House of R - 'Ms. Marvel’ Episode 4 Deep Dive
Episode Date: June 30, 2022Mal and Joanna team up and dive deep into the fourth episode of 'Ms. Marvel'. They start with Mal giving her perspective and thoughts on the show up to this point (6:54). Then, they discuss the theme ...of Kamala being torn between two worlds (14:00). They wrap up with pointing out some Easter eggs, and answering some listener questions (1:08:30). Hosts: Joanna Robinson and Mallory Rubin Associate Producer: Isaiah Blakely Additional Production Supervision: Arjuna Ramgopal Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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From the host that brought you to Coding Westworld.
And Westworld, the recapables.
Comes the Ringer Prestige TV podcast on Westworld.
I'm Joanna Robinson.
I'm Danny Hyfitz.
And I'm David Shoemaker.
Welcome to Westworld Season 4 in the Prestige TV podcast feed,
where we're going to break down every episode of Westworld season four.
Every Monday, the day after the show comes out on the Prestige TV podcast feed.
Wherever we get your podcast, but get them on Spotify.
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that train from that night?
Yes.
The bangle is trying to tell you something, bata.
I don't know what.
But I do know that you needed to be here with me
to figure it out.
I don't know how to figure it out.
I feel like I'm trying to piece together a hundred different things
and I just, I'm breaking more than I can fix.
That's quite a puzzle.
But then, if you have lived like I have,
lost what I have.
You learn to find beauty in the pieces.
And welcome back into the ringerverse,
your nexus podcast feed for all things.
Fandum.
If there's something fandom related,
guess what we're podcasting about it?
We're 24-7 podcasters now.
That's the new reality of the ringerverse.
I'm Joanna Robinson and joining me today
with a bag of the mildest biryani
she could find. It's Mallory Rubin. Hi, Mallory. Oh, Joe, you're wearing a shirt that says New Jersey. What is this look?
I'm over every moon conceivable to be here today to talk to you about Miss Marvel episode four for the first time with Mallory Rubin.
We've talked about lately in our, you know, in texts and chats and stuff like that. But like, we haven't gotten to do the classic
the house of our deep dive.
We've been a little busy with someone named Obi-Wonkonobi.
So Mallory and I are here for the final two episodes of final three episodes of Miss Marvel to give you old deep dive.
Before we get into that, some program reminders, because this isn't the only thing Mallory and I are doing this week.
You're hearing this on a Thursday.
Tonight at midnight Pacific time, Netflix is dropping, I don't know, 90 hours of stranger things.
Two episodes, many hours of content.
Mallory and I will be doing a Friday episode about the first episode of the final installment of season four of Stranger Things.
Right. And then on Monday, even though it is a holiday for most people, we will be here with a recap of the second.
Two and a half we hear long episode of Stranger Things.
So that's two stranger things deep eyes coming.
Might be our first successful record a podcast shorter than the runtime of the episode
challenge.
I think we can do it.
No promises.
No promises.
And then Wednesdays, on Wednesday, the Midnight Boys, Poo, Poo, we'll be back with a
one-two punch of the latest episode of the boys and Miss Marvel.
So you'll get that from them on Wednesday.
And then we're into Thor, Love and Thunder territory.
So listen, it's all happening.
We're here for all of it.
Your pals on the pod on the mic.
So,
Mallory Rubin, how can folks
make sure that they are aware
when our episodes are coming out,
our schedule?
What do you think?
You know, one thought that I have is that they could follow the pod
on Spotify or wherever they get their podcast.
Sure.
And, you know, another suggestion.
Yeah.
Follow our myriad social feeds.
The ringerverse is everywhere.
If you have a social media platform that you frequent,
you can find the ringerverse there.
I mean, if you're still out there rocking peach, I don't know.
Wow.
You remember peach?
Chris Ryan and I had a few fun days on peach.
That's the name I haven't heard in a long time.
A long time.
Other than that, we're everywhere.
You can find us.
You can enjoy Jomi's wonderful Lord of the meme action.
And of course, you can get links to pods when they publish.
You can get prompts for mailbags.
You can get programming reminders and announcements.
You can get it all.
That's how social media works.
The voice of the youth on this podcast, the one more thing to say.
Oh, my God.
Real hello fellow kids energy for me there.
I'm officially 100 years old.
You can't see it right now, but Mallory has a skateboard slung over her shoulder
and a backwards baseball cap.
Um, one more thing before we get into this episode conversation is that, of course,
we've got a friendly neighborhood spoiler wording for you.
Everything that is on the table today is up through episode for Miss Marvel, but also
the comics.
We can talk about anything that happens with the comics.
We don't care.
We're not going to talk about, oh, I don't know, movies like Thor, Love and Thunder,
which we both seen.
We're not talking about that.
We're going to save that for later.
That's not on the table.
I can't wait to talk about that, though.
Thrill.
over the mood to talk to you about that.
But yeah, we're here
to talk to you about all things.
Miss Marvel Comic Con.
Let's go.
Season 1, episode 4, seeing read,
written by,
oh, just a host of writers.
Sabir Prasada, A.C. Bradley, Matthew Chauncey.
And it's directed by Charmine Obaid Chenoy.
And Charmine is a very accomplished
Pakistani director.
And I thought, like, visually, I don't know, we'll get into this, but there's a lot of, there's a lot of comment about Marvel action, Marvel TV action.
And I actually thought this episode had some really top tier Marvel TV action for a couple reasons, which we'll get it to.
But before we talk about that, before we talk about some punches, some hard light, I want, you know, you're here on the mic.
I'm here on the record.
It's true.
How are you feeling about Miss Marvel so far?
What is your journey been like?
Like, how's it going for you?
Oh, I love, I just love this television show.
I'm having an absolute blast.
I'm so excited to finally talk about it with you.
I've missed having the chance the last few weeks to really just revel in this truly
pleasurable viewing experience.
I think that this show is so vibrant and charming and charismatic and full of life.
And it's like my favorite.
kind of story inside of a genre rapper, which is, yes, of course, there is the legacy
and the mythology and that is being parceled out episode by episode beat by beat.
I personally had very, I have very little Miss Marvel Comics canon awareness.
I'm only now taking my first foray, as you know, Joe, because I'm a text of you into the
comics.
It's all new to me.
And so it's been really cool to kind of run those parallel tracks of the comics of the show,
learning about this aspect of the canon, the coming of age story.
Just my favorite thing.
And you put that inside of a superhero story and a genre tale and I'm in.
You add the, again, that just charm and the heart that is so ever present.
And the show is just so steeped in the journey of discovery in so many different
entwined respects.
And I just love that.
Learning about your friendships, learning about your friendships, learning about your
family, your history, your culture, your own community, the parallels that exist across a family,
across generations, and how that teaches you something about your own experience. It's just really
been a delight week after week. I'm having a blast. Excellent. I'm so, I'm so thrilled you're here.
This week on the show, we're headed to Pakistan. We're in Pakistan. We're on the flight,
and then we're in Pakistan. We should say, for the record, oh, I just want to let me say more
broadly. I wasn't able to be on the episode last
week, but I've gotten a lot of
emails.
People find going out of their
way to find an email where they can reach me
and sending me the longest emails I've ever
received in my life
about this show and about our
coverage of this show.
Awesome. And I've been doing this for a long time.
I've got a lot of long emails. Back of the
Thrones days, I got like, you know, dissertation
link. But I think the way in which
this show is so important
for a very thirsty underserved audience and the way in which they want to applaud us for
getting something's right and then like rightfully hold our feet to the fire for the things that
we like misstep on and I always appreciate that when it's phrased as nicely as so many
of these emails have been phrased.
You know, it just underlines to me how important this show is to so many people and and that makes
me emotional. So anyway, thank you for those long, long emails. I'm sorry I didn't address any of
them on the pod last week because it wasn't there, but please keep sending them. I love to read
your thoughts and your feelings. And actually in prep for this episode, I watched a breakdown,
you know, you and I love a YouTube breakdown of an episode of Marvel TV. We're fans of that,
but I watched one in Hindi. Not that I could understand the Hindi, but I was just sort of like
interested in what the person was kind of zeroing in on and then going through the comments,
which were all in English and seeing what they were most excited about was a really fun thing
for me to understand, you know, who this episode is hitting and where.
Yeah.
It's awesome.
It's a really special show.
So, yeah, so we're in Pakistan.
It's actually we're in Thailand.
They filmed us in Bangkok.
But there's some exterior, some B-roll that is from actual the streets of Pakistan.
