House of R - ‘The Book of Boba Fett’ Season Finale Deep Dive
Episode Date: February 12, 2022Mal and Joanna take one last ride on the rancor to break down the thrilling conclusion to the first season of "The Book of Boba Fett". They discuss the divisive season (04:21), the finale reunion we'v...e all been waiting for, and Boba's final battle stand (36:23). They also theorize about the future of Star Wars TV with Ben Lindbergh (1:49:34) and answer your questions with Jomi. Hosts: Mallory Rubin and Joanna Robinson Producer: Steve Ahlman Guest: Ben Lindbergh Social: Jomi Adeniran Additional Production: Arjuna Ramgopal Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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Oh, okay, little guy.
I'm happy to see you too.
I didn't know when I'd see you again.
It's okay.
Yeah, I missed you too, buddy.
But we're in a bit of a bind here right now.
Be careful. You keep your head down. You stay hidden until the fight's over.
Hey, that's the shirt. You got the shirt.
Welcome back into the ringerverse, your Nexus podcast feed for all things fandom.
I'm Joanna Robinson and joining me today, now that she's figured out how to transport a snoozing rancor from downtown MosESpa, it's Mallory Rubin.
I'm Valerie. How you doing?
Joe, that's the shirt.
You got the shirt.
How fancy I am.
Yeah, so we're here to talk about the book Boba Fett, the finale specifically, but also sort of the whole season.
Ben Lindberg will be here to do some forward-looking chat with us.
I am in the host chair this week because, you know, Mallory is just a little overwhelmed by seeing this reunion between Mando and Grogu.
So she needs to take a seat and let me drive the car for a little bit.
So let me get a few announcements out of the way.
Number one, programming reminders.
Monday, so soon.
It'll just be two days until you hear from us again.
Monday, it's a House of Midnight episode.
I'll be here.
Charles will be here.
Van will be here, and we'll be talking about all the goodies that are going to drop during the Super Bowl.
You know, we usually get some fun trailers, teasers, tidbits.
we will be there not to talk about the game because as you know, I know nothing about sports,
but about the accompanying entertainment that we will get there.
And then the other thing that we want to say, of course, before we dive into everything,
is your friendly neighborhood.
Spoiler warning.
Everything.
And I mean, everything that exists in the Star Wars canon and Legends is on the table.
It's a book, a comic book, a video game.
An animated series, a plush doll that we bought at Disneyland one time.
Anything. Anything and everything.
A Lego set.
It's all on the table.
So proceed with more caution than Luke effing Skywalker did when he threw a baby in an X-wing
and sent it off unattended.
I thought you were going to say to have to be with more caution than the Gomorians did when they neared the edge of that cliff.
That was actually my first, Joe.
That was my first draft, actually.
And then I decided to switch it to Luke because I thought it was expecting, actually.
I was going to talk about my poor dearly departed pig boys.
We'll get to them.
We'll get to my poor pig boys.
I just thought I would sort of wind you up with a little Luke Skywalker frustration first.
Okay.
So we're here to talk about Chapter 7 in the name of honor, directed by, oh, dear, Robert Rodriguez, written by John Favro.
And it is a one hour long episode, baby.
A nice chunky, chunky, rancor-sized episode.
Joe, you know an episode of television is long
if it's half the length of a house of R-pod.
We're laughing.
I don't think Steve is, but we're juggling.
All right.
So before we get into the specifics of the episode,
including the death of my pig boys.
And the confirmed death of your gal, Flipp.
This was a tough one for you, Joe.
Charce the flip. I lost so many friends this week.
We want to get a sort of our bigger picture thoughts on the season as a whole on the finale.
We have to talk about the elephant in the room, which is not the rancor, but Steve Allman's nemesis, Robert Rodriguez.
Listen, I want to be very clear.
And I said this before when we were giving a lot of credit to Bryce Dallas Howard for an episode we really loved.
I don't know how much credit or blame we can give any individual director.
on an episode of a Star Wars show.
It takes a village to make these episodes.
But what has been true is that the Robert Rodriguez directed episodes, which are one, three, and seven.
It's not been my favorite, your favorite, anyone listening's favorite, I think.
So he's getting like the brunt of the blame.
Mal, do you think that's fair?
How do you feel about it?
Boy, what a hot place to start.
What a spicy place to start.
We've got the spice that the Pikes are trading and the spice that you're kicking off the pot.
I kicked over a chest of spicy takes.
Joe, let me just say this.
It's great to be here with you.
Our first full season of a Star Wars show together.
I want to just say to you and the listeners, I'm a little under the weather today.
And if I'm a little sluggish or a little, if it's possible to be less coherent.
than usual.
Then that's why.
And I feel compelled to note that up front.
But, of course, had to be here with you to talk about the conclusion of the season of television.
I was eager to ask you that same question about Rodriguez's episode and his role in the show more broadly.
Because the point that you make is a good one.
Is it also fair to note that he's not merely a director on his three episodes, right?
he has a larger role as an EP on the show and a larger guiding hand in shaping it.
I think that, you know, in ways both, as you noted, good and bad, this has surfaced as kind of
a through line of our discussion this season and surely will in future seasons of Star Wars TV.
It's a little bit hard to parse exactly who is responsible for what.
I think that the way you already said it is what I would say, too.
His episodes were not my favorite.
I think that there are a lot of different factors that are worth assessing when we talk about.
not only the finale, but the season as a whole,
because I think that in many ways,
the finale was like a microcosm of the season as a whole,
which is to say that it was a mixed bag, right?
It was uneven.
It was a little bit disjointed.
The highs, you know, the Midnight Boys use the word roller coaster,
and that's exactly how I feel about it too.
I think that the highs that the finale reached were incredibly high,
and I loved.
And when the roller coaster goes down the track,
it's a little bit jarring and sometimes a little bit confounding.
And I think that that was true inside of the finale
and for me true across the season.
Rewatching the season was an interesting experience
because I think that there were
were questions that I had after the finale
that, and this is, we talk about the old time,
this is often the case, right?
