need him to lead them to Sylvie.
And Mobius says to Loki, well, come on.
you're the god of mischief, right?
And the look on Loki's face here,
the way that he tilts his head to the side
and smiles with like the purest look of
love and genuine gratitude.
Like this was a cute little quick moment,
but it was a real like you actually see me clearly moment
between the two of them that I just adored.
Just bros seeing bros.
You know, it really warms the heart.
Oh, man.
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Speaking of bros, we've got another bonding session. It's time for Super Guidebook, Bros.
we are going to break bread.
We're going to torture Brad.
We're going to get to that.
But because we cut between scenes,
let's actually just take the
OB and Casey and B-15 stuff
in a chunk here,
and then we'll take all of the bread stuff together.
We go to the temporal loom.
It is very, like,
toddler throwing noodles all over the room.
Energy from the loom.
It's like, you know, my hair on a humid day.
Things are really out of hand.
The score is very dramatic.
And OB is trying to type his keystrokes in.
They fail.
Access denied and valid temporal aura.
Oh no.
So then later, after the Brad torment,
B-15 brings Casey down to help OB and they find OB shouting,
we're all going to die.
And it is not the kind of positive workplace energy that I am looking for out of OB.
But also, he's not wrong.
For a long enough timeline, we are all going to die, Mal.
Well, it's been hundreds of years since he had seen another person until Mobius and Loki popped down.
So, I mean, he's having a good run, honestly.
Yeah.
He has very productive.
Very, very productive.
Casey's absolutely overcome.
He is overcome when he realizes that he is meeting the Oraboros of TVA Guidebook fame.
You've read it?
Hope he says read it.
I practically memorized it.
This is just so cute.
Casey asks,
so it would be to sign it.
Yeah,
this whole exchange is,
nerded out.
It is a basically
line for line reading
of me with my MCU book
next time I see Joe.
You know,
just sign next to your picture.
Read it?
I practically memorized it.
Practically memorized it by now.
Every detail,
every ticket.
Order your book now.
Order it.
Wonderful,
wonderful read.
It's fantastic.
Shout out Joe and Dave
and Gavin.
Best.
P.15.
She's not saying this about
MCU the reign of Marvel Studios, but she is
saying this about the moment between Casey
and O.B. and the guidebook.
She's like,
can we focus
on the, we're all going to die
thing that O.B. was saying a second ago,
please. Can I get your attention
again? And he tells
them, O.B.
is trying to apply a retrofit device
Rob, but he can't open the
containment doors. The only
person who can, he says, is the person who designed it with a live scan of his temporal aura.
Well, here's the problem. He remains is gone and Miss Minutes isn't here to override it.
So Casey states the presumed plot of episode three, we have to convince rogue artificial intelligence to come back to work.
Yeah, as a workplace leader yourself, how would you convince a rogue artificial intelligence to come back to work?
What's the cell to miss minutes? I don't know if I want Miss Minutes to come back to work.
Even if the fate of the multiverse is at stake here
and the temporal loom is about to explode,
I was not digging the Miss Minutes energy.
I don't want Miss Minutes as my cubicle mate.
No, thank you.
But as a viewer, I'm very much looking forward
to mask off creepy-ass Miss Minutes returning to the TV.
I cannot wait for that.
I can't wait.
Yeah, going to episodes without Rivona and Miss Minutes is a little bit of...
Are you surprised by that at all,
or does that feel right in terms of...
of pacing. It does feel a little right. I mean, you want to give them something to chase after.
You want to give these early relationships some time. And like, honestly, we need to get to know
Brad, right? Like, we need to get to know some other characters you're plugging into these
spots. And I think those have been successful to varying degrees, but I do love Brad. I think that's
probably been the cherry on top of the show so far in terms of new characterization.
Okay, you heard it from Rob. Eat shit, Miss Minutes. Brad Wolf is here.
Kick rocks. All right. Speaking of Brad, it's time to tour.
or Brad. It's time to break Brad.
Great episode. Name. Wonderful stuff.
We go back to Brad and he is resting
on the floor grates.
I don't know what it
was about this overhead shot. I loved this. I think it gave me
maybe like
yellow jackets,
honeycomb,
like beehive, visual
corollary
just vibes. But
there was something about it that I just love so
and just Brad's like eye roll when Loki walks in.
I mean, this was just an absolute sublime.
Sublime.
Way to start.
We are here with the plot.
The plot of Mobius and Loki have worked up.
I loved hearing Mobius later refer to this machine as the gizmo when he's threatening
Brad in front of the McDonald's with a return.
Time Cube atmosphere time here.
Brad is like on to them right away.
He sniffs out that this is a gimmick, right?
This is cute. Which one of you came up with this little script, but they still managed to dupe him, which was part of the great achievement here. Loki locks the door. I would like to ask you if you understood why this made sense or worked. Would a prison door lock from the inside is my first question? Like, if so, what is just stopping Brad from getting up, walking over and opening it? And then as a famed hunter, which we know he is overpowering the Minuteman outside. And then if it locks on the outside and not the inside, that wouldn't.
Brad who worked at the TV as X-5.
Know that?
There is no explanation.
Okay. I was like, what do I miss in here?
So the only way I could think of to explain
why the door would lock from the inside,
a prison door would lock from the inside,
would be that maybe the room he's in is not a cell.
Like, not intent.
It's just an empty room that they have chosen to put him in
for holding for whatever reason.
I don't think we've got enough explanation.
to say that that's true.
And they certainly seem to suggest
that he's in a holding cell
of a fairly official capacity
and it looks consistent
with the holding cells we've seen.
Maybe every time he tried to get up
to go to the door,
they zapped his time color.
I guess that's possible.
Maybe it all happened
in another scene off screen.
As to why he's not overpowering them,
I think that is like,
he's projecting confidence in power
by not trying to escape, right?
Like him laying on the ground.