So that's really exciting.
And this is directly from a storyline in the comics where Kamala goes to Pakistan in volume
for issue number 12.
There was a QR code in the episode for that issue.
So they're like, we're doing the journey to Pakistan.
And like I think it's, I just want to ask you like this idea of going back to like a home country or the homeland as like a growing up right of passage.
Do you have any, like, thoughts or feelings or connection to that?
Oh, I love it.
You know, I think that it allows us as an audience in tandem with the characters who are
central to the story to better understand the roots and the connections across time and
across generations.
And I think that one of the things that this show has done so deftly, and this has been
the case throughout, but you really felt it in this episode because we are not only with Kamala,
but we were with her mother.
We are with Nani.
And then we see them with each other as well.
And you get the opportunity to identify the through lines and the parallels and when those parallels bring people together and when they divide them apart, right?
The idea of borders and divisions very present throughout this episode and this story so far.
And one of the moments that really stood out.
And, you know, the performances are just so wonderful on the show.
I mean, everybody who's been covering, covering this Marvel on the Ring ofverse through the first three episodes has rightly touted the performances are just consistently excellent.
and magnetic across the board.
The scene where we get the wonderful, like the leg massages is a massage of your way of getting back
to me.
We have, you know, the taffy, the beautiful taffy conversation.
But we get this really, like, illuminating exchange.
It is absolutely true.
And even after Baba left you, you continue to cling to these fantastic theories.
And Sana, Nani says, I just thought I'd share them with you.
I didn't need your stories, Mommy.
I needed my mother.
This was like one of those moments where not only is it very compelling emotionally,
and it just works on that level.
You are watching two people work through their history and their past together.
But you understand so clearly then the way that Kamala's mother has taken something
that she is still working through in processing, this struggle with her mother and her history
in her life.
And it is then manifesting
in the inversion
where her daughter
is craving the exact thing
that she got and didn't want.
And the way that these
cycles and repetitions
perpetuated across
a family dynamic,
I just think is like
so interesting.
And I just also thought
it was such a lovely,
I mean,
it was just such a lovely setting
the beautiful moment up
on the balcony
between Nani and Kamala.
You know,
you found my secret spot.
Like it was,
was a gorgeous episode.
It was so full of life.
And again, like I as a viewer am learning so much as I watch that.
And the moments where you realize that your central figure, your hero, is learning
so much too in tandem with you.
It's just a really, like, a rare and cool thing.
I want to talk about this, like, really inherently important theme of Kamala's character in
both the comics and this show, which is the idea of, like,
torn between two worlds. And she gets it double time, right? Because she gets this sort of,
am I two American for the Pakistanis or two Pakistani for the Americans sort of theme that we've
seen explored a lot in sort of first generation kids in America? But also, of course,
she's finding out that she's got this other torn between two worlds identity in terms of being
part human and part gin.
And what I love about that,
what I love about like the spicy food stuff,
like her being embarrassed that the food is too spicy for her.
This is straight out of the comics where like her grandma had to make the food
like white level spice for her and stuff like that.
And like all of that stuff is really charming.
But what I love that's baked into the concept of this show that's not in the comics
is this repeated idea that the reason she's able to harness the power of the bangle is because of her fractured identity.
That like this bangle has, you know, these scary immortal people have been chasing this bangle,
but they have never been able to harness the power of it the way that Kamala has.
And, you know, it's explained to her by the character Walid, who she meets in this episode.
Like, we believe your genetics could be the answer to why it is that you can shape the nor.
hair the nor being this light.
Your humanity links you to the matter of this world.
It makes your abilities unique.
And so that fractured identity, which so many people see as a weakness, as like, I don't
fit in anywhere, that's the core of her, that's a source of her strength.
And it goes back to this like sort of Joseph Campbell, hero's journey idea of talk about this
a lot.
We talk about like mythological heroes and even superheroes is that the wound, this idea of
the combining the wound with the gift.
So like the wound for someone like Superman is being shunted out of his home, right?
He's exiled from his home and separated from his humanity.
But that's also the source of his strength because he's from a different planet.
That is why he is as strong as he is.
So like tying the wound to the power is such a strong, interesting hero's thing.
And to do that with this idea of like, I'm split between two worlds.
first born American immigrant experience, I just think that that is really a fascinating concept
that they really expanded on out of the comics. What do you think? Oh, yeah. I think that's exactly
right. And I really, I love that. And this, the numerous different versions of the two worlds,
like there are plenty of moments in the, in the episode, as you note, where there's like a lot of
levity and poking fun, whether that's with Kareem or.
around the campfire or with her cousins
or any number of other sequences, right?
There's even like a moment
where her mother just says to her,
don't be weird, right?
And so much of,
so much of the pull that we feel to this character
is that the idea of like weirdness
is inherent to identity
and like a thing that you have to grow
to embrace and love about yourself, right?
And finding the other people in your life
who help you embrace that
is like such a magical thing,
much more magical ultimately
than any superpower, right?
And so like one of the moments
that I just loved so much in the episode
because it's this big idea, right?
And it applies to all of these then specific,
specific exchanges and moments.
It was like Kareem just talking very broadly
about, you know,
and introducing Osse Kahlah to the Red Dagger's,
but talking really about illumination,
perspective, seeing something in a different way.
And he had a couple lines.
You know, he says sometimes,
you have to look beyond what's right in front of you.
Welcome to the Red Daggers.
Perhaps we can teach you to open your eyes.
And that's just a real gift to find people accidentally or otherwise
in front of an Ant-Man mural or otherwise.
Who can not only help you find the clarity,
because there is like an actual quest element to this that Kamala is chatting about
with Kareem and will lead to the Red Dagger sequence,
but also with Nani in this exchange of like the trail of stars and is this the train we're seeing
and trying to piece together what she is even seeking.
And that idea of seeking comes up, I think we'll talk about that later, on the actual
inscription of the Bengal in a very compelling way.
Oh, yeah.
Well, you're not just in a really deftly told nimble story, you're not just seeking a plot
answer.
You're seeking that in tandem with some sort of revelation or epiphany about who you are.
And that's going to unlock each other in a well-told story.
And I really think that that's happening here.
Yeah, I love that.
To yes and sort of some of this multi-generational women stuff that you were talking about.
I like I just, I really love with much love and respect to Kamala's dad and brother who I love.
I love that it's like we're talking about three generations of women here, right?
Grandmother, mother, daughter.
And something that I want to talk first about Nani and this idea of partition.
And her studio, her obsessive, like, yarn wall about partition and like the art that she's created,
drawing, you know, painting her mother because she doesn't have a photograph of her mother
or, you know, having to create.
She's like, you dwell on what you lost or you could create it, you know.
And I just, I thought that was just a really beautiful concept.
Incredible.
But I do want to talk really quickly about partition, this very traumatic thing, obviously.
But one of the items on the wall in Nani Studio references Mountbatten.
And that pinged the crown fan in me.
Do you watch The Crown at all?
Oh, yeah.
Okay.
So Mountbatten, of course, a real life figure in history, but also.
a significant character in the crown,
played first by Greg Wise and then by the great Charles dance.
And is a really interesting character,
but thinking about his,
he was,
you know,
so he was the vice where he had to oversaw partition.
And a lot of people are just sort of like make him
and understandably the main villain of partition.
And the fact,
you know,
he,
spoilers for the crown and also real life.
Mountbatten was assassinated in 79 by the eye.
RA. And it's a really shocking moment, right? Not the least of which because we've been with this
character for so long. Also, he's played by Charles Dance. But there are so many resentments
swirling around this one man who is painted as both a kindly uncle and then you learn more and
more about sort of all the nefarious things that he had his hands in. And so I just think that that was
just, I don't know, it's just a really interesting figure to crop up in this that he is also
in the crown kind of
gentled and lionized in a way
but also there's just this like really
it's like a lot of blood on his hands
and I don't know
I just thought that was a really interesting figure
any thoughts any Mountbatten thoughts or feelings
not like you're right now I'm just
I can't wait to talk about the crown with you
in future seasons
not surprised to learn that we're
both deeply devoted to
to the crown and of course have long been devoted
to Charles Dance
Sir Sir Tire went himself.
Just hearing you
like say all that though
and and
sketch out the way that these
you know that that
I thought the only way I could hold on to
what we had lost was to create it myself
like deeply emotional, deeply family rooted
aspect of that room and that discovery is entwined
with those those
snippets of actual real life
history.