That bugged me a little bit less
after rewatching the finale
and after rewatching the season.
But I also don't think you should have
to rewatch a season of television
for that to be true,
particularly when one of those questions
is so firmly
anchored inside of the titular character,
which is like something we're going to talk about a lot today.
Do we really understand the evolution of Boba's motivations,
how he got to where he is, and why?
What he thinks about that, how he is kind of wrestling with the questions that are on his mind,
when a character like Cadbane voices aloud in the finale of the show,
what's your angle?
It's hard not to think, hey, he's voicing that on behalf of all of us.
And I think that if the characters are then really interrogating that,
it can actually be quite compelling.
And if they aren't,
then it can take you out of the experience a little bit.
So that's kind of my sweeping answer to your question.
I can highlight some of the things I loved about the finale
and some that I liked a little bit less is another quick teaser.
But what's your thought on that dynamic
among the creative team and how this all shook out?
I mean, I think I wouldn't call it.
I mean, I think, okay, so a couple of things worth remembering
is that, like, look at someone's a really secretive organization
and sometimes in really positive ways
because it results in a bunch of surprises for us.
But it can be hard to figure out
who made what decision when.
If you're a fan of the film Rogue One,
you should know that the credit director on that film,
that film was massively reshot.
So if you give all the credit to the credit director,
you're missing out on a major creative force behind that film.
And so these are the questions that we have around Lucasfilm.
A roller coaster is not the word that I would use for this because I have, I think usually on a roller coaster I have fun the entire time up and down.
There's the anticipation and the release and all that sort of stuff like that.
And that was not my experience with the finale.
But like you, I did have a much better time the second time around and was able to focus on the things that I enjoyed and was less wound up about the things that I didn't.
but it goes back to, I think, some of the conversations you and I had separately about the end of Game of Thrones.
You know, a podcast you and I spent years talking about.
And that's a show that I think went through a major evolution of what kind of show it was over the seasons from where it started when you and I started covering it to the end.
And something that you and I both talked about a lot in our respective podcast is the idea of sort of spectacle versus substance.
And I think if like, you know, I think the best version of anything has some of both, right?
My preference is more, if I can only have one, I would take substance, you know, and there are some people who, if they could only take one, they would take spectacle.
That's what they love to see in their entertainment.
And so if you're a spectacle person, this episode, which is essentially like the live action version of, I mean, except it's done with pixels, so it's not live action, but like, you know, the quote unquote live action version of.
those guys, those, like, now 40, 50-year-old men that we've been talking about who
smashed their Kenner Star Wars toys together in the backyard when they were kids, you know
what I mean? Like, wouldn't it be cool to see a rancor fight like a droid? And you're like,
I mean, if you love Pacific Rim or whatever, like, yes, that's really cool. And it looked
very cool. But when we think about the story, and in there is a story I really care about,
which is Mando and Groku. So that's in there, too.
Did I want it to go down like this?
Like, is this how I wanted the reunion to go?
No, not on the back of a speeder when, when, like, Amy Sedaris' character literally says, like, save your, you know, see, yeah, save your tender moment.
I'm like, no, I want to, I want to bask in the tender moment.
Like, that's, that's the show that I want to watch.
That's Manilori and I want.
For people who love the finale, they want to, maybe they want to watch a rancor fight a droid.
And I think it's cool, but it's not, for me, it's not ideal Star Wars.
What do you think about that?
Okay.
There is a lot there to parse.
This is going to be a fascinating chat today.
I'm really excited about this one.
So, Joe, you know this about me.
I've got a Grogu and a BBA and an Obi-1 behind me.
I've got a mule near behind me.
I'm building another Star Wars Lego set right now.
I love Star Wars toys.
I think that's great.
I was delighted to see some of those toyetic,
hey, we know you're going to buy our birch.
elements surface of the finale. It's like, hey, I will definitively have that in one ship
with sweet little Grogu pressing his face against his bubble, holding the razor crest
bubble in his hand, asking dad to go faster. I will have that in my home. Like, I can tell you
that definitively now. If that is for sale somewhere, I will have it in my home, right? But of course,
I agree with you. And I think that that's like, that's, that's, that's, that's, that's, that's,
the thing that's a little bit hard to shake is that those elements not only shouldn't be mutually
exclusive and the best version of this thing, they will ultimately enhance each other. And we don't have
to look far inside of finalities in Star Wars or inside of battle heavy episodes in Star Wars TV to find
examples of where that's worked really well. Like I think we could just cite the two Mandalorian season
finale, which were very battle-heavy.
And, you know, contrast, the very sincere thrill you felt when IG-11 and Grogu zipped in to town
to how you felt when the mods were vespiriding in.
And it's like, this is just not going to go.
Well, what is the plan here exactly?
And some of that is about the pace and flow, the choreography.
of the fight. I have some
COVID-centric questions
that I'm curious to ask you about from your
TV expertise perspective because one of the things that I
found a little bit
a little bit
like on mooring watching the episode
was just the volume, like the
scale of it. There were so few people
which would have stood out anyway
but was really kind of heightened
because of the number
of times that the characters kept saying
we have no chance without reinforcements.
We need these reinforcements. We need these
reinforcements. And then the garrison arise, it's 10 people. So is there a chance? There's no way
going to make this without some dusty moisture farmers from Freetown on the back of one truck.
Yeah, exactly. So stuff like that was just sort of strange and I think like hampered the flow of the
episode. But I also think there are examples of Robert Rodriguez to get back to him directed episodes
of Star Wars TV that are battle-centric that are electric. Like the tragedy, his episode of
Mandalorian season two is a battle heavy episode that I loved. And so I think that connects to
what you're saying about this, just like a brew of factors. And it gets back to that larger
question that people have been asking us about and discussing all season long. Do we think that the
season was always supposed to go this way? You know, we talked when we potted about chapters five and
six about how much we loved them. And, you know, one of the things that I said last week and believed
fervently and still do,
is that I would not have traded those episodes
for more boba-centric episodes.
I think, if anything,
the finale just reinforced that.