I don't think that's all pretty consistent,
but why he would believe this whole ruse
about the door being locked
from the inside of a cell he knows
as well as anyone having conducted
many such interrogations.
Yeah, I don't know about that one.
Absolutely hilarious.
On the complete opposite end of the spectrum,
which is just like we are instantly smitten and wooed,
can we just talk about the design of the gizmo
for a second year of the Time Cube machine?
Like, this was incredible.
The commercial vacuum cleaner?
It's like,
vacuum cleaner meets ghost busters, meets stranger things, meets like on and on and on and on the list goes.
It's just wonderful.
Again, like, we tell, Joe and I talked for a while in episode one about the production design and the sets and, like, all of these choices that they make.
And it's just another great example.
Like, the controller, it doesn't need to be as big and cumbersome as it is.
But that's just perfect.
It's a perfect choice.
Like, they shouldn't have to plug in quite so many hosy.
but they do, and that's wonderful.
It's just...
It's like y'all have talked about
what makes Star Wars clothes,
Star Wars clothes, they don't have zippers.
Everything in this is just like,
throw a hose on it.
You know, like, put a giant hose connecting
this suit to the wall.
The back of the space suit.
Great stuff.
Everything.
You know, not enough hoses out there.
Loki,
surrounded by hoses,
is ready to enact a mischief
as Mobius pretends to watch in horror
through the window of the door.
It's a brutal stretch here for our guy, Brad Wolf.
It's like, really sorry about what I said about your mom.
I've been in a lot of these rooms.
Yeah, I know that the Time Cube is that color
because of all of the bodily excretions that leak out of you in terror as you're being
tormented.
Please don't put me in there.
The moment when Brad says, you could kill me with that.
And Loki says, could I?
after the cube crushing.
Excellent.
This is just electric.
Like,
the way that the show works
to remind us
of what Loki is capable of
and has done,
but in this totally different context
is just like
really, really,
really riveting to watch.
The way that he is,
again,
just playing with his prey here.
This is exciting.
Oh,
sorry, that's only made it smaller.
It's shaking the cube around them.
After that line,
he follows with,
like,
I can only describe
as the teeth clenched
emoji. Just like, oh, sorry.
Fantastic.
Steve, our wonderful producer, Steve
Alman, went on the record on Midnight Boys that
he wanted some
actual bone crushing. He felt
that we needed to see
the torture result in some bodily harm
for Brad Wolf. I'm wondering, are you team Steve
on this one? Yeah, I think the level
of box he was put in, I would describe as
like basic economy on an
airline flight, you know?
That's just my day-to-day existence
trying to fly around this country of ours. So,
he could be compressed a little smaller.
Still room for like a tablet, you know.
We can listen to podcasts with ease and comfort.
It's a complimentary drink in there.
It's too kind for torture.
He's got a tomato juice.
Interesting moment where
Loki reminds us of the
bond between Docs
and X-5. And how
likely it seems that a decorated field
officer like X-5 would just bailie says
you and Docs, I don't buy it.
Doxon, this sweet baby boy who may or may not be breastfeeding?
I don't buy it either.
The forehead nuzzle on the breastfeeding, Neil?
No way.
So what do you think?
Like this line felt like an intentional way to remind us of the closeness that we had witnessed
between them in episode one.
We don't know a lot about their dynamic.
We don't know anything about their history.
But when you hear something like this, like are you thinking they are in cahoots still
together somehow that despite the life that Brad has rediscovered?
and chosen to live,
that he is still team docs in some capacity,
or has he left genuinely all of the docs agenda behind?
I think he's bailed.
I think he's set out with the agenda.
And then, you know,
there was some actually decent, like,
paving of this road being done in the first episode
when B-15 is telling him,
like, you had a life on the timeline,
and you had a life on the timeline.
And you can see him kind of, like,
wander off and thought, like,
about what that might be.
And so the idea that he gets down on the ground
and figures out, oh, I could be,
Brad Wolf. I can be pruning Bridget Bardot.
I think just like that, he's out of there.
Oh, man.
I think it was as simple as that.
So you're just like firmly in the
in the once more time to be Brad Wolf,
who won't Mobius Loki's face. I love it.
He just wants to get the round of applause at the end of the Zaniac premiere.
He's very excited about the sequel. He's happy to offer you a ticket.
He's not offering Wobius a ticket,
He is offering Sylvie and Loki a ticket to the sequel. Great stuff. All right, he cracks. He cracks. He caves.
Doesn't want to actually crack and cave inside of the time cube. And so he cracks. He says,
I did find Sylvie. Found her before I bailed. She has a new life. He tells them that she is on a branch.
And they decide to sit out, but they're not going to take Brad's word for it. He's going to show them.
They bring him to the Golden Archers. The branch timeline, Brockston, Oklahoma, 1982. Brad is
extremely shifty.
When Mobius asked why,
Mobius is like,
what is going on with you?
Like, even in the context
of a time prisoner
who was just tormented
inside of a time cube,
you're acting odd.
What is going on?
And Brad's like,
oh, I just,
you know,
I'm not super keen
on seeing a Varian
who killed 400 of our colleagues,
which is like a decent,
it's not the real answer,
but like a decent cover,
honestly.
It's like, yeah,
thank you for the reminder
of the legions that Sylvie killed.
Loki's really protecting
in his heart as he is mustering up the courage to walk in. He says, I have to find out what she knows.
So he's like putting on this air, and this is partially true, right? But he's really leading
with this mission-centric framing, not I am here to find and hopefully sway the love of my
life to be with me again. It's just like, it's the mission. You were my mission. Of course.
He's got stuff to do, you know, he's just taking care of business out here.
Rob, the facade lasts about, I don't know, four and a half seconds because he walks in.
He sees her at the register and his face, the only way I could think of was it droops.
Like his eyes pull, his face falls.
I was in tears.
This was so heart-wrenching.
At the same time, at the same time, you can see Sylvie's guard go up as soon as she sees him, right?
Like she has gone from her comfortable, like, this is my life space to this fucking guy.