Yeah. And to your question from earlier about like, do I, how do I think about these,
returning to your roots and families across time moments. Like, I actually, I don't know if I was
thinking about it in this way watching it, but now hearing you talk about these like three
generations of women inside a family and, and confronting their own history, I'm thinking about,
like, the sequence where, um, where Kamala is walking through town with her cousins and there's like,
you know, again, like, not.
like an ill-intentioned or anything, but that she has that line about, oh, this is like Florida,
right? This is where, like, old people are. And then there's this, like, very serious reply
from one of her cousins. And, you know, my, my, my maternal grandparents, my mom's parents,
my Nana and Papa are Holocaust survivors. Yeah. And I, like, now just hearing you say all this,
it makes me think of, like, a moment when I was a kid and visiting my Nana and Papa
in in Florida, in Del Rey Beach.
They eventually came to live with us in Maryland.
And I was really young at this point in time.
But my, my Papa was spreading yogurt.
And it's impossible that this is like a slightly apocryphal story,
but this is how I remember it in my mind.
Yeah.
He was spreading yogurt on a bagel.
And I was just like, Papa, what are you doing?
That's disgusting.
Why would you be spreading yogurt on a bagel?
Yeah.
And he was like, if you went,
years of your life without eating without being able to access food like we did like you would
never ask a question like that and you know I think about things like that because like I was just
with my sorry getting emotional I was just with my family last weekend and you know a few weeks
before that I was back in Baltimore for the first time in three years because of COVID and I actually
hadn't been to the house that my mom and stepdad are currently living in. They had like moved
right before COVID. And I was just, you know, I talk to my mom all the time, but like, you just have
these moments where you're like pulled back into the history of your own family and your own life,
right? And just like walking around and she has this, the house has changed and her life has changed.
And she has this one picture of my Nana and Papa that has just been with her every single. Please,
she's ever been. And I don't know, it's just like a really, it's just like a really lovely thing
to think about. And, you know, she has like her associations with that and her stories. And I'm sure
her siblings have different ones and they have like common moments that they think of and totally
distinct ones as well. And, you know, I had the, the privilege of like really knowing my grandparents.
And again, they lived with us for a while and they're both, you know, they've both passed away and they're
gone now. But I think a lot about like trying to read about all the stuff I don't know about their
lives still and these historic horrific things that they lived through. And like why? Why I don't know
more about that? And like what I can do to change that. And I think the answer to that is just to like
ask to ask my mom or ask other people in their lives. And like again, I just love I love this show so
much because even though I just said I wasn't like necessarily
consciously thinking about that watching the episode
talking about it with you,
you just made me think about it.
And that's like a really cool special thing, you know?
So I don't know.
I just think that like I thought it was interesting on the Midnight
Boys they discussed whether it felt too soon to change locations in that way
to go from Jersey City to Pakistan.
And I felt really glad that this happened here where it did because I think that
not only in terms of like the lore and the history of the clandestine and the Bengal and all of that,
Kamala understanding her family and who she is, given in particular what we've come to understand inside of the show about how little
opportunity these family members have had to explore these things together.
Yeah. I think it's like imperative for her journey and for that self-discovery that we were talking about earlier,
that she be here.
And Nani even says that, right?
Like the Bengal is trying to tell you something, Beda.
I don't know what, but I do know that you needed to be here with me to figure it out.
Like, what a cool idea.
I love, first of all, thank you so much for sharing that.
I love podcasting with you and talking about story with you.
It means a lot to me.
The, when Nani says, my passport is Pakistani.
my roots are in India.
And in between all of this, there is a border.
There's a border marked with blood and pain.
People are claiming their identity based on an idea of some old Englishman,
Mountbatten, you bastard, had when they were fleeing the country, how is one to deal with that?
Do you think you're ever going to figure it out?
But what's the rush?
And then also, but then if you've lived like I have lost what I have, you learn to find beauty in the pieces.
And again, like, these are just, these are things that she needs to learn from her grandmother.
And when I'm talking about that original wound, it's like the original wound here is this is partition and this idea of people flung on one side of the other of something.
And, you know, similarly we'll learn more I hope about Aisha and all of that.
But like the gin being exiled from their homes is, you know, such an interesting parallel.
And again, very different from the comics.
but I think a really smart way to underline the importance of story.
Partition is part of the comics.
It's in there.
But I think making this story about these characters, these gin figures who are trying to get home,
allows you to dwell even more in the idea of partition, what it really meant and what it really destroyed and what you can choose to do in the aftermath of that destruction.
Do you hold on to your hate understandably,
but do you hold on to your hate the way that some of these villainous figures in the show are holding onto their hate?
Or do you take another approach?
And I think that's really interesting.
The way in which I related really personally to these generational stories that we're getting here is the stuff with Mniva and her mom.
You mentioned the leg rub and stuff like that.
But I just think the stuff with the toffee boxes,
she's like, why do you have toffee boxes everywhere, right?
Like, this is a sign of your declining mind.
Why do you have toffee boxes everywhere?
And she's like, because you love them as a child.
So I held on to them.
Like, of course, you know.
And so she's still thinking, she's still thinking of Muneva as a child, right?
In her own way.
And I flashed back immediately and viscerally to like one Thanksgiving at my house
where I was, you know, maybe my early teens.
And I was, you know, my grandma at that point, my grandma,
my mom's mom would come and stay with us for Thanksgiving and for Christmas, like just
overnight. And I remember being in the kitchen and watching my mom at her rope's end
dealing with her mom and my mom and I didn't get along. And so watching her turn into a child
dealing with her own mom. And it's such an important part of growing up is realizing either
that your parents are just humans like you are. There's a human.
you're just human or maybe even more viscerally that they were a child like you were a child
and they're capable of still being thrust back into that child position when they're around
their own parents if you get if you're lucky enough to see your parent interact with a grandparent
like that's an experience you can have and then one more step beyond that we have another
experience in life is when you start to watch your older parents lose the ability to take care
of themselves whether that's true of nani who's outprivile.
partying before she has to pick people up the airport. I don't know. But Boniva's like maybe it's
time for you to come stay with us. Maybe it's time for me to mother you. You know? And all of that
cyclical stuff is happening at once very definitely in this episode. Centres is on this idea of
toffee. For me, my favorite part of this episode, there's a lot of spectacle. There's a lot of running
through the streets. It's, it's Kamala coming home and her mom is eating the toffee's and he shares
it with her. And she says, you know how mothers are. And it was just like, you know,
She's just enjoying this childhood delight, which is she's just eating these toffies that she loved as a kid and Mala can't eat them because they're hardest rocks or whatever.
And it's just this like really beautiful moment.
And it's the kind of like pause depth.
They didn't spend a ton of time on it.
But it's just like the show has room for some of that family stuff in a way that I feel like a lot of other Marvel shows or even superhero shows in general because they're so focused on the supernatural threat or the action or.
whatever, that they don't take the time to flesh out those characters and those relationships.
Yeah, I love that moment, too. Not only because there's an element of like bonding and, you know,
laughter and just this like sweet kind of innocent tenderness, but there's a moment through this,
just this, this little thing, sharing a bite of food with somebody of enhanced understanding of who
your mother is and as you're saying like what that history is. And, you know, to your point about
that idea of, of Nani still thinking, you know, of her as a child and what the tofis might represent
in that sense, like this kind of almost like frozen in amber attachment to a past version of
their family, a past version of their life. There's also this like related, really lovely way
of looking at that, like she never stopped thinking that she would come home.
You know, she never stopped thinking that they would be able to like find their way back to each other.
Then this idea of like the trail of stars, this magical pathway, this bridge that leads you back to somebody you love, this like embodiment of protection and guidance, that can be in a box of candy too.
You know, there are so many different ways that like you can make your way back to each other.
If you just like you said like it's those, it's that line of wisdom from Nani, you know, you learn to find beauty in the pieces.
And like the toffee in a way, it's the pieces that represent.
that's the thing they no longer were able to share together.
But that piece can be the way back to each other too.
It's just beautiful.
There's this, I don't know if you have any connection to, like,
candy from elsewhere, but we have these family friends when we were kids that would come
visit and they would bring this candy from, they were Italian, they would bring these candy
from Italy called Torone, which is disgusting.
It's white and it's really sickly, sorry, to my taste, not great.
But it came in a very specific tin and they would always bring it.
And my sister and I would always pretend that we were delighted to have it because we were a little polite children.
And then we would be like, why is this?
Sorry to offend any Italian listeners.
I hope you love the Toronto yourself.