But I also think it's true
that returning to a boba-centric episode
when the last time we really spent with him
with his arc was at the end of chapter four
when he is making a very clearly ill-fated pitch
to the three families,
what ends up happening is that we end up in a finale
where some of it works wonderfully.
I could not possible, let me just say this,
I could not possibly have loved the Grogu Dins stuff more.
We'll talk about it more as we go.
Do I wish it had happened elsewhere?
I'm eager to discuss that with you more,
but I think that the parts of this that featured Grogu,
I just adored and I'm such a sucker for it.
I don't know if that'll ever change.
It's just like, just a wonder to behold
every time he's on our screen.
I really liked most of the two CAD-Boba showdowns.
I have a couple notes, including the fact that I don't think Boba should have been able to kill Cadbane
and also don't think CatBain is necessarily dead. We'll get there. I loved the major domo's usage
of this episode. I mean, just hysterical. I loved Pelly. It was great to see BD. The rancor is like
emblematic of both buckets of what worked and what didn't. Fun to see. Really fun to see.
Great to see that payoff. Chekhov's rancor. There he is, right? Calling back to Boba's
holiday special ride, calling back to even something like him mounting the sand creature at the end
of chapter one, like similar camera angles even with like the turn of the head and him being present
mounted on top. But the character choices that got us there, those moments of bonding that
shared arc and evolution, we don't get to see the training. We, chapter three ends with we begin
today. That scene ends with we begin today. We don't see any of that. Not even a not even a montage.
We get the rancor shaking the floor in chapter four, right, during the family recruits.
A claw. A mirror claw. We don't get to see the training. I had so many questions. The battle itself
in the episode is the thing that just didn't work as much for me. The character choices,
because it's not just the choreography and, like, and filming and directing aspect of it, the character choices that lead to how the battle unfurls were utterly confounding to me.
And then, you know, just some, some questions about Bobo's overall arc. I think that in terms of the lack
of big reveals in this finale,
not getting Kira,
not getting a lot of the stuff
that we speculated.
I'll just say,
like, I'm not personally in a,
oh, no, like we Ralph Bonert
our self-place with it.
I'm fine with that.
I think that the choosing
to actually establish
the Pikes is the big bads.
As we talked about at the very,
you know, beginning of the season,
I actually like the idea
of trying to establish
more character sets
and villains fully inside of the universe.
The question,
and this will be the through line today,
is was it done effectively
and satisfying,
enough for it to fully land, and particularly on the heels of the highs of chapters five and six.
So some stuff I loved.
There's a lot for me to respond to there.
Let me zoom back to the beginning where you were asking about COVID questions, right?
So what's definitely true of all TV being filmed in COVID is that sacrifices have to be made
in terms of like number of people that can be present in a scene or the way that those things are shot.
And there's a lot of creative ways to get around that.
Like, for example, I really enjoyed watching the screeners for Ted Lasso because, like, all the crowd stuff is done, like, on CG.
So when you watch a Ted Lasso screener with none of the digital effects done, you're just, it's just an empty stadium.
They're just, like, running around, you know what I mean?
And it's like, and they digitally put that in in a way that, like, you can't see when you're watching the episode, but it's definitely just a funny thing to think about.
So, like, you know, COVID has been taking a huge toll on these crowds scenes.
But there are creative ways to write around it, and I would point to the end of Mandalorian season two, which was also filmed during COVID, as an example, because that's actually a very low body count climactic finale.
You got a bunch of, you know, troopers that they're fighting.
But in terms of...
Helps to be in a ship instead of out in the streets of most...
That's what I guess.
It's a siege of a ship, so it's a very contained, like, tense interaction.
and there's confined spaces and one-on-one battles, stuff like that.
When you decide to make in COVID,
when you decide to make your battle episode on a, you know,
not just one street of Mosaspa,
but you're going to send your troops to various corners of Mosaspa.
I have some notes on the battle strategy.
I mean, it feels like there's only 50 people in the entire town
is what this all feels like, you know what I mean?
And they're like, the mods are like,
we're going to patrol this entire dis...
Or like, let's take, you know, the Midnight Boys guest, Tupac, as an example,
he alone is going to patrol this whole section.
And then he's taking now, but there's, like, the numbers game.
Just makes no sense to me at all in any of this.
And so I just feel like in the writing of it, this isn't just a directing issue.
This is a conception issue.
When you're like, all right, we want to do this big finale where Boba makes a stand.
Okay, make it like a saloon fight on.
almost. Make it like, you know, people are coming in through the windows or something like that.
Like, make it a contained thing. So we're not feeling that empty space so much in the battle of it all.
And that sounds nitpicky, but it ends up giving the whole thing a really shambly loose feeling.
You know what I mean? When you set up your episode that way. I just, I think if you're, if you're dealing with the logistics of COVID, you have to deal with them very creatively.
And, you know, that's, yeah, I don't. I don't.
think it's nitpicky at all in this context because I think the episode sort of welcomes us to
think about that because there's so much time spent talking about where they should be and why
and talking about the people that they're trying to protect, right? So you kind of can't forget
that variable. Like it's actually drawn into the core plot. And I don't know if we want to hit
that aspect of it here or maybe maybe we can circle back to the, you know, true like thinking face
emoji response to why Boba would listen to the mods, imploring him to stay in the sanctuary
instead of holding up in his palace, like why he would be that impressionable, why they would
welcome the battle into the very streets that they're saying they're eager to protect, but because
that is actually like text, right, the discussions about where they are, who's around them, who
they're trying to protect, why, what it means to have the battle in a certain location.
Of course we should be thinking about that.
it would be strange not to, I think.
The other element of that is that when you have these very, like, basically small
meleys spread out over the city, it reveals a narrative flaw in the season, which is that
if I cared about the mods a lot more, I mean, I care about my poor Gimorians a lot,
and I care about Black Cresantin mostly because of the way the Midnight Boys have built him up.
But we haven't spent that much time with it.
him, right? The mods, barely any time with them. Incredible, incredible Midnight Boys interview
with Carrie Jones, by the way. If anybody hasn't listened to that, you got to check it out.