It is walking through my door.
There's sadness and despair for him.
And there's like real anger and resentment and bitterness and gardeness like you're saying from her.
I thought it was a really another like quick little thing.
The show does the quick little thing so well where we hear her, the call Bill your orders up.
And he says, he thanks her by name.
Thank you, Sylvie.
So like just these little things that indicate this is the rhythm of her day.
Like these are the interactions that make up her routine and her life.
if she has made a home here.
And when Loki walks toward her
and the way that he has to build the courage
to just say hi,
to just ask, can we talk?
And the most she'll give him is my breaks in five.
And then blows past him when he is outside waiting.
Talk fast.
I don't have a lot of time here.
It's a quick lunch break.
Rob, quick one.
The old Bobby B, quick one.
Well, here's a statement.
And you can tell me whether this says more about Loki the show or the larger project of Marvel television.
But I felt more in this moment watching Loki walk into a McDonald's and seeing his cross-gendered variant self from across the floor than during any moment of any other Marvel show.
And this is, it's just all the road we've taken to get here, all the buildup between these two characters.
This was incredible.
I think Sylvie is just such an incredible creation in this world.
And we can dig into that in greater depth later.
You're right, though.
It just hits.
A moment like this just hits, and it hits you right in the chest.
It's two people looking at each other across a fast food dining room,
and it absolutely floors us.
Like, it just floors us.
And the way that she blows by him outside,
his posture against the porch,
the way that she opens the bed of her pickup truck and sits,
like everything, the way he stands, the body language, the crossed arms, like, there's the visual
incongruity of seeing Loki in this setting, which is just very rich and amazing. Like Sylvie
has managed to really find the sense of belonging and comfort and he looks so out of place. And so
then you feel like, oh, my God, we want them to work the way back toward each other. But like you
said earlier, they're just moving further and further away from each other in all of these different
aspects. And the show captures that and just a glance in a word and the way that people sit,
in the way that they look at each other as they talk.
Like, it's just really incredible.
And we hear, this was the opening clip that we chose for today's episode,
the beginning of this exchange, Loki's talking about,
I can see the future now.
She's like, congrats.
It's so funny.
Withering stuff.
You know, that's real cool.
That's real cool.
Pruddle.
I am not impressed.
I saw you there at the TVA.
I need to know why.
and you know what it means.
It's the future.
He says it's going to happen.
Is it really?
Because that sounds a lot like
the future's already been written
and we both know that it hasn't.
Not anymore.
I made sure of that.
So this question of what's fixed,
what is in motion?
What did these characters
directly do to ensure that?
Sylvie reminding Loki and us
of the free will-centric logic
that drove the first season for her
but also crucially for him
is really important.
here. Like, you could pick any of dozens of lines from the first season, but I'll offer up one
from the very first episode, which is, now you all parade about as if you're the divine arbiterers
of power in the universe. This is Loki to Mobius. We are. You're not. My choices are my own.
Like, this was the driving propulsive force for this character. This was the thing that he was
rebelling against. This is what they build toward in the eye paved the way interaction with
he who remains at the end, the harrowing, harrowing moment where they have to confront
what it means if that's true,
what it means for every moment of their life to that point,
what it means for everything they might do moving forward.
And so, like, we're going to listen now
that the second half of this exchange,
and then we'll talk about all of this together,
but the return to, like, centering this aspect of free will
and, like, the point you made beautifully earlier
about how they have moved in different directions
when this was a guiding, shared pursuit for them
in season one feels really important.
Steve, can we hear the other half of this?
Enchant me.
You can see what I saw.
I don't want to see.
I want nothing to do with this. I have no answers for you.
Sylvie, if you and I don't work together on this, I can't guarantee you
because of long on any of this will be here.
No.
No.
This is bigger than the TVA. This is about everything.
You like it here?
You like this place?
You've made a home?
If what he who remains said is true,
the TVA is the only defense.
And if what I saw of you is true,
then there's nothing to stand between this world and utter destruction.
Without the TVA,
All of this, everything is gone.
Tell me everything you think and everything you feel.
The free will of it all, the way that I loved Sylvie calling him out on his
hyperboise here, right, with the TVA.
Well, for one, just after everything that they've been through together and after where
they left off in their fight at the end of time and how much that was about trust and connection
and ambition, about who.
they were to each other,
for Loki to show up and be like,
hey, I need your help on a thing from work.
My guy deserves to be called out, right?
He 100% deserves to be called out.
But I'll say this.
He and Sylvie were not obviously totally on the same page
when it came to the unbridled freedom of the universe.
Like that is a,
that is a terrifying proposition.
And it is presented as such in season one.
Like this is something you need to reckon with.
And I think Loki,
is so daunted by that idea
in that moment. And Sylvie
in Loki fashion is like
the one who is burdened with glorious
purpose. And she's like, I know exactly
what I want. And I accomplished it and I
achieved it. And now you're going
around with the fascistic
assholes who have been chasing me my entire
life trying to do what exactly.
I think she's pretty right
to feel betrayed in this moment.
Absolutely. And I think we're on a
knife's edge with Loki
here because in
last week's episode
in the season two premiere,
he was really in the same place
that he was in the finale
of like, I just need more time.
Like she seems so sure
and I'm not.
And so like that is valid.
It's a big thing.
But at the end of the day,
like, you know,
we'll cut back in
and talk about the Mobius X5 conversation
and then you go inside
of the flow of the episode.
You go back outside
and you hear Loki say,
you're just going to give everyone
free will and walk away?
And Sylvie says,
that's the way it works.
You're welcome.
And it's like, yeah.
And Loki, everything that he's weighing and the time that he wants to have to be able to weigh it is one thing.
But at the end of the day, like the character in season one who said, only order, no chaos.
It sounds boring.
Like his fear, there's the logic behind the fear.
There's the rationality that guides the fear, right?
the desire that he has to fend off the many kings,
the multiversal war of all of he who remains his variance,
is reasonable, right?