But that's just seeing that tin.
I know that tin so well.
And just seeing it.
It doesn't even say the candy.
It's just like the design of the tin.
I know what's inside of it.
I know.
And like that, I don't know.
It's a visceral sort of interesting memory.
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Meanwhile, over damage control, we have some notes.
The toughest of looks.
We have some notes about the strategy here.
I have a lot of compliments for this episode,
but damage control, I have no compliments for you.
Any thoughts or feelings about how easily Najma and her and her pals escaped?
I think that ultimately if everybody inside of the story is kind of in on the bit,
and like we're just actually supposed to think that everyone who works,
for damage control is a dummy and a doofus and like not a real threat, then I love it, right?
Because like the ability to just so easily thwart them then becomes kind of comic and
like thematically resonant. If they're supposed to be antagonists of consequence,
then it just like makes it really difficult to take them seriously. Yeah. But in general,
you know, we haven't really gotten the chance on Mike to talk about, uh, uh,
Obviously, we talked about it in our Spidey pod,
but here, I haven't gotten to just say,
damage control can fuck up 500 times
if it means I get Stewie in the ICU.
Like, I'm content.
I completely agree.
What a treat.
It's been noted by many people that damage control,
this specific prison shows up in the She-Hulk trailer
and it is where Blonsky is being kept in the She-Hulk trailer.
And we know that, like, Blonsky just, like,
off out of his cell, out of his cell anytime he chooses. So, you know, across the board,
damage control, not controlling much damage, it would appear, right? Man, Blonsky. Missed that guy.
Well, it's great to see him in Shang Chi. Can't wait to see him again. I have a theory. You'll see
more of him soon. All right. So let's talk about the red daggers. I think there's some really
interesting casting going on here, right? So like Aramis Knight is cast as Kareem. And I know
did you watch Into the Badlands at all, the AMC show?
I didn't.
No.
Okay.
Not a great show, but it had some great thing.
It had some really interesting world building going on.
And it had visually very cool, great costumes.
And then some of the best martial arts fighting I've ever seen in my entire life.
Daniel Wu, who is showing up on Westworld this season, is a phenomenal.
Like, he was the lead and he has these fights and this red coat.
And it's just like everything that you could possibly want.
Aramis Night played his sort of.
like protege like the young in training, which just means that this young man has done so much
martial arts training, uh, in his already in his young life. Um, and so I feel like that
really came through in casting both him and, um, Farhan Akhtar, who is a, who is a, who is a
Bollywood star and not just like a, but like a Bollywood star. Like in that Hindi video that I
mentioned, like most of the comments were about Farahnaqdar who, who shows up as wellied.
So, like, the two actors that they cast is Red Dagger.
The two members of the Red Dagger collective?
I don't know how many others there are out there.
That was a really funny Midnight Boys chat about how many members you need to actually be a secret society.
Maybe it's like the Sith where there's like an amassment of a princess.
And, like, Wally had to die because Kamala has joined the Red Dagger's.
Rule of two, never worked out poorly for anyone in Star Wars show.
Always great.
be fine.
Always great.
But I just, I think, I think that, that specific casting just really shines through in a lot of
the action that we see in this episode because you've just got like two frigate crackerjack
actors who know what they're doing when it comes to movement, as opposed to great actors
who have a couple weeks of training before shooting a Marvel show.
So I thought that was really, really good.
They were just like both absolute delights.
Yeah.
incredible to watch.
I don't know how quickly Kareem might head to Jersey City,
if that's something that's going to pour it over from the comics into the show.
I would love it.
I thought he was just exceptional and I hope he's very present in the story.
I thought what lead was just so compelling.
And also, like, you know, we talk often about how inside of an MCU tale,
there's going to be multiple moments,
whether it's in a movie or across a Disney Plus series,
where you have a lot of exposition downloading happening.
And a lot of that, a lot of that fell on him.
Yeah.
Specifically when it came to Lunar and the Vale and the Bengal.
I was like wrapped.
He had like maps and charts and 3D like.
like yeah yeah yeah he's fantastic like honestly gone too soon but um it's it's so it reminds me of
um that scene in wayne's world where they replace the random actor in the gas station with charlton
heston who like had to deliver this beautiful monologue and they like stopped the movie and mike mire's
like can we get a better caliber of actor here and they just like tap charlton heston for this tiny
thing and then i'm like oh they tapped a bollywood legend for this like very small role but like
gives it weight gives it excitement for people who are watching and excited to like see uh you know all of
Pakistani uh you know culture represented here or stuff like that and and like real emotional heft too
in in in between and entwined with all of the mythology downloading because like he has that
lovely there's that lovely moment handing over the garment he says to you know he says sort of like
there's history in every thread of this fabric so you always remember where you came from you're not alone
And that idea, you're not alone.
It connects to everything we've been talking about today,
like learning to really just embrace the ties that bind
when so much of what is driving the story is about the borders that divide
when you find the ties that bind.
That's like a really powerful thing.
I love this idea that like Kamala is slowly building her costume out of these pieces
that come from these various people, right?
So like the scarf, which we know from promo material is going to like wind up being in the,
you know, its inner comics costume is going to wind up being in her end game costume here.
You know, she puts on this, like, long red shirt and the blue vest.
It's not the final look, but it is, it is a reference to her costume.
The mask she has is what Bruno gave her.
You know, so she's, like, taking these pieces and putting together her costume for all
or various identities.
I love it.
I want to talk about the many, many boyfriends of, of Marcon.
Same.
Incredible.
Incredible player.
We love her.
I think it's fucking great.
Oh, I also think it's great.
Like, the Midnight boys.
that was a rare misstep from them.
But I think what I think is even more interesting.
And they let us know that this was coming with a shot of Felicity in the first time.
I warn people, I'm like a love triangle if not a square is coming because that is all Felicity is about.
One of the saddest moments of my podcasting tenure was not getting to talk about the Felicity thing with you.
Because I watched every second of Felicity and it's one of the most formative viewing experiences of my life.
I'm still deeply in love with Ben.
Okay.
I was going to ask you too better to me out.
But you knew the answer.
I did know that.
I did.
And your soul, you knew.
I like barely out of my mouth.
I feel like we've talked about Scott Spiebman before.
Anyway.
I think I once told you that, you know, living at L.A. now for nine years,
you see celebrities walking around and I'm very rarely like, oh my God.
But I saw Scott Speedman once at the Arkley parking lot.
And I was like, oh, my God.
Nearly fainted.
I'm trying to think of the, no, I'm not ready to talk about the celebrity.
I saw that most dazzled me.
Okay.
So, oh, a tease for the future.
Yeah.
Karim, Kamran, and Bruno, I think are such an interesting specific trifecta here, right?
Because they represent three, three aspects of her experience, right?
There's like Bruno, our white American friend, this is the guy she grew up with that represents her American side.
We've got Karim who represents her Pakistani side.
And then we've got Kamran who.
like her sort of bridges both.
And I like that she is finding something to fall in love with or be interested in
in all three of these avenues.
They're all three of them parts of who she is.
And I just, I think that's really clever.
And, you know, I don't know how it's going to turn out.
I have my favorites.
But, oh, I want to ship in.
Who are you rooting for?
I wanted to show an apology to Kamron because I haven't had a chance to be on the pod since
it was revealed that he wasn't.
a villain like he is in the comics.
So my deepest apologies to Comran.
You are very attractive and also very nice.
And I'm sorry you were left behind by your own mother in this episode.
Brun a moment for him there.
I have to go with Bruno.
And I think that connects back to my like team Noel roots.
You know, I'm now team Bent.
But like when I first watched the show, it was very much team Noel on Felicity.
So yeah.
Bruno is such a null, honestly.
So, oh my God.
I'm Team Bruno.
How about you?
How about you?
I am instantly and deeply Team Kareem.
I was absolutely captivated.
I just think it was just like a delight.
I have a lot of affection for show Bruno, though.
Comics, Bruno, in my early reading already like quite different.
But yeah, I don't, I mean, I don't, I don't,
Jomey was saying of the Midnight Boys that he, like, that people don't.
like comic bruno that wasn't my experience reading the comics i do like him but um you know
there's a there's a little bit more of the like unattractive null possessiveness uh in in comics
bruno there is in show bruno so yeah right i i love that what you're what you're saying though
about how each of them each of these potential love interest like represents and reflects a different
aspect of um kamala's life and one of the things that i really
I really love about that is that, you know, we haven't seen them all interact with each other,
but obviously we got a lot of Kamran in Bruno time.