It is wonderful this Wednesday's episodes. Great episode. But the most baffling example of this
is a moment where a girl, a woman from Freetown, who we have spent no time with.
Joe. Joe. I know. It sounds like you're saying my name, but that's the character's name. And you
wouldn't know it because he spent no time with her. So she and. She and.
And Drash, you know, the head mod woman do this dramatic, you know, sniper stand thing.
We've been given no opportunity to care about these characters.
So why do I care that these two women are in this big dramatic situation?
If you had spent more time, if I had spent any time with them, meaningful time with them in the season, that's why you have to narratively, you know, like in something like, you know, the reason Thrones is off.
my mind is because Van brought up the Battle of Bastards in Wednesday's episode. But like, you know,
the reason that the best of Thrones battle stuff works is because of your emotional investment in the
characters. And so what really works in this episode is when Peli-Moto speeds in the town with
Grogo and all of a sudden you're terrified because Grogu's in the heat of battle and you're like,
you're so scared. And in Grogo and his dad, like Grogo was watching his dad in danger and Grogo's saving
his dad. Like all of that. Oh my God. All of that.
So good.
But then they, you know, but then they do something baffling, like send a character I am actually kind of emotionally invested in.
Fennexhand away for 20 minutes of the episode.
She's not even in the battle at all.
She had to go to another town to assassinate some people.
So she's just gone.
And instead I'm stuck with some freetowners who I don't even really know.
And so it's just I, that's to me when spectacle starts to feel empty when you haven't done the character work to get me emotionally invested.
We're going to dive into some of those particular battle deployment questions as we go today.
But I'm curious to know just in a big picture sense, how are you feeling about the season as a whole now that it's over?
And in general, but particularly the question that we talked about the last couple weeks, did it make sense to, as much as we loved them, did it make sense to so fully shift the focus of the book?
of Boba Fat to Grogu and Dinn and Luke and Asoka and other characters.
I was really, I'll just keep repeating that those are two of my favorite hours.
I'll start with TV ever, so I'm delighted that we got them and would not trade them for more of
the episodes that we got before or after.
But I do think it's worth talking about just because the flow of the season is so unique.
And I was struck like in the closing credits of the finale when the theme song changes
instead of, to the point where we're actually hearing the words,
Boba, Boba, Boba, Fett, right?
The character name, and I was like, do,
because we need to remember
who the show is supposed to be about
at the very end?
I feel like I feel like I'm being a little harsher
than I actually feel about it.
Like, I actually liked the season.
And I thought the finale was okay.
And I liked the season of TV.
Like, I had fun rewatching it.
I will certainly come back to it in the end.
I think I'm higher on it.
Higher on it than you, certainly.
It's not, like, it's not close in my mind
to Mando's seasons.
one or two, not close. But the parts of it that worked, I thought worked so well that I will be
eager to return to them. And the parts that didn't work as well, I'm almost like viewing
anthropologically. Like I'm eager to like keep revisiting them and processing them and thinking about
them and particularly eager to see, this is like a show where I will consider my assessment
of it open, right? And I will be thinking about it as we get future installments of this show potentially
and other shows to come. Because I think that that will inform.
both in terms of the character arcs,
but also more broadly,
the way that these,
the shared universe
inside of the Mandalorian timeline functions,
do other shows work this way
in terms of structure?
Is this really like a kind of isolated outlier?
That will, I think, ultimately,
like, determine where I land on this.
And again, like mixed bag is I think the summation.
The way will always be, probably,
is that you will love something more than I do,
and that's just the nature, our natures.
And I love that actually about us.
But what I think is true
is that the, I do, I do.
Like, why would you want two people feel the exact same way about something?
That being said, like, I think that, okay, I'm going to drop a phrase that people who are close to me in my life hear me say on a regular basis.
I was watching a TikTok the other day.
And someone was saying, someone was talking about.
Because you keep sending them to me and I love it.
Someone was saying, you know, Peter Pascal was, was, you know, is Peter Pascal tired because he's, you know, is Peter Pascal tired because he's.
He's carrying this entire season on his back.
And I'm like, well, that's not fair for a couple reasons.
And I'll shout out to specific reasons.
Pater does such a good job with the vocalization of this role.
But the physical Mando performance is Brendan Wayne and Lateef Crowder,
who barely get any acknowledgement for all the incredible physical work that they do to embody this character.
And I want to shout out another, you know, performer, which is Doreen Kingy, who did the physical
work for Cadbane.
And like the voice is incredible, but like the posturing and the pacing and all that sort.
Like that, those silent physical performances are a huge part of what makes this compelling.
But, you know, it's, it's unfair and our job to Monday morning quarterback to like finale
quarterback a season of television.
But if it was the plan all along, and I'm not convinced it was.
was. But if it was a plan all along to have Mandu and Grogu and their reunion in this end of this season,
wouldn't it have made so much more sense to balance that cocktail by having bits of Mandu and
Grogu throughout the season separate. Mando, you cut to, you know, cut to Mando doing, you know,
like, well, we'll spend time with Boban Tatoo. That's fine. But cut to Mando doing something and
we see that he's lonely and sad and maybe a little angry.
And cut to Grogu training, we see that he's lonely and sad and Mrs.
Didn't.
Like, show us the absence.
Show us that separation.
And so then it won't feel like all of a sudden we're watching two episodes of a different show
entirely when they jammin at the end here.
And so if they had sort of shaking the cocktail up that way throughout the season,
then that feels like an assured, confident season of television.
Yes, we're going to give you Boba and his journey in Tatouin because this is interesting to us.
But also, we are telling you as John Favre of DeFaloney that when we give you a show that's in the Mandoverse, Mando and Grogu are going to be there too.
And that's how these equations are going to be balanced going forward.
I'm never going to be mad about that because any second I get to spend with Grogu is a precious moment.
to me. But that's why when you look back at this season, despite its highs, it doesn't feel like a good
coherent season of television. That's what I would say. I am reticent to agree only for one reason.