We're like, yeah, take the time to think about how we could maybe avoid that.
But whether or not he is, there are divisions inside of the TVA
and Loki and Mobius and B-15 are working toward one,
version of order and like general docs is working toward a prune-tastic charge explosion. At the end of
the day, if Loki is seeking any version, this is Sylvie's point, and this is how I feel about it,
and I love this tension between the characters and inside of the episodes and the season so far,
if he is seeking any version of controlled, sanctioned,
manicured, managed, monitored, free will,
then definitionally, it's not free will.
And it doesn't matter if it's under
He Who Remains His Hand or Docs's hand or Loki's hand.
Like, Loki's seeking to be the one to control other people's decisions
is Avengers, I'm standing on the stairs, giving you my villain speech.
Yeah.
Shit from him, right?
So, like, this, I'm so eager to see how he works.
through this or whether he does and moves back toward Sylvie, because that is like what I'm
hoping for, but I think it's fascinating that even though we understand like logically,
rationally, practically the reasons that he's in this space emotionally, philosophically,
existentially, we have to be opposed. We have to feel opposed to the thing that he's saying.
Like we have to be team Sylvie on this, right?
Well, Sylvie has a great plan, which is if the Kang show up, kill us.
kill him.
Just kill them.
Easy.
Flawless plan, flawless logic.
I've seen the release slate for phases five, the rest of phase five and phase six,
and I'm on it.
This is what we do.
I'm sure.
Kang Dynasty is a title.
Yes, your words are coming, but I'm confident that this will go well.
Well, so not only does Sylvie have, you know, the moral high ground of wanting free
well for people.
She has a plan.
As far as I can tell this new version of the TVA, doesn't really have.
have a plan.
Like the TVA's only real move to this point has been,
we prune the timelines to keep the multiverse, quote-unquote, stable.
That was it.
That was all they had.
And so as we're going to get to in the rest of this episode,
their ultimate failings in countering docs
and what docs is trying to do and all the other hunters.
Like, what other cards do they have to play?
Because they seem intent on like, okay,
how can we have this more, you know, morally sound version
of the fascistic governance we had before.
That's the thing.
It's like, is there a morally sound version of it?
I don't see how.
Like, you work to make sure
that everybody inside the TVA
is preserving the branches
instead of putting them.
At the end of the day,
like the inherent existence
of this institution
is like noxious and foul and wrong.
And stemmed from a desire.
It's like, yeah.
Unnatural and unholy.
Oh, man.
What a great show.
Oh, incredible stuff.
I have no idea how the TVA
is going to salvage any
of it, but I suspect that's kind of the point that we're going to reckon with is that this is a thing that is beyond saving. And that's why it's headed toward its foretold demise with some of the, some of the foreshadowing. Yes, I think so. We do have some French fries to eat and milkshakes to drink before then. We cut back inside where Mobius and X5 are, well, Mobius is enjoying the meal. Brad is very preoccupied. I would like to share with you what is my favorite line of the season so far. Please.
Mubius absolutely mainlining his McDonald's saying,
I thought you were setting us up for an ambush.
Hell, you were just setting us up for a great meal.
Thank you.
Mobius is clearly the kind of guy who eats his apple pie first,
and I don't agree with that approach,
but I love that for him.
Do you think it's because he wanted it while it was nice and warm?
Well, this...
He did say he was not leaving until he went in and got the apple pie.
So maybe he just was really very pie.
forward. He's leaving hot fries on the tray to eat the hot pie. You can't, you simply cannot do it.
Simply cannot. Did you get McDonald's after watching episode one, Stinger, and then again after
watching episode two? I did not. I did. I'm not surprised by this. I can't. I'm so susceptible to
stimuli. I was like, this looks fucking delicious. And then I got someone. I was like, you know what? It is.
Well, let me, let me follow up on this point because I know you are, let's
say a prolific door dash customer.
Yes.
Did you get your McDonald's delivered to you?
I did.
I asked,
in light of this apple pie fry conversation,
you getting McDonald's French fries delivered to you.
I assume you got French fries.
Of course.
Large fry.
So I've had a couple,
I've had more than one McDonald's order recently.
Sure.
One of the time,
one time I got a double cheeseburger,
double-bacon cheeseburger, and then the other time I got the two cheeseburger meal.
So, slight variance, but ultimately you've got your double cheeseburger or your two cheeseburgers,
large fry, mcnuggets, yeah.
Soda.
I did orange soda one time and root beer one time.
And then I got a Sunday with hot punch, an apple pie, and a McFlurry.
I saved the McFlurry for the next day.
I have two main objections with this overall smorgasbord we have laid out.
Okay.
Both as they relates to you getting these things delivered to you.
You got an ice cream Sunday delivered to you.
It's hell them up great.
It was in great shape.
I put it in the freezer while I was eating my meal.
And when I was ready for it, it was in pristine condition.
That doesn't bode well for the contents of that ice cream,
but I accept whatever's happening there as part of the process of McDonald's.
This is a very quick delivery.
Very quick.
See, this is the thing.
The French fries, to me, getting McDonald's French fries delivered to you and not eating them
as quickly as humanly possible.
I ate them right away.
Immediately. And they were piping hot.
In the bag, in that person's car.
Pipe and hot.
I don't know.
I don't know.
I don't know.
I think you committed Door-Dash malpractice.
This is gross negligence to me.
I stand behind.
I stand behind it.
How could you possibly defend yourself and the French fries you've allowed to turn soggy?
They were not soggy.
They were the texture, the consistency, the heat level.
They were perfect.
As Steve knows, because they sent him a picture.
sure of my meal. I put some fresh
cracked pepper on top of them. They were
wonderful. You're judging
them up. I can tell you, I know what I'm getting for dinner
tonight after this conversation.
Yeah, I'm going to text you both the picture later.
Actually, I have some, I have some pizza
waiting for me. Maybe tomorrow.