And that, like, it's a, for their perspective, for each of the guys, that's a threatening
reality.
Like, that is something to resent and fear because it's something that someone else has
and can bring to, to her that you, like, cannot.
Whereas to her, it's this, like, whole constellation of possibility and everything.
everybody and the relationships you have with everybody can be like unique. And I think also like,
again, to connect to this like larger theme of, of discovery and embracing the pieces and the different
aspects of who you are and where you come from, like she doesn't have to actually make that
choice. It's not like a one or the other, right? It's like all of these people can be a meaningful
part of her life. So I ship them all in some ways. And, you know, I always love, like with Bruno,
I always love a guy in the chair. It's, it's a favorite. It's a favorite thing.
thing of mine. Delightful.
And I feel like episode, I've liked the whole series, but I feel like episode one was the most
like exciting.
This is something different than we've seen before.
There's so much like extra added artistic juz to it.
And like their, they're a little mission to go to Avengers Con and stuff like that.
It was just like just like so cute and their partnership and all that sort of stuff.
So I think I'm going to hold on to my Bruno feelings from from episode one.
I would be very content with a Bruno outcome too.
I love him.
I think he's a delight.
so sweet and giving, you know, the world is full of a lot of, like, deeply selfish people.
And Bruno, just out there, helping.
Be a Bruno.
Doing whatever he can to make somebody else's life better.
I want him to be a little more selfish.
I'm, you know, the Caltech thing, right?
It's an important thing for him to follow his own path as well, because that's how you
could be the best for somebody else ultimately.
I agree, man.
I really agree.
I want to talk about something that happens with Kareem of the comics that I really love.
Is that like Kamala shows up to Pakistan.
She meets him.
He's like a friend of the family.
So it's very much get your bingo cards ready because here's my Buffy reference.
It's very much like how Buffy meets Riley, her T.A.
The bingo cards.
We haven't talked about the bingo cards on the pod yet.
Incredible stuff.
The mal is horny square.
My parents and my journalism professors must be so proud.
We should say that someone in our, I don't know, because it was texted to us by someone, so I don't know what the origin was.
Steve said to us.
I think he said they were in the Facebook group, I believe.
So someone in the Facebook group, I guess, made bingo cards for both the Midnight Boys and House of R, like, individual cards.
And Joe references Buffy is one of them.
But Mal is horny, like should be the center square for sure, the gimmie, right?
I believe Steve's response to that was free space question mark.
Oh, God.
You know, love our listeners.
They know us.
They do.
It's great.
So here's that, here's that Buffy Square.
Buffy meets Riley, her T.A.
And then later, like, encounters him as this, like, super soldier commander
out on mission.
And they find that they both have superpowers, right?
So Kamala meets Kareem is just, like, a deeply hot, even in comic form,
friend of the family that she's like, oh, hi.
Right?
And then she goes out.
about, you know, superhero on patrol,
night's doing the superhero thing in Pakistan.
And she fucks everything up.
Because she doesn't know anything about what it's like to superhero in Pakistan.
She doesn't know anything about the implications of what she's done.
And he shows up as Red Dagger.
And he's like, you didn't check with any local heroes.
You just blundered in here thinking you knew what you were doing.
You don't know what the hell you're doing.
And I just love that moment in the comics where he's like, listen, listen, this is Pakistan.
And you might be Pakistani, but you don't know what you're doing.
you're doing here. And I just like, I really love that.
Yeah. So I don't know. I mean, I don't know if Kareem is going to come to America like he does
in the comics. I don't know if Berta's going to go to Caltech. I suppose those are Miss Marvel
Season 2 concerns. Let's talk about Miss Marvel maybe bleeding into the Marvels the next time we're
going to see Kamala in the movie with all of this Nour, Jin, Kandestine, the unseen, like so
so much terminology going on fast and loose here.
In last week's episode, we didn't get a chance,
you and I haven't had a chance to talk about this,
but in last week's episode,
when we get the bengal flashback,
they dig it out of the rubble and it's on this blue arm.
Yes.
Which makes a lot of people feel like that bangle is connected to the Cree somehow.
I shouted that out loud.
That seemed.
Did you just say Cree in your house?
Like, is that what happened?
Kind of.
Yeah.
I just turned to Adam.
I said, great.
A Leo pointing meme.
Okay, great.
Also in that flashback, we see on the floor of that, wherever they are, the 10 rings.
Yes.
Which has been a theory that we've been floating since the beginning of that this bangle might be connected to the, you know, the rings, the bracelets from Chongxi.
We've been talking a lot about realms, right?
that there is this other realm that the Jin come from.
Yes.
And to talk about realms and how they are different from the multiverse,
there's a great breakdown video from our pal, Eric Voss,
over on New Rock Stars,
about realms versus universes versus multiverses and sort of what their different meanings are.
But Tala, which is the realm in Shang Chi,
the thing to remember about that is that it is like,
you can't just stumble upon it.
It needs a gateway to open it in order to,
enter it and it exists on earth, but no one knows of its existence. And the inhabitants of
Talo that we meet in that film, like one example being played by Michelle Yo, are these sort of
beings of light that are taking human form. So that might be how we should best think about the
gin that we mean here. And what we, one, one thing we learned in this episode is sort of this
idea of being a gin, well, lead says, if Thor landed in the Himalayan Mount
he too have been called a gin.
So it's like, there are many beings like this,
but they're called different things depending on where they emerge around the world.
I don't think of Thor in the same category as the residents of Talo,
so that's where it gets a little confusing for me.
But like, there are some, they're attempting to draw some connections between this.
What is your understanding of where these things overlap and where they are distinct?
So it's a great question.
Before I attempt to answer it, I will note that,
two things. One, I just realized I'm wearing my Morris T-shirt today. Didn't even think about it, but here we go. Oh, my God. What a joy. What a gem. Good old Morris. I, so one of the, and I don't even want to say contrasting moments, because I think that part of the point is that we're supposed to be thinking about these ideas in tandem, not as oppositional instincts. But like, one of the different kind of, you know,
frameworks or attempts to parse all this,
distinct from the will lead actual run down an explanation of the Nordimension,
the Bengal, the clandestines, etc.
Was Nani, when Kamala asks her about who she is,
what does Nani say to her?
She says, I don't see what the whole fuss is about.
It's just genetics.
You're focusing on the wrong things.
It's not about how I see the vision.
or if you are a gin,
the important thing is that
when the bangle was used
the last time it saved my life.
So obviously, like, our inclination
as deep dive podcasters,
it's not going to be to hear that and say,
doesn't matter.
Nani, noted.
We're no longer going to try to figure this all out.
But I am going to try to, like, hold on to that
because I think that it operates
in conjunction with ideas like
the open your eyes.
Perhaps we can teach you to see,
lines from Kareem just about like maintaining a open mind as we attempt to sift through all of these
different kernels and nuggets of canon. So yes, the idea of how universes and dimensions relate to
each other, I think you already, you know, you already explained it quite well, I think. I,
the idea of this veil, the map that we see initially with the two layers, like, it made me think,
and obviously, like, these are not perfect corollaries or comps, and there's a lot of culture and history
that is connected to this particular version that is not present in these other examples,
but, or is present in different ways, it made me think of, like, it made me think of a couple
things. One, his dark material, specifically the subtle knife. And that is, of, of,
course more akin to the world multiverse. Yeah, yeah, yeah. You can work the tip in and you can make
your way to another world. Work that tip in, Joe. Not sure we've got a lot of like ring reverse
contains adult content on this pod, but you found a way. Just smile. I guess like happened naturally.
Happened naturally. But that idea of like it's connected to our world but hidden, right? This
idea that there are realms and other ways of life and other people and other existence.
that are always just right out of reach.
That then, of course, makes me think of stranger things,
another show that is very present and top of mind for us.
And quite literally in that case,
because we get the description behind the veil of NOR
that separates our world from theirs.
And Kareem follows.
We'll lead there and says,
nor is the energy of the realm, the veil,
the clandestines, even your powers are made of it.
And this then ensuing rundown of the threat
of breaching that veil.
of tearing it down and this nor dimension overtaking this reality, our reality.
So that makes me think of the upside down, right, and the thread of the gates.
And not that I think the lessons of those two stories are necessarily the same or again
that it's like a one-to-one comp, but inside of this show and a lot of what we've been
discussing today about like learning to accept and embrace something that,
you might be led otherwise to fear.