And I agree in all other respects. And the one reason is simply, and this is just pure stubbornness on
my part, I don't want to dilute. I don't want to dilute the quality as we shake that cocktail and
move the ingredients around of chapters five and six.
which are so special to me,
but I agree completely
that that sort of structural retooling
would have immensely helped,
not only the other episodes,
but the flow of the season overall.
You're definitely right.
And if I were mature enough to,
this is C-8, 5 and 6 dip in quality
slightly to account for that recalibration,
it would help immensely.
I think, again, like, I rewatched the whole season
and I was really struck by how jarring it was
to go from four to then seven in terms of boba.
And then the theoretical nominal central thrust of this season of TV.
And some of that is expectation setting.
Some of it is structure and intent.
Like a lot of what we invested in this,
this, of course, is something that we agree about,
I think, and we'll talk about more today.
Like, we were really invested in super high on early in this season.
in this decision, this seeming desire to flesh out elements of Tatooine inside of the Star Wars canon,
the Tuskins, these intriguing mentions of the oceans that used to cover the planet,
all of these nods not only to the lore and the history of a place, but to the people who have populated it
and given it its sense of self,
and to get to the finale
and have our worst fear in that respect confirmed,
which is that the Tuskins were in fact not coming back
and were in fact not only initially
massacred to borrow the show's own phrasing,
but then to have that massacre resurface in the finale once again
to attempt to unmoor and then motivate,
the primary character is like just a huge bummer
because part of what should have been,
and I like the word that you use, like confidence,
part of what should have been
part of that really confident storytelling choice
to set something in a place
that has been so central to Star Wars for so long,
but intentionally focus on aspects
other than the ones we've seen before.
It's not a Skywalker story.
It's about all the other parts of Tatooine
that you didn't get to spend time understanding before.
And there are some thematic payoffs
with, you know,
Boba and his gaffy stick and the showdown with Cadbean, but they're undercut, I think, right?
Because the, and, you know, we'll talk about that scene, I think, in more detail later.
But, like, they're undercut because it feels like that was ultimately the purpose of those choices
in the first place.
Wait, I have one more quick big picture question.
I'm sorry.
I'm so undisciplined.
My God.
If I made a season of television, it would be a mess.
No, it would be, it would just be grogrew, like, babbling and, like, playing with
ball-shaped items, and you just be like, yeah.
That sounds like an Oscar winner, I think.
I'm really curious to know if you think that this,
and I don't necessarily mean everything we actually got here.
I mean more returning to Boba Fett as a character
and featuring him in a story should have been a movie
instead of a season of TV.
Where do you land after seeing this?
I don't think that would have been a great movie,
is what I think.
Not as this unfolds.
It's just bizarre to.
me, like, you know, as you and I were going through and filling out our notes and, and, and, and
tallying up all the myriad of references that are in this episode to the Godfather, to a bunch of
other things, but a lot of Godfather in this episode.
And my offer is this.
Nothing.
You and I talked a lot about the Godfather at the beginning of the season, too.
And, and, um, it's bizarre to me that they have all these references in here without giving
us an actual crime story.
You know what I mean?
they just throw these crime story references in here,
but we're not watching
Boba Crime Lord really at all, you know?
And so it's just...
That's in part because of what you just outlined
about the structure of the show,
but it's in part because Boba himself
doesn't know if he wants that.
That's like the central thing
that I can't shake, right?
And we'll, you know,
the whole like spice of it all
on the place inside of this episode
is really interesting to parse
in terms of like,
can we really properly track his evolution?
a character who opens the show in Chapter 1 by saying out loud,
I'm a crime, I'm a cruel the crime lord, gets to the end,
is I just want to help these people.
And those are not the same thing.
And I don't know if he totally understands that, right?
Yeah.
You know, the question of, do I want a movie of Boba Fett?
I mean, do you want a movie of Boba Fett?
No, I'm ultimately glad that this was a television show.
That's part of why I wanted to ask,
because I think that's been a popular talking point.
And I understand why.
I think that the fact that it feels disjointed,
you know, leads to some deduction
that a more streamlined version
maybe would avoid some of those problems,
how exactly do all of these elements conduct?
I think, again, I'm, like, excited.
Even though the show was not an A plus,
I am still really excited about building out the stories
in the Mando timeline.
Like, I cannot wait for Mando season three.
I cannot wait for Soka.
And I'm curious to see how Boba and Fennick
and the characters inside of this show
are deployed again.
in the future, either in another season of this show or in other stories.
Don't say another season of this show.
I just don't think it's earned that at all.
Do you know what I mean?
But putting them in other things, for sure.
I want to see Fenwick again.
I want to see Boba again.
I don't ever want to see those mod kids again, ever in my life.
I want to spend all the rest of my days looking at Cobb Van.
Why did he have a shirt on in the back of the tank?
It was a turtle neck too.
Why couldn't he have been in the same little pair of underwear that everyone
else is in. I really, I was obviously immensely relieved to see that he was in there,
to see him in the tank, to see him with the modifier, delighted to know that we'll be getting
mod, mod van in the future thrilling. But come on. Come on. Does he need to be fully kidded out
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Looking for a job? You're late.
I've already got a job.
I'm here to negotiate on behalf of the Pike Syndicate.
I don't negotiate with gutless murderers.
If that's not the quack to call in the stiffling slimy.
Clear out.
All right, so let's talk about the episode.
Okay.
Take us through it.
Boba and his pals made the sanctuary.
As you already said, they make this sort of baffling decision to have a massive war in the town that they are trying to protect.
this is a mod-led decision.
Then we get to, this is where I want to talk
with bigger pictures, we get to that first big reveal.
You already talked about this.
You talked about the Tuscans
and how it feels dissatisfying that they were in the end.
I don't know, Fridge does the word we want to use,
but essentially there to just motivate.
But I think my main objection
beyond that premise is it also just feels inert.
There are a series of things that happen this episode
that just feel like,
ah, yes, it's exactly as we predicted
I didn't expect, I mean, like, you know, cure is not here.
Okay, fine.
But like, you know, oh, yes, it was the Pikes who framed the Nictos and Cadbane tries to use it to get a rise at a boba.