Why not both?
Why not both? Why not both?
We're just talking about this on Zoom with Steve.
When Mobius is enjoying this meal,
he and Brad are watching
Sylvie and Loki through
the front window of a McDonald's,
and they have a lot of thoughts.
God, it's weird.
They're just absolutely,
they're like, I have so many thoughts
and so many questions.
This feels wrong.
I don't want to look,
but I can't look away.
It's one of those.
Mobius has a classic.
They say opposites attract.
No.
No.
Wonderful stuff.
Calls back to his seismic narcissist
assessment of the situation in season one.
You referenced this moment earlier.
Absolutely delightful little instant here where he's reflecting on the oddity and wonder of life.
He's like a few minutes ago, Brad, I was torturing you.
Look at us.
Now here we are enjoying a meal like gentlemen.
So great.
He tries to bond by asking Brad about his movie.
Rob, I would like to ask you, is Zaniac scary?
What did you learn about Zaniac?
It's not scary.
It's an elevated thriller.
It's cinema.
Marty eats your heart out.
This is cinema.
This was like,
this wasn't even a Marty sub-tweet.
This was just at Marty.
Yeah.
So this is a tweet.
It's cinema.
The giant smile on Owen Wilson's face,
as he said,
it looks scary.
He's just the best.
He's a national treasure.
Truly.
Truly, truly, truly, truly is.
He does start to realize, though.
I think it was the anxious swirl of the shake
for Brad that really,
Like, Mobius could no longer ignore.
Something is going on with the jumpiness,
with the eagerness to leave here that is about more than just Sylvie.
And so he takes Brad outside to tell Sylvie and Loki what the fuck is going on.
It's a very tough moment for the woman in the orange shirt.
Who is specifically called out as being on the brink of women in death.
She's going to die.
She's going to die.
Iron shirt?
She's going to die.
Brutal.
Brutal.
Man.
Sylvia chants him, gets right to it,
seized the Dox branch bomb plan,
and then we go into easily,
I think uncontroversially,
the weakest part of the episode,
which was...
It's a great Marvel tradition at this point.
You know, kind of shitty action scenes
shoehorned into an otherwise formidable show.
It is.
It is a proud tradition, though.
Let's not forget.
This was one of the great achievements
of Season 1 of Loki that they avoided this
in the finale.
It's true.
the staging of this scene, the kind of convoluted exposition about what we're learning in real
time about the time doors of the charges and the temp pads, all connected to the central controller.
We already talked earlier about the 30% of the branches.
It's go time.
We get this like, our mission is compromised.
Set off what you can.
We're too late.
Finish it, stretch from docs that was not super compelling on the like, where,
we move in general docs on the Marvel villain power ranking scale here.
But Sylvia Loki do hold hands.
They grasp hands, much as they did when they were enchanting Eliath in season one,
you know, stronger together.
Don't overthink it, Sylvie says.
And they send a Maruk-esque plume of green gas toward the time doors to disarm the remaining
charges.
They have docs in custody.
We do hear from D90 that some of her loyalists escaped.
So that sets up the prospect that some of her followers are still out there who are trying to enact or continue this plan.
This is the thing for me.
And it's, you know, whatever kind of action set piece you want to put into these shows to, you know, drum up some interest, like get a little adrenaline flowing.
Like, whatever purpose you think they're serving, you could take this scene out and say that they got there too late.
And you have the same result, same endpoint, and probably a more resonant execution.
if they aren't able to do anything about it.
So I don't even know why they get there in time to like,
bang, bang, boom, energy blast, hold hands,
stabby, stabby, arrest some people.
Like, what are we doing?
Why are we doing any of this?
Stabby, stabby.
Stabby, stabby.
Boy, do you think it was, do you think that's how it was,
specified as a movie from the script?
I'm reading from the script, yeah.
You've got pages?
Yeah, I got the pages.
Sylvie follows.
Moby's and Loki through the time door
back to the TVA. Where are they watching horror
as these branches disappear?
V-15 says those are people.
Those are lives.
Sylvie's face
really like hardens in resolve here.
Now again, like she goes back to the Broxton branch.
It's not everything that she unlocked,
undone. It's not everything.
And more branches will continue to unfurl from here.
But she is deeply dismayed by what has happened
here and by the company that Loki is keeping. And as Casey gets that ping on Ravona's
tempad and that subsequent mission is kind of unlocking, here's the next quest, Sylvie and Loki
and Loki have a very fraught exchange. She says, is this the best you lock it do? He says there
was nothing we could do. Some defense, she says. The TVA is the problem. It's broken. It's rotten.
I'm going home if it's still there.
And he tries to stop or he says,
please don't.
It's harder.
But before he can finish the sentence,
she's gone.
And then he's just alone and devastated,
as he says, the last bit,
which is to stay.
It's harder to stay.
And so while the action set piece here
left something to be desired,
this moment was really good.
I thought this was a really revealing moment
for Loki, actually.
It's harder to stay idea.
like the TVA stuff that we are much more team Sylvian than team Locke on at the moment.
He's talking himself into it.
We just discussed like the fear that he's feeling about the many,
he who remains variants and the threat of multiverse war and everything.
But he's talking himself into this as much to find new purpose and new meaning
inside of new structure and new belonging as anything, it seems.
They're both right in a way.
you know, like obviously Sylvia's right
about the flaws of the TVA
and about how she feels in this moment
like, why would she think
that this organization that
captured and pursued her her entire life,
how could that possibly be anything but bad?
And after the way season one wrapped up
for Loki to then just like join them
and shrug his shoulders and say
there was nothing we could do
when all these timelines like hers once did get pruned,
she's right to get a little pissed.
Quite pissed, I should say.
he's also not wrong to say like it's harder to build something than to destroy something.
Yes.
And it's clear that they have a greater mission here and lots of noble ambitions as far as like trying to set things right,
trying to give the people of the TVA a chance to have a real life, trying to not prune all these timelines.