Like I think feels very important here that if the nor
dimension is only presented or viewed as a threat,
like that has to be one of the things I think ultimately that
distinguishes our heroes from the quote unquote
villains of the story is how can these things actually,
how can you find that bridge and that pathway?
How can people live the lives they want to lead
without one of those things needing to come at the expense
of somebody else's way of life?
how can you? And you know, we heard the Bruno exchange in the prior episode about like, well,
maybe things go boom, right? If you try to do this, like there are risks and dangers and real,
real threats. But is there a way to pierce that border to tear down that divide and that thing that
stands in as a divide without necessarily having to risk one reality or the other? That feels to me
like very central to what the final two episodes need to unlock. Right. This idea of like maybe you can send
them home without there being an incursion or perhaps all that is going to bleed over into the
marbles and perhaps Carol Danvers is going to be instrumental somehow in figuring out how to
do this. We also like we know that there are supposed to be two bangles. So right how is that
going to work? Right. I actually have a theory about that. What is it? What is it? Do you want to hop
over to a theory corner? Tell me what your theory is. Well, I love a Joe Robinson theory.
I mean, like, the episode ends.
We're going back in time, right?
Yes.
We rip a tear in time and we're back in partition, right?
And the very common theory, it's not even a theory at this point.
We could just like probably, we'll be surprised if it doesn't happen, is that the trail of stars that Sanah, you know, takes back to her is something that Kamala, like, lays out for her, right?
There's a question of like, is Kamala running around Allah back to the future to, by the way,
a film that Kevin Feige has a lot of interest in.
So is she going to be running around like Marty McFly and Back to the Future 2 running back on
on a timeline or whatever?
Or did she swap places with Isha?
Like is she actually like like quantum leaping or Russian doll season twoing if you prefer
into like Aisha's body, right?
Right.
Yeah.
But but a main question is the chain of custody of the Bengal, which is like if she brings
the bangle back in time and that bangle is somehow the bangle that and it like is then passed down to her.
Like how does that work if she brings the bangle back in time and sort of stuff like it?
But I'm like wondering if there's a way you can bring the bangle back in time and then if two bengals are in the same place back in time, even though they're the same bangle, there's two bengals.
Do you know what I mean?
Are you a fan of the television program dark?
Yes, yes.
The timey-wimiest show we've ever seen in our entire life.
I love, love, love, dark.
And I wonder how much room there is in the final two episodes of season one of this show
to introduce a lot of like bootstrap paradox questions.
You know, that like would as interesting as I think that would be,
that would make me a little nervous just in terms of like a story structure perspective.
I do agree with you though that.
Yes, it seems like almost clear that because again, we get the specifics of we hear,
when we move back in time, we hear this is the last train.
And we had previously heard Nani say last train.
So we know we were at this moment in time.
And I agree that it seems very likely, even maybe a lock, that Kamala will be the one
who unleashes the Trail of Stars.
In terms of like how that might then connect her to her great grandma, that makes
we think of the inscription then like what you seek is seeking you okay first of all incredible
piece of you know uh sort of prophecy mumbo jumbo jumbo what you seek is seeking you i love it right um
really and uh i mean i don't i don't i can't remember this is a bingo uh square for you but like
we got to also hop on a potter reference here of course right like hairy looping around prisoner
Raskavan, my favorite, of the Harry Potter stories.
And I don't think I knew that.
Yeah.
Interesting. I love that.
Being the patroness that rescues him, right?
He thinks it's his dad, but it's himself, right?
Bronze wrote again last night.
So, you know, it's like that, which is one of the most, I think one of, actually, I think
maybe the most beautiful moments in Potterdom for me.
And so, yeah, so this idea that she could be there, she could be this or
origin story, this like this thing that saved her grandmother that put her family on a certain
path, all that sort of stuff.
Yeah.
I think it's, I love that.
I love that.
I think that would be so, so beautiful.
And also, like, Leeds' response when after he shared what the inscription, what it said,
and he came home's response was, is that, like, an important message?
And I think there's a, there's a version of the show where that plays is, like, pure kind of,
like, chuckle comedy, right?
Yeah.
I thought his response was genuinely profound when he said, I don't know, but it must have been important to someone.
Like, to me that that cuts to something central about how prophecies are deployed in stories that I think a lot of stories really miss.
Like so much of the way prophecies are ultimately fulfilled is because of the perspective of the person who hears them.
Like, you know, you end up setting into the self-fulfilling prophecy.
The thing that you are seeking to avoid.
And just like this idea of connection and the ties that you don't yet see because you haven't been able to open your eyes.
Like that really does feel like it would fit with all of the themes of this episode.
Well, and the thing that I love to about the wording of that, what you seek is seeking you.
It's not who you seek is seeking you, but what you seek is seeking you, which, sorry, I said that like three times too fast.
But like I think that like my apologies to anyone who's listening to this at 1.5.
But I think because if you say who you seek is seeking you, that's, okay, that's kind of, that's kind of.
Cool, that spooky.
What you see is seeking?
What is seeking? What is seeking me?
What is the thing?
Not what is the person, but what is the thing?
Is it my destiny?
Is it, you know, like, what is it?
And I just, I love that.
And the loop nature of it.
Again, if we're on, if we're talking about a causal time loop, because there's been a lot
of questions of like, if Kamala goes back in time, is this a Loki situation where she's
creating a fractured branch of reality?
And it's like, no, if it's a closed causal loop,
If she was always the one to create the trail of stars, you know, to save her grandmother,
then that's not creating a new reality.
That's just fulfilling the, the existent causal travel loop.
I love causal loops and I love time travel.
You and I didn't get to talk about Loki, but I am thrilled that we are here.
You're right that probably a bootstrap paradox is too much.
And it's possible that the second bangle, if indeed we get a second bangle, but it's possible
that the second bangle is something that'll show up in the marvels or maybe never at all.
But I just thought this idea of like we need two to get home and we have one, you know, something you think about.
In terms of the realms, there's something else I want to talk about really quickly, this idea of one reality sort of laying on top of ours, but we can't see it.
I love the one shot in the first fight between pure dust and veil of shadows quote stuff there.
Really?
Continue.
Where do you think Vecna was during partition?
There's one one I actually really liked how the fighting worked in this episode
Her still bumbling through and figuring all of her stuff out
But like how the hard light like how Kareem is sort of like running around on the hard light too
I thought was kind of cool like he runs down her arm at one point I thought that was really cool
But like this tremendous donkey Kong cool too
It's just iconic in that exact moment the Ninja Turtle Donkey Kong exchange
she's laying on a sheet of hard light right above him.
And it's just sort of this idea of like, oh, reality.
I mean, if I had said that, you would have said phrasing to me.
I know.
Okay.
Saw your face.
I saw your face.
I saw that coming.
But, you know, like, yeah, there's, it's a, it's a classic meet cute sort of sexual.
You know, I was surprised that when the thing broke, she didn't land on top of him.
She landed to the side of him.
That's all there.
but also this idea of like a reality hanging above our reality.
I just thought was a really cool visual.
This thin veil between.
Totally.
I love it.
If we're talking about realms.
Yes.
We obviously need to talk about the realm we might be most familiar with,
which is the quantum realm, right?
A lot of Ant Man.
Scott Lang slash Ant Man has been brought up in almost every single episode.
We really lingered in this one too.
Really lingered in front of the mural.
And I can't tell if it's because.
like we're wanting to lead into the quantum mania like realm conversation or if paul red's going to
show up at some point in this show like i don't want to i don't want to get our house up like that would be
fucking amazing i think like i love that brie we feel like brie showing up that wouldn't
feel like out of the realm of possibility paul's showing up i don't know but i don't know what
teach a podcasting workshop at the high school back in Jersey City?
I don't know what him being there would, I mean, this has to connect to quantum media, right?
We have to be on some sort of quantum realm beat here.
Do you disagree?
I don't disagree.
It's like it would seem strange to have these repeated, recurring, lingering,
Scott Lang, Amman mentions and we're always going to associate the quantum realm with Ant Man.
And I think we've now officially entered the point of phase four where we're like,
Remember this time a year ago where we like spent weeks on in talking about whether we were going to see a version of King in every single ensuing MCU story until quantum media and then it hasn't happened at all, right?
Like I just my dream.
I think that that all totally tracks.
I guess my question becomes, you know, we got the Thor mentioned here.
We have this quantum mania possibility.
Obviously, as you just as you just noted the we literally literally.
know that this this world is connecting the characters are going to be in the Marvels.
So we think we'll see Captain Marvel here.