And then he doesn't really.
And that's the payoff of this long plot.
Like, that's, that's what it was all for.
It was for this.
I mean, that's, that's, that's the issue for me.
Anything else you want to say about that, about like how the tough can, how it all,
went down with the Tuscan review.
I'll share some more thoughts, I think, on the gaffy stick part when we get to the Boba Cad Bain
Showdown later.
I actually just want to once more talk about the actual battle plan if you'll indulge me
for a minute before we just, I can't get over this.
Joanna, I can't get over it.
Help me get over this.
Not only that, but the way was done because, um,
it was done with a Fennex-Shand voiceover,
and she's trying to give us like the Danny Ocean,
here's all of our roles in the casino for the heist sort of voiceover, right?
But without the like fun,
and it's just sort of like the mods will be here,
and B.K. will be here, and the Gimorians will be here.
We're sending two people here, one person here,
five people here,
and definitely the people who grudgingly promised us
under threat of rancor that they wouldn't turn of us,
we'll definitely not turn on us,
and it will be fine.
Exactly.
So, and like,
I'm glad you mentioned Fennick,
because while we are, you know,
certainly rooting for Bobo,
we've been,
we've dunked on our guy a few times this season.
You know, we've questioned some of his decision-making,
as have the other characters in the show with him constantly.
Are you sure that's the right call?
Phenic has some bad battle planning happening in this episode, too.
It's on both of them.
the decisions that they make are not sound.
When Boba opens and they're holdup in the sanctuary
and there's no mention at all of Garza Fwip
or anything that happened.
And it's like, okay, so that was also,
and I really hope that we'll see Garcifup again.
I think that we could see her potentially in Obi-Wan
or another show earlier in the timeline.
But it's another thing where that was merely a plot mechanic
to show that Boba was vulnerable.
because he boasts about being a protector.
You're under my protection, and then he isn't.
And so he's like standing in the charred embodiment of his failure, right?
Of his inadequacy, which, again, is sort of like thematically potent and compelling, actually,
except that the characters aren't really thinking about it that way.
And then later in the, yeah, later in the episode, when the families betray him and Dindjarn says,
it was a smart move.
And Bob was like, yep.
that I'm like, in what universe then did you think they were not going to do that to you?
Very, very tough.
Like, he opens by saying even if we win, there might not be anything left of this city.
And so, like, right away, sort of like, well, why is this the move that you're making?
Why is this the decision that you're making?
And I kind of couldn't shake that all episodes.
So when the mods convince him, D rash says, if you want to abandon Mos Aspen to Hide in your fortress,
go ahead.
we're staying. The people who live here need our protection will stay. But the result of that
decision is putting those people at risk. This destruction and wreckage all across the streets
that they're claiming to care about. Go to the palace. Whole up. First of all, high ground,
right? Second of all, the pikes know where they are. Now, we have access to information that the characters
in the sanctuary don't because we follow.
had into the Pike headquarters in Mosisley and hear that whole exchange with the mayor,
that fucking mayor, ma'am. The confluence, though, of all of these variables where it's like,
why are you letting the kids talk you into staying there? One, two, everything we talked about about
production limitations aside, why do they actually think that enough people from Freetown are
coming to make a difference? That was, that's actually weird. They say they're doomed without
those reinforcements. Why do they think that those backroom people,
can make more of a difference than either of the following, the rancor, who was deployed late
in the episode for dramatic effect, which again, I found dramatically compelling. I concede,
but way too late, no reason Boba should have waited that long, doesn't prepare the people
he's in the battle with for that eventuality. So they all end up firing on their own teammate,
railing the rancor. What the fuck is that? Insane. How about the ships?
Or guy Boba Fett wrongly murdered from above.
We've been talking about this all week.
Leges!
When he runs back to the palace for reinforcement,
why does he pick the murder kitten and not the ship that he can just hover safely above
not cause any property damage?
Din and Boba had a conversation about the ship.
Now, it's not exactly like, hey, let's go get this and use it as a weapon.
And Mando's like, we could escape, right?
And that's not what Boba wants to do
because, again, they're his people.
But wouldn't that be a moment to think,
oh, but I could, I might come in handy here.
Also, Dinn has a ship.
Now, people are moving between most Espo and most Isley
so freely in this episode that I consider no retort
that falls into, yeah, but Thing X is over here
so valid.
Like, none.
Oh, yeah.
Fenwick gives a real Gendry run over to Moss Isley.
Right. But she gets there much slower than characters get from most icely to most ESPA.
Like, Bain gets there much faster than in the other direction. So that's a little bit strange too.
And then, like, the, you know, the annihilator droids that come into play in battle are like really, really cool.
But it's this whole sequence where, again, it's sort of like you're destroying the very place that you just made a decision to swear to protect.
And you already mentioned the three-family turn,
but it's like dividing their numbers.
You know what it reminded me of?
It made me think of The Sinister Six
and how this is something that's
that Marvel comic fans,
Spider-Man comic fans love to talk about, right?
The Sinister Six forge as an alliance
because they recognize that they cannot beat Spider-Man on their own.
And then the first thing that they do is say,
well, let's go battle him one-on-one.
Let's take turns.
Let's line up instead of doing it.
as a team.
Ninja
If you're that worried
about your numbers,
don't spread out
across the entire city.
Don't put
like chrysan't
around the
trans oceans when they're
sworn rivals.
Here's my
cat literally arrives
and they say,
I thought nobody could
sneak up on us.
It's like a funny moment,
but they're dunking on themselves.
He doesn't,
he doesn't like slink in.
He just walks down a street.
I love it.
What are you talking about?
No, the,
let me offer.
up an alternative battle plan. Stay inside of the highly reinforced palace and fly your ship above it.
And when the pikes come for you, which they will, because they are as determined to eliminate
you as you are them, shoot them from above and have no harm befall you or the city?