They don't know how to do any of it yet.
But the way that they're bumped up against each other and that, again, bumped up against each other in that way,
where neither of them is necessarily wrong.
Right.
I think it's part of what makes Loki great.
It's part of what makes Sylvie,
like such a brilliant, uncompromising character.
She comes by her stubbornness really honestly,
and it plays well in these moments.
It's a great point.
The fact that she,
the substance of her argument and her position
is something that we are inclined to support and champion
doesn't mean ultimately that her utter inflexibility
and like the unyielding way
in which she approaches everything is like productive,
ultimately. Daniel linked up in his wonderful episode breakdown on the ringer.com, what a great
website. A Tom Hylston interview with Marvel.com conducted pre-strike, of course. And there were
like a couple really interesting quotes from Hylston in that piece about this idea in particular.
He was looking for meaning in the wrong places. And now I think he's found a way of giving himself
purpose, which is to try to reorganize, to help Mobius and Hunter B-15 and the TV.
and then later, if season one was about self-awareness and self-acceptance,
season two is about taking responsibility and trying to find a new purpose.
Maybe there's more burden and less glory in the purpose this time.
So that's a really interesting idea.
Like, the thing that is driving him might be actually really well-intentioned, right?
It's harder to stay.
I love the way you put that.
It's harder to build than to destroy.
the things that are motivating that intention
don't necessarily mean it's the right decision
but they might be noble instincts.
And that's true for both characters
and they're in completely different places
so like how do they bridge that divide
and work their way back toward each other ultimately?
Like it's a great place to be
a couple episodes into the season.
Absolutely. And it's the big difference in having...
It's a reason why Loki as a show works.
It's the difference between,
being a time travel show that has some relationships in it
versus a human emotional show that has time travel stuff in it.
And these two are the central tension of the show.
They are always going to be as so long as it's structured in this way.
I think it really works for them.
And in part works for Loki as a character
because you're right that he's reaching for something
that he thinks is noble,
but you also can't separate it from the villainous Loki
who does want to run shit.
Right?
Like there is a part of him formatively that is still there
And we are constantly wrestling with including all throughout this episode
Is he the villain still? Does he still have a streak of that an instinct of that an inclination of that?
Or is it all just an act from this point forward?
Well, and I think like one of the most impactful moments of the season one of season one and of the season one finale
Was that like I don't want the throne. I just want you to be okay moment. Yeah and
And it's like, it's meaningful in so many ways, right?
Because it shows us an immense amount of progress on the front that you're talking about here.
But also like, we feel like overcome with emotions seeing Loki get to that point.
Because it does represent such a seismic evolution for him.
We love a character on an arc.
Shout out, Joe.
We miss you.
Loki wanting Sylvie to be okay.
Loki not wanting the throne.
It doesn't mean that he wants her to be okay in the way that she's,
she wants to be okay or that they have the same idea of what it means to be okay, right? And so like,
that's just, there's like a level of complexity there and the choices that the show makes
for the individual arcs and the shared arcs that I think is really rare. Like it's just,
it's, it shouldn't actually be simple or easy or tidy for these people to align. Yeah. It just
shouldn't. So this is, this is ultimately much more, not only dramatically compelling, but
truer. Like it feels truer to who they are that it would be a difficult thing for them to find
not a common ground that's like transient and and springs up from some urgent need,
but is like lasting, is permanent. It's like foundational to whatever they can build moving forward.
I really, I hope it works out for those too. I do too. I think a lot about the architecture of this show,
like the storytelling architecture of this show
if Sylvie never existed
and it was just a buddy cop
Loki Mobius workplace comedy
trying to write the timeline
like if he was kind of the touch point
Mobius was for everything
would it still work
I think it would
but for me and those parts sing
like those scenes are great
those actors have an incredible amount of chemistry together
it really really works
the Sylvie stuff is where the juice is
and it's what elevates this show
I mean for one
God forbid Marvel tell a story
with any kind of romance or longing
or yearning in it.
In itself a rare thing.
But those two performances,
like Tom Hiddleston and Sophia DiMartino,
they're electric together.
And their characters are so well written.
Sylvie, for me,
is one of the best
late stage Marvel creations.
I'm trying to think of the last character
has been introduced to I would put on her level.
I think she's the best
character they've introduced since
Civil War, question
mark? Wow.
End game, maybe.
Although Honorable
mentioned Lila the Otter.
You know, she was pretty chill.
It's still too painful.
It's very painful.
Too painful.
But that's kind of like where I'm at
with this character.
There's great villains who have a one-dimensional
perspective. There's great
supporting heroes who you like because
of their costuming or their flair or the actor
who plays them. This is the real
Like, this is a real character.
And it's one that has been somehow positioned,
counterweight to one of the most beloved performances in the MCU.
And the fact that they pulled that off, how do you do that?
It's hard to think of like a taller order than go toe to toe with Tom Hiddleston's Loki,
bar to bar.
Extremely tough.
And for us to sit here on the other side and say,
Loki is basically wrong in all of these scenes.
And yet we're driving the bus on,
getting them back together, on them having scenes.
Honestly, I don't care.
They can fight. They can do whatever.
As long as they're on the screen together.
I'm fine with it.
Yes, absolutely.
Yeah, I agree.
They're not on the screen together at the end of the episode.
They both have fascinating final moments.
So at the TVA,
did you notice this?
Loki walks back.
And it is frozen.
Everybody is
frozen. I thought very
intriguingly but also
conspicuously, like we were meant
to notice that they were
standing still in a way that is
not natural. And Mobius moves
a bit when Loki touches him, but everyone else is
like
embedded in amber.
Like you don't see any time cubes, but they might as well be
locked in them. It really
gave you the sense that he was walking through
like a dollhouse
or like a chessboard
somebody else's pieces.
on each square, like that really heightened that, like, can he even see the game that he is inside of with clarity sensation?