You just sketched out the Ten Rings, Shang Chi connections.
There's this like beacon, bengal possibility.
Like how many other properties can this connect to?
Without it feeling suddenly like diluted or a little too chaotic?
I mean, I think mainly the Marvels.
It feels like that's a strong clear.
She's going to be in it.
We're leading towards that.
That might as well be Miss Marvel season two sort of vibe, right?
Quantum mania in the quantum realm, I don't know.
I mean, it's not that far away, that movie.
And we've been promised by Kevin Vigy himself that we're going to get some sort of clarity
of an overarching structure plan?
It's obvious to him, he said.
Sure.
Classic.
I feel like there are nine possibilities.
I think they've made nine obvious possibilities.
They're like, obviously we're doing secret wars.
Obviously, we're doing Young Avengers.
And I mean, it's probably secret wars.
But anyway, we're off the train tracks here.
Anything else you want to say about like Theory Corner?
This is not Theory Corner, but just because you've mentioned the action
a couple of times. I just have to ask how you felt about the car chase because I know
that car chases are a, this is a passion of yours and specifically you're on the record on
the Ring of Mercer and the Ringer Podcast Network saying you do not like and will not watch
any car chase that doesn't include the most VESpa gang.
Did you miss them?
This was so much better.
Don't you think this was so much better?
Yeah, this is really fun.
And it ties back into her driving lesson.
It didn't make me think my TV was broken, which is still a confounding thing that happened during
that Boba sequence is bizarre.
Yeah, I enjoyed this, Chase.
What do you think that most of us the gang is up to right now?
It's just hanging out with each other, getting to some new mods, challenging that
piece of garbage, Lortha Peel on his watermonger bullshit.
Oh, my God.
Mallory's really excited for the Lorth Appeal season of Book of Boba.
But all right. Wanted more Loroth Appeal. It's true.
Let's talk about Easter eggs.
Okay.
I need to start here, first and foremost.
Magnum the dog.
Beautiful pop.
Your new, maybe best friend.
It's a little gorgeous, gorgeous creature.
What a coat.
Most of the pals that we listen to and watch their YouTube breakdowns or whatever,
feel like this is a reference to Magnum PI.
I don't know why there would be a Magnum PI reference here.
My first thought was the ice cream brand, which is very prevalent overseas.
You can't go anywhere in, like, Europe and Asia without seeing Magnum advertisements.
And they are, they definitely have Magnum ice cream in Pakistan.
So that's what I thought the dog was named Magnum.
Do you have any thoughts or feelings?
Does it Nani, doesn't Nani seem like someone who would name a dog after an ice cream bar rather than Tom Selleck?
I don't know.
She does.
Yeah, I like that.
I don't know.
I think, like, for a lot of people, their main association with Magnum is going to be with, like, a certain size of condom.
Yeah.
I have nothing more to contribute.
No, but I don't think that's why Nani has made her dog that.
Oh, my God.
Anything else you want to talk about in the Easter egg section?
We hit a couple of these.
The nap pillow, our dear sloth, just a delight.
Wonderful stuff.
It was great to see the slot, baby.
I like a, on the Ant-Man mural, I like the Adrian Alfana call out too.
Great Miss Marvel comics artist.
So I love it when the creators get their names.
Like, yeah, it's usually like a street name or a business name or whatever.
But I love license plate sometimes.
I guess that's usually an comic issue.
And the street signs are usually the creator names.
I love it into the Spiderverse and he's like scrolling through his phone.
And there's just all these names in the like in the context of that one.
All right.
Secret Scroll.
all this is really easy for me this week.
I'm going with the cousins.
The cousins.
It's 100% the cousins.
Who left Kamala in the middle of the street in a city she doesn't know?
Also, the very strange comment about the sloth baby nap pillow.
Like, I didn't know you were in here with someone.
Those cousins were bizarre.
I don't like, as characters bizarre, only explanations at their secrets.
Oh, and sometimes we have people ask us about this because I don't know, they're just like starting to listen to us for the first time.
A scroll is an alien in disguise in Marvel lore.
We met them in, you know, in Spider-Man and elsewhere, Captain Marvel, obviously.
It is a running bit that Mallory and I just pick a secret, who might secretly be a scroll in whatever we're watching it, be in a Star War or a Marvel property or the boys or whatever.
Who's a scroll in the boys?
Oh my God. What a great question. Had to be some secret scrolls at HeroGasim.
Had to do. Oh. Oh, yeah. Yeah. I think that maybe the 50% very prolific ejaculator.
So that's the secret scroll. That's my new favorite character name. Prolific ejaculator. All right. Mailbag time. Yeah. Jomey isn't here. So it's my job to read out the mailbag promises. Which means I picked the weird and wonderful one. So you're welcome. You're welcome.
We're going to start with John who asked, you and Mallory are tasked to form a four-person
Pakistani boy band group but can only pick the guys from the ringer.
Who would you pick and what would the group be called?
Okay, Mallor, here's my first question.
Are we tag team forming this or do we each create our own boy band?
Let's tag team it.
Okay.
Number one draft, I think.
Yeah.
Is Jomey Adiron, who when I was in number.
LA last weekend was like next time karaoke, right?
Okay.
I love this.
Jomi.
Yeah.
Jomi always loves to chat about the musical questions that we get in mailbags as well.
This is a great one.
Sticking with a karaoke theme then, my number two has to be Chris Ryan.
Great.
Because I once had the pleasure of seeing Chris Ryan at Grantland karaoke and I was riveted.
It was incredible.
Like his voice is amazing or he's just like charismatic on the mic?
All of the above.
Like actual rock star energy.
Seriously.
He's saying Mr. Brightside and it was like transporting.
Great.
Great.
I am going to rely on your institutional knowledge because obviously like I spent far less time here at the ringer and also interact with fewer people than you do.
So I mean my next draft might actually be.
I don't know why.
This just strikes me as really funny is Ben Lindberg.
good old Mike face, Ben Lindberg.
You know, Ben proposed marriage on stage at a concert.
No, what concert?
A Sloan concert.
And, you know, their child is named Sloan.
And I think most people who have been reading Ben for years
think that that's because of the analytics conference.
And it's not.
It's the band.
This is really charming.
Oh, my God.
It's the rag tag team of Chris Ryan.
I mean, no matter what Arjuna is their manager, let's just put that out there.
That's what I'm saying.
Arjuna is the manager.
Isaiah Arjuna, do you want to get in on this?
You want to help us forge our band?
Do you have a nominee for our final spot here?
The final pick?
I've been thinking it's tough final spot.
Isaiah, you can vote for yourself if you want to.
If you want.
Yeah, I could probably do it.
Yeah, I think I could do it.
All right.
Love that for you.
This is great.
So it's Jomey, Isaiah.
Chris Ryan and Ben Lindberg.
Good.
honestly genuinely rag tag what we call this group boy it's got to be some sort of like ringer pun right
do we think that all the songs because of you know the nature of this being a miss marvel ringerverse
or culture podcast exercise that all the songs are going to be about like genre stories because then
instead of like we could go with 10 rings as a play but it could just be 10 ringers maybe then we
need to add more people to the group i don't know
I just don't know
Shangxi and the four ringer's employees
I'm going to think about that
and also we will take suggestions
if you guys have a better boy band
name please let us know
at us on Twitter or elsewhere
and we'll we'll find out
and then we'll make this happen at some point
at ringer Khan
2024
we will make this boy ban happen
Isaiah you get to start practicing right now
okay Dennis Roden asked
the most important question
how sticky was that guy
who fell from the drinks truck
into the spill bottles of grapefruit soda and whatnot on a sticky scale rating from everyone, please.
Everyone just being us because we're here.
What's the scale?
I think the stickiest.
Like, is the stickiest not like a movie theater floor that like someone has spilled soda and no one cleaned it up?
So it's just been baked into the floor of the, you know, and your shoe makes that sound as it sort of like peels off of the stickiness.
Yeah.
That's top tears.
sticky for me.
Sounds like a fruit roll up being
forward away from the last.
Movie theater floor soda
stickiness.
Top top.
Bottom are those like you
do you remember those like
quote unquote sticky
like hand things that you would get
as a kid that you could like throw
and it was just a sticks as something.
But as soon as it got like a fine layer of dust on it
stuck to nothing.
I might this might be
you might be too.
young for that reference. I need Van here.
Hey, walk me through this again?
There was like, it was like a, you know, like,
you get like sticky gummy,
uh, toy stuff as a kid, right?
Isaiah says you know what you're talking about.