Just a thought. Almost. No? But I'll yes and that and say, do all that. And send Fannickshan
right away to just murder everyone. I mean, something she should have done in episode two, honestly.
she does it in like five seconds war over you know can i give me my theory on this tell me if you think
this is way off base i don't even mean this as a critique genuinely this is just something that i found
myself thinking about as i was watching it felt like in a few different moments in the episode
fenwick being sent off to kind of a solo side plot one example mando taking all
of this fire from the pikes and falling to the ground and just seeming a little bit diminished.
Oh, yeah, yeah.
I like this theory.
Yeah, that's a good theory.
Taking down Cadbane, et cetera, et cetera, et cetera.
It just felt like Boba coming out on the raincore, even though it didn't make sense in terms of the order, like the sequencing.
Yeah.
It felt like they needed to, this is something the Midnight Boys have been talking about all season,
make Boba seem really cool again in the finale, like really seem like a badass.
and that part of the way to do that
was to, like, remove
some of the adjacencies
that make other characters look cooler than him.
Right, because the problem
right at the beginning of the season of television
is that Boba and Fenwick are surrounded in the streets
and, like, Fenwick does some murder parkour
and looks really great,
and Boba just looks like a chump, right?
Whereas in this episode, I will say,
when Mando and Boba deployed,
their jet packs at the same time and then start using their arm. That looks great. My guy is firing off
knee rockets like a fucking baller. It's awesome. A beautiful like pose. He struck a pose. It was just,
it was incredible. Also like Mando can't ride the rank work, which is important not only because it gives
that contrast with Bobo, but because it actually did feel in line with existing canon where like Mando
in his own show is hesitant to ride the blurg. And Quil is like, come on, you should be able to do this.
Think of the Mythesore history. And it sets up how fulfilling that will be in the future and also the
bonding between the rancor and boba.
Like, Mando shouldn't have been able to do that and he wasn't.
But still, it's like one more kind of enhancing element, I think.
I think you make a good point.
But I, but that's terrible storytelling.
We need to remove the female lead of the show for 20 minutes of the episode because she
makes our male lead look like a chump.
Like, that's terrible storytelling.
You know what I mean?
But here we are.
Some, some true, uh, true viciousness from Phenick when she got to the Pike headquarters.
That was like actually shocking.
Let's talk about something that happens really early,
which is that we get a shot of an X-wing with...
Hell yeah.
And you could see R2.
So I was like, oh, this is it.
Okay, Grugu's coming back.
I didn't know if Luke was with him,
but I was like, Grogu's coming back.
Like, here he is.
It's come.
Yep.
I gasped.
When it was revealed...
Yes.
That Luke...
After Grogu pointed to the mythrill
and Luke in a scene that we didn't get to see,
I guess,
angrily tossed Groko into an ex-week.
He was like, fine.
Go back to your dad and sent him without adult supervision.
How did you feel?
How'd you feel?
You can't do that, Mal.
It just depends on the moment whether or not you call this thing a baby or say that he's 50.
How did I feel?
What a question.
How did I feel?
Joanna, when I saw the ex-
swing.
I gasped aloud.
I genuinely could not believe.
Because you know immediately, you know what it means.
Grogo has made his choice.
Before we even realize that Luke's not there,
Grogo was made his choice.
He has returned.
We are going to see the reunion in this episode.
I was shocked.
Because I thought for sure,
I've been shocked every time we've gotten something
that I thought for sure we would see in Mando.
You know, we talked about this with Charles
on the mailbag at the top of the week.
And then we were all in agreement.
Like that will definitively happen.
in the Mandalorian season three.
And it didn't.
It happened here.
So I was processing my absolute, like, euphoric delight, knowing I was going to get
Grogo in this episode and get to spend time with him.
And I think that he dramatically heightened my enjoyment of the episode.
So I'm really glad he was here.
I could not possibly have loved, as always, the Pelly element of this more, like the heart
and the humor that she brings in those sequences we get the thing.
First of all, she thinks that the authorities have found her.
right for not having like her certification set and she's got you know asking her droids to cover everything up
we get to see bd again just a delight and then the way that we see first r2 as you noted and then
grogo's head his little his little keppi rising and then later when she like climbs up the x-wing and
looks down at him and he's just this little this little like a hirschy kiss sitting in the scene of the x-wing
And she calls him bright eyes.
And we get that like meadow wink to the audience with her just iconic line about his name.
Grogu, whoa, that's a terrible name.
Sorry about that, pal.
No way am I calling you that.
And then sees him in the best car and says something shiny.
Look at you all fancy.
Like she feeds him.
I wish more people would feed him.
He's always hungry.
He's a growing 50 year old baby boy.
Couldn't have loved any of it more.
Did I judge Luke?
Which was your actual question.
Yeah.
Nope, nope.
Next time I'm not feeling well.
I'm just going to call you and say, Mal, can you describe a grogoose scene to me?
Literally anyone of your choosing.
It's giving me, like, or maybe I'll be like, do frog eggs for me this week.
Oh, my God.
It's just giving me the energy that I didn't know I could tap into today.
I just love him so much.
I just love him so much.
I had a couple, I had some Luke dissonance in this moment.
I had a couple different thoughts.
on the one hand, I was embarrassed for him and disappointed in him because he's a petty, petty baby.
And he was so hurt by Grogo's decision that he cast him off.
Now, maybe that's not what happened.
Maybe one day we'll be treated to a scene where we see that they had a very mature exchange
and a feast of dungworms and eggs and all of Grogu's other favorites.
And they really talked through what this choice would mean for Grogo's future, what other avenues he would have.
have to continue his training in the future.
Or,
or Luke said,
all right, I have shit to do.
R2.
Can you take care of it?
But here's the thing that you know about me.
You knew that, one,
I wasn't going to answer your question for seven minutes
because I was just going to talk about Grogo,
and that happened.
Two, you know that I love R2.
And I trust him.
And so I feel like Grogu was not cast aside
into danger and despair.
He was put with R2.
He was entrusted into R2's care.
I trust R2 with my life.
I trust R2 more than I trust Luke.
I mean, that's a fair assessment, but he didn't even have his seatbelt on, Mallory.
The baby did not even have a seatbelt on in that X-wing.