And then the contrasting visual of Sylvie back in Broxton on the hood of her truck out in the open air as free as can be in theory.
But after her, is your mom going to pick you up, conversation with Jack from McDonald's?
So we'll talk about more in a minute in theory corner.
what's the thing that she reaches for?
It's the tempad.
It's he who remains his tempad,
which activates in her hand.
What does you make of this last glimpse
of each of them in this episode?
I mean, I think it's a wonderful contrast.
I think you're right to pinpoint
the facade, the fakeness,
the artifice of the TVA
is being part of that.
I think there is an emotional weight
happening there that we talked about earlier.
Like all these people have just died.
Right.
And the point of the new.
TVA is that we are reckoning with what we're doing and what is happening, like what the reality
of pruning looks like.
Right.
And also that for Loki himself, like, time has stopped because Sylvie has left again.
100%.
Yeah.
And so you have like, again, the emotional weight of the room.
You have time stopping for Loki because the person he's chasing after is not there.
You have this dollhouse effect, which I think is a great way to put it, of this place that is
not real, that does not exist, as Brad would tell.
Like, you know, none of this is real, right?
This is not a real place, and yet they are trying to do things that have real consequences.
And to juxtapose that with as real as shit gets, which is laying on the hood of a pickup truck blasting Janice Joplin.
That's a whole ass mood board right there.
Sure is.
God bless.
That a great one.
I love it.
Incredible final moment in the episode.
And because our guy Jack is there, it's a great time to go to Theory Corner.
Now that's spooky.
Scary.
Genuinely unsettling from Steve.
Okay.
We have, we had some theories this.
We have a couple of things we're going to hit on Theory Corner today.
The first one is, want to check in with you on this.
Is Jack from McDonald's Mobius question?
We got, if anyone didn't hear the first pod, first of all, go back and listen to it.
It's right there waiting for you on your house of our feed, follow on Spotify, wherever you get your podcast.
We got a really.
email from bad baby Lauren who presented the theory that the McDonald's manager,
Jack in this episode we learned, is Mobius and that we will learn at some point that this was
Mobius's life.
Joanna wrote this email in the first pot, I was like a stunned.
I thought this was so brilliant.
Lauren pointed out like the uniform with the tie and these visual parallels, the hips on the
hands, like all of the physical similarity for sure.
of it.
Rob.
The way that Mobius
inhales the
McDonald's in this episode,
the way he's like,
I simply will not leave
until I get that
fucking McDonald's pie.
More fodder here
for this theory?
Like, where are you on this?
Do you like this?
Are you into it?
Do you think that this is true?
Give us your reason.
It's definitely more fodder.
But I think more importantly,
we're moving into
conspicuous amount of screen time
territory for Jack.
It's one thing to have
name, but like when you keep popping up
and your main characters keep like interacting with you
in ways where they're like expressing interest about
you're like, are you getting home okay?
About whether your mom is coming to pick you up.
Yeah.
There's something going on there.
I mean, as far as I'm concerned, this feels like the leader
in the clubhouse. Like I can't think of a reason he
would be important other than
because he is in some way Mobius or
related to Mobius. I don't know exactly
what the mechanics of it would be.
But, you know, Roger Ebert has
this great like law of economy of character
where if someone keeps showing up,
it's like they must be important.
I think if Jack,
I mean, if he shows up in one more episode,
he basically is Mobius as far as I'm concerned.
Oh, man.
I miss the most important part of this, though,
which is you and Joe,
when you talked about this previously.
Yeah.
Joe brought up, you know,
this is Oklahoma,
Brockson, Oklahoma.
Oh, yes, yes, yes.
Rob, please chime in.
Regional expert.
Yeah, Owen Wilson from Dallas, Texas,
where I'm from.
Yes.
Joe referred to Texas and Oklahoma as kissing cousins
to which I will say
excuse me
yeah maybe yeah no excuse me
yeah no we simply cannot allow
if Owen Wilson one of our great Texans
has been plotted as a native Oklahomaan in this show
it's a betrayal I'm gonna have some thoughts about that
yeah it's a betrayal I hope it's true but it better not be true
did you ever hear I think that you would hear
Red River rivalry talk
on a House of our Loki pod
like you got in that segment last week
what a time.
The Sportsball talk on House of Our
is always my favorite part.
It's been a real treat lately.
Genuinely wonderful.
Just a delight.
You had something that you wanted to hit
in Theory Corner.
Yes. I wanted to talk about OB.
And in particular,
these theories floating around
about his somewhat like
mysterious and ominous nature
and the way he's presented in the show.
I'm fully on board.
with the idea that you and Joe floated last week,
that he is like maybe a founding member
of the TVA and some capacity.
They were going to get a statue reveal.
Yeah.
It feels like he and like seemingly Ravana,
like their memories have been wiped,
but they were there from the start.
But I think moreover,
there's an extra textual thing here
that I can't get out of my head,
which is Kiwi Kwan.
His first role after winning an Oscar
is not just this.
It's not just tech guy
who fixes your timey,
why me bullshit.
I would be shocked.
I would be legitimately shocked
if there were not some kind of turn for him.
And I think the one that makes the most sense
is one that he is not fully aware of.
Because at this point,
we've seen him in enough scenes
where he's by himself.
And he's expressing concern about,
oh, Mobius isn't going to make it back.
Oh, Loki's not going to make it in time.
Things you would never say aloud to yourself
if you're secretly a villain.
Yeah.
So I think he doesn't know exactly who he is,
but there is no question in my mind,
a big, big OB Reve.
is headed our way.
Yeah, I agree.
That's exactly where I am.
We are going to get some sort of reveal that will shake him and shake us,
but he cannot currently be in possession of those facts and have the awareness of that
history because it just wouldn't track with what we're seeing from him.
I mean, I guess it's possible that over those hundreds of years of no sleep and visitors,
he worked his way toward a totally charming and genial that just, you know, love to be a part of
team.
Isn't it great to be a part of a team place?