It was like, it was like a sticky hand thing and it was on a long
sticky thing and you could just sort of like slingshot or throw it.
Yes, and you would stretch much like, like, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
Like the stretching powers.
Okay. Arjuna's with me too, right?
Yeah, yeah. I know what you're talking about.
That's the bottom of the sticky scale because the stickiness didn't last.
Yeah.
As soon.
I see.
It just touched one thing, it was then, like, not sticky anymore.
Okay.
I'm hanging with you.
I'm back.
Those were I did not like those.
Those had a weird smell, I thought.
Oh, absolutely bizarre.
So the non-sticky, sticky hands and the sticky movie theater floor.
Where are we with you?
I'm at, like, somewhere in the middle, which I would, I'll go with, like, ring pop, right?
So, like, it can be, it's, like, you're not necessarily at the beginning really thinking
about how sticky it is, you're just like, boy, this is delicious. And then by the end, you've got like
an infinity gauntlet of candy coating all over your hand. Is that what happens? I've never had a ring pop.
Does it just like, what? This is like goop all over your hand? Well, I guess it could be something
about the way I eat them. Maybe I might need to be like reflecting. Do you slobber your ring pop?
Like, I don't think so, but I don't know if that's like, maybe. That's like not a normal thing. I don't know.
I think because, like, you know, you've got the, it's just on top of your finger.
And you're just sort of like, yeah.
No, I've never had a, I've never had a ring pop.
I mean, I know, I know what a ring pop is.
I've just never had one.
What about a push pop?
I mean, I don't think the push pops, the ice cream experience is as sticky, but you can also get some, you can get some drip with a pushup.
I know, I know.
Ooh, what about, uh, what about to give like a universal experience that everyone's to be like,
oh, yes, I've experienced that.
Jolato on a hot day in like it here's like I lived in Italy for a little while when I was there
I went from like sorry I went from like American who doesn't know shit right to like I've lived here for a little while and like watching American tourists get the like piles of gelato on a cone and then try to walk around Florence as it just like like drips an avalanche of sticky and
down their arms.
I'm like, you amateurs,
you got to get the cup
and you got to go small
because you only have
a limited amount of time
with that gelato.
So I, unlike you,
I never lived in Italy.
But I did go for a week once
during my semester abroad.
And when I was in Florida,
I was very quickly identified
the triple scoop cone conundrum
and my solution was to get
three different orders
at slightly staggered periods of time.
That's a pro move,
but kind of,
Top three gelato per day.
A one scoop boating.
Yeah.
Best gelato flavor, Mallory and Rubin.
Oh, I couldn't possibly.
I mean, I could not possibly.
I just love them all.
I don't know.
Oh, God.
I think it depends on the mood.
It's like too specific to whether I want something like fruity and refreshing or like rich
and creamy.
Just depends on my mood.
And the best part about the three scoop day is that you can just run the gamut.
You don't need to worry about them complimenting each other.
Exactly.
What about you?
Favorite flavor?
Strachatella, I think.
That's probably, if you made me pick, that would be my one.
When they opened Grom in, when I lived in New York and they opened a Grom in the village,
I would get the Strachiazza there all the time.
It just, it's just fucking delicious.
I just have to say, though, this is not about gelato.
This is about ice cream.
We're here.
We're talking about frozen confections.
And Arjuna is on the Zoom with us.
And I will not miss the opportunity to say that Minship ice cream is delicious.
And Arjuna is wrong.
Oh my God.
it's honestly it's my favorite it's my favorite too and he thinks it's gross and the first time he told me this
i was like i don't know if we can move forward like wow like not for me oh it's oh no these are
many many zoom chats it's disgusting it's disgusting i can't do it i can't do i can't do men chip i respect
it i respect that you can both enjoy it just said it's gross and it's disgusting for me for me
it's disgusting are you against do it.
All mint chocolate combinations.
Yeah, I am.
Okay.
That's a wrong opinion, but that's okay.
I don't understand this.
But I will relate to you in this moment by saying, I am vehemently against all orange
chocolate combinations.
I think orange and chocolate is a disgusting combination.
And so though we are not forced to eat orange chip ice cream, let me tell you of the trauma
of being a child and thinking that you're getting a mint milano and then it's a disgusting
orange milano cookie, like orange and chocolate.
It's a no for me.
Wonderful.
You didn't like the orange chocolate candies, you know, that were shaped like an orange and you'd break them apart.
The whack, the waka, wack and orange.
I was a Christmas tradition in my.
Yes.
No, I mean, I love an interactive chocolate.
That sounds like, I would love to, like, I would love to be the one to break it.
I just wouldn't eat it because I thought.
Here's one of my takes.
Chocolate is delicious with anything.
Orange, mint, or otherwise.
Okay.
Isaiah, do you have any strong chocolate flavor opinions that you need to get out?
Nothing too crazy. I'm not like a mint chocolate fan, but I'm not, it's not gross. That's a bit strong for sure.
I just can't believe that like Arjuna wouldn't enjoy like an Andy's mint. An Andy's mint.
Refreshing. Delicious. Wonderful. It makes me feel sick. Makes me want to vomit.
Wow. Well, then that brings me.
What? Is it a taste aversion thing? Did you have like a bad experience as a kid? Did you eat too many as a kiddo?
No. I, I just remember eating them as a kid and thinking they were gross and it just hasn't, it has.
hasn't changed since then.
It's just been that way.
I mean, I feel compelled to change your mind, but this is how everyone who meets me
and finds out that I don't like hot fruit treats me because I don't eat, I don't eat pies
and people are upset about it about you.
Yeah.
Love a, love a fruit pie.
Love a copler.
Wonderful.
Not a buckle, not a cobbler.
Get it out of here.
All right.
If the ring reverse was a secret society, Peter asks, what would it?
It's corny secret society name B.
Oh, my goodness.
Great question.
Yeah.
Ooh.
That's getting us for a lot of naming creativity.
I really feel like this is like Van's Sweet Spot or also like Steve coming in with a
particularly corny pun.
But like we're not particularly gifted in that way.
Ring reverse secret society.
I would call us the magnums like the ice cream not like Tom Selleck or the condom size.
That would be my really jaunty.
I just think we make way too many dick jokes on the pod to be called the magnums.
We just can't.
No way.
Absolutely not.
Oh, man.
Maybe like, hmm, there's a lot we could do with rings.
There's a lot we could do with verse.
Verse has like a nice secret society kind of thing.
Oh, the verse?
Yeah.
Just call it the verse?
Yeah.
It's like if you're really in the know, you're part of the verse.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Does it have a little apostrophe in front of it?
Only on our tattoos.
Okay.
Well, great.
I really do feel like that fulfills the corny prompt.
We're getting tattoos with apostrophe verse.
I don't do it.
Terrible.
Terrible.
All right.
Again, if your name is Van Latham or Steve Holman or anyone else who's listening
was a better idea of what we should call the Rigger v.
secret society. Let us know on social or elsewhere. And, you know, right in the sky.
I don't care how you decided to communicate it to us. Anything else that we want to say about this
episode of Marvel? Are Judah's baffling feelings about mint chocolate? Like anything else we got,
no? I don't think so. It's just an absolute joy to discuss the show with you. So glad to do it at
last. All right. We're going to do what we do with the close of every episode, which is just
to remind you of the many, many shows we have coming for you because we love you and want to
talk to you about all things nerddom. So Mallory and I will be here tomorrow to talk to you about
Stranger Things, something I am staying up all night to watch. Mallory will be getting up at the
crack at dawn. Yeah. It'll be later tomorrow. But it will be tomorrow. We will be here.
We're not a hot take. We're not a hot take pod. But we will be serving you medium takes about
about Stranger Things. We'll also be back on Monday, the fourth, with.
with the second Stranger Things episode.
The Midnight Boys,
we'll be back on Wednesday,
talk about the boys and Miss Marvel
in conjunction together.
And then we'll be back, of course,
also talk about Miss Marvel.
And then, as I said,
our love and thunder time, baby.
So that is it for us this week.
Thank you to Mallory Rubin.
Just like a gem and a treasure.
And I love talking to you about everything.
You're my favorite.
Oh, same pal.
What a treat.
What a treat.
Thanks to Isaiah Blakely who does not have disturbing mint chocolate takes for his work on this episode.
And thanks even to Arjuna Rangipal for his tremendous work on this episode, even though he is a monster and should not be allowed near ice cream.
All right. We will see you tomorrow.
Right here.
Bye.
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