But that seems unlikely.
It's more likely that he just doesn't recall how he may be direct.
But it's going to be so interesting if that is the case to see like, because he does remember
writing the TVA guidebook, for example.
So like, what's the timeline of that or like what was he not only maybe like allowed to remember,
but what was it important for him to remember?
And then what was maybe like obscured or blocked off?
in some way. It's fascinating.
Great character.
Just wonderful to have a bit in the show.
I'm springing this on you in real time, but while we're on Theory Corner,
do you have a theory from the first episode of who you think pruned Loki?
Well, so I had to kind of redirect because the first time I watched it,
I thought Sylvie pruned Loki.
And then it becomes clear it's like someone from behind him.
Thematically speaking, it has to be Loki.
Yeah.
Has to be Loki.
Yeah.
but maybe in referencing the interview you talked about with Hittleston,
like if this season isn't about self-discovery so much,
if it is about responsibility,
then it's plausible that someone else could be responsible
for the downfall.
Maybe that's OB, right?
Maybe that's someone who was a founding member of the TVA
who's feeling a sense of responsibility for what happened to it.
Rebelling against the realization of what they helped to foster.
A lot of interesting possibilities.
yeah definitely so okay anything else you're going to hit on theory corner no i think we did it okay
easter eggs we'll just do one each okay did you have a favorite easter egg from this episode
i do uh at the beginning of the episode when loki and mobius are chasing brad and they finally pin him
against the brick wall with all the shadow play there is giant graffiti on the wall
in what i will only choose to interpret as a message to
Kevin Feige and the Greater Marvel Machine, and it reads, less is enough.
Incredible.
Let's all take it to heart.
Incredible.
Maybe not on House of R.
Maybe that's not the thing to say on, you know, two and a half hours into this podcast,
but less sometimes is enough.
That's a pretty, like, contained runtime and by some of the recent standards.
Mine is also from that opening scene.
We got a Kingo movie poster.
We run past, we stroll past.
one of our favorite
Eternals.
You know,
we're not often
given reason
to think about
the Eternals
in the MCU these days,
but here was one.
And that was nice.
The less said the better
on that front.
We're not doing Wigwatch, Rob,
as we said.
I was, like,
really eager to get
a full rundown
of Joanna's
Sylvie Mullet
thoughts and some thoughts
on Brad's new
longer hair,
but we'll get all in that
later.
So that's something
to look forward to.
But we are going to do
Fitwatch TM
with Rob
Bohoney, TM.
Can't see any of the future.
I'm not a witch.
No?
Why'd you dress like one?
Great stuff, Steve.
You're the best.
Rob.
What was your fit of the week?
Lots of great candidates in this episode.
Amazing jackets,
amazing collars,
amazing footwear.
I don't know that we ever got past the high point,
though, of Brad's open collar,
movie premiere white scarf look.
Tremendous.
Absolutely tremendous.
And you can see how,
that Bridget Bardot
rumors started.
You know,
you can,
you can get behind it.
It's,
it's an amazing look
for Bradwolf.
It really is.
The scarf was
sensational with apologies
to the scarf,
with apologies to the
tuxedos,
with apologies to,
my runner-up,
which was the way Sylvie
rocked that McDonald's
uniform, which I just
thought was astonishing.
It has to be
the new Loki coat
for me.
Not only that rich
shade of Bram,
the form-fitting
nature of the coat. It is one specific thing that puts it over the edge. The thickness and lushness
of those lapels, I have never seen anything like it. And they have, they have never been more popped,
right? This is the real, this is the real time collar is whatever kind of collar that Loki has
going on popping at any given point in time. Incredible. Well, maybe that collar will inspire
your selection for our final category of the day. It's the Netflix
subtitle award, Rob,
if this episode had Netflix subtitles,
what would it be?
I'm going to go with Mobius
Sporks enthusiastically.
I was hoping we could go like both men
spork enthusiastically, but
Loki is not really
into the whole situation. It's kind of working more
for one of them than the other, which is a tragic thing.
I'm glad you mentioned that because this is also
the moment I chose
for my subtitle selection.
I admire your economy.
Here's a 500-word version of your pick.
Let's hear it.
God of Mishiff and Prince of Lies, half-heartedly,
unconvincingly, pretends to eat jello-mold-esque key lime pie slice,
duping Mobius with, it is, sham reply as brows furrow unconvincingly,
and whipped cream distends wet.
It always distends wetly.
Always distends wetly here in the Netflix
subtitle award.
I'm imagining the screenshot
and the amount of space on the screen
that that subtitle is taking off.
I'm not even seeing the web cream anymore.
It's tough if you're watching on your phone
or your laptop with a subtitlept.
It is tough.
It's true.
Rob, that's it.
We did it.
We made a podcast.
Any other thoughts on this episode on this season?
I have abs.
My head has been emptied.
I have none.
I have no thoughts left.
This was wonderful.
Thank you for joining today.
This was such a treat.
You're the best.
Really appreciate you being here with us today.
Thank you.
Thank you to our favorite timekeepers as well.
Steve Allman for producing this episode,
Arjuna Ram Gapal, for his additional production work on this episode,
and Joomi Adonneron for his work on the social for this episode.
Remember, head back into the ring reverse for a new button mash
waiting for you right now to get you ready for the impending Spidey release.
On Thursday night, the Midnight Boys,
Poo!
Beo!
We'll have their instant reaction to Loki.
Episode 3.
Jess will have a...
splash page video breakdown of episode three for you heading into the weekend. Ben and I will be here
on House of R at the end of the week, Friday, for some Walk and Dead talk. And then Joe and I
will be back with you on Monday for our Loki episode three deep dive. You can find all of Rob's
beautiful writing and all of Rob's beautiful podcasting on The Ringer NBA show on the ringer.NBA.
On the Ringer.com, what a great website. We'll be back with you soon. Until then, remember,
it's not a podcast.
It's an elevated thriller, all right?
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