I have a lot of notes.
Maybe he took it off.
He crawled out of his little Razor-Crest seat all the time.
Maybe Luke buckled him in and Grogu took the seatbelt off because Grogu, who I adore, is not a very disciplined passenger.
He likes to move around in the cockpit.
We've seen it before.
I'm just saying.
We've seen it before.
He's a restless little 50-year-old.
Okay, so...
When Cadvane rolls up to the sanctuary,
yes.
It gave me real lame as you at the barricades
listened to this vibes.
Mallory's wearing her Cadbane shirt again.
I had to break it out again.
I just love him so much.
But, you know, you are on your own, you have no friends.
Like, I killed...
I killed Cobbant.
I didn't believe him.
He's like a kill cop van.
How are you doing in that moment?
That I was fine.
It wasn't until the Weewe showed up and was like, yeah, they did him dirty that I had a real.
Gunned him down in cold blood.
That was a rough one.
I was a real moment.
I was like they would not fucking dare.
And again, the person I was watching with, this is like, this is just the nicest, most
reassuring thing.
Maybe this like lifelong friend of mine has ever said to me, he was like, no, they're lying.
I'm not sure why, but they are.
And I was just like, thank you because they lost my mind.
I was like, they wouldn't actually kill Cobb Vantth with them.
And usually I'm way too cynical about stuff like that, but I'm too emotionally invested.
So, yeah.
All right.
So Kathy does this thing.
We've already kind of talked about that.
The family's betray, which we already kind of talked about.
The montage of their betrayal, that's betrayal.
That's a big godfather reference.
It's a lot like the end of the first godfather when during the baptism, as Michael becomes, literally becomes the godfather, like the various heads of families are killed around town.
Turns out they did not abide, Joanna.
they did not abide.
And the one conversation
that Boba and Fennick had
about whether they should believe
what had just transpired,
which in essence netted out in,
you know,
my offer's better than the other offer,
which was objectively not true
given that those characters
had just told them
that they profited from the spice trade.
Turned out that was a bad thing
to bet on.
Who saw that coming?
Chekhov's three families.
A lot of Chekhovs,
blank in this episode. Check off
and DeSX back to back, back to
back, back, right?
My
poor
Green Gomorians
I thought of you.
They just like stepped off that cliff.
It was very... They walked backwards
off the cliff. Now,
again, if you have a better battle plan
and a better game plan, you think about
where you are on the field.
It reminded me,
granted with more
lethal stakes of when a football player in a key moment in crunch time doesn't know whether to
stay in bounds or get out of bounds in terms of like the clock. You got to know where your feet are.
You got to know where your feet are, Joe. There's another footwork football moment later when
Skad did the 360 spin move that everybody's been tweeting about all week and everybody's been making
fun of it. And I was like, you know, maybe earlier in his life, he was a quarterback. And
knows that you've got to really be able to plant your feet.
You need that solid footwork, Joe.
Maybe it was just about the footwork when he launched.
Style over substance.
Everything's going south.
The mods are pinned down.
Fennick shows up and saves them for some many day's X moments.
I forget, was Fennick on your sharpshooter list when we did that mailback?
She was.
You and I get to take a victory laugh.
Clearly deserved to be.
Yeah.
She's a bad.
She was on our list.
She deserves to be a great sharpshooter.
could have ended this whole roar by herself in episode one if she had been allowed to.
Okay.
Okay.
And then so we get a return of the creed as Mando does say, like, is really firm that he's not going to leave Boba.
There's another element to it that I think is a little darker because he says he's like ready to die if he needs to.
And to me, that's, to me that speaks to he's lost his son, his cohort has.
His covert has tossed him out.
Like, he doesn't have the roots bounding him to his life that he needs.
So he's just sort of like, sure, I'll die for honor.
What else I don't even get to see my son?
I went all the way.
I came all this way.
And I didn't even get to see him.
Yeah, I had the same read on it.
I thought this was actually incredibly sad.
And I just want to say, thinking all of those things, believing all of those things,
still, the remotest possibility that grow,
was out there and you could be with him and then maybe being willing to die for Boba instead.
Couldn't be me, Joanna.
Couldn't be me.
Never.
Never.
But yeah, I was struck by it too because, first of all, just his adherence to the creed after
being excommunicated gives us, not that we lacked this confidence previously, but I think
assures us that he is going to go to Mandelor.
He is going to seek out, destroyed minds or not those living waters in which he can attempt
to make his way back.
Now, what he might learn on that quest that will lead him in another direction potentially is, I think,
one of the exciting things to speculate about heading into season three of the Mandalorian.
But he is determined to find his way back into the covert and still abides by the way, despite
everything that happened with the armorer and that fucker, Paz Vizla.
But it was just really sad because he's like, I've got nothing now.
This is devastating.
Mando.
A lot of, a lot of, like, quietly, very sad moments about lonely.
in this episode, which I do think was, of course, one of the thematic through lines of the season.
Like, it manifests in the conversation with Boba and CAD later when CAD is touting individuality,
the solo pursuit and anything else being weakness, and Boba taps into that lesson of tribe.
But, like, forging those bonds together, found family, lessons, teaching, stuff we talk about a lot inside of this show and others.
Because it's not just everything we just outline with Mando.
Like Mando says to Boba, you're out of friends, right?
you're out of friends.
And like the fact that the characters know that they can't allow that to be true is pretty
important for their arcs moving forward.
I think what's what's what I think is revealed in this sequence here, all of this that happens
here, is that I firmly believe that there was a ton of stuff cut from this season of Boba Fett
for better for worse, but I would say for worse because when Fennick says,
when Fennick goes to save the mods
and they think her and she says
manners, I like it, which just feels like
such a callback to some kind of
relationship that we never got
to see between Fennick and the mods.
Do you know what you mean?
Yeah, yeah, yeah, it's a great observation.
Do you think that it was cut
to make room for the Mando Grobu stuff
that wasn't supposed to be there in the first place?
I mean, like, maybe.
Maybe there's a version of the season
where we don't even get five
six at all, but then I don't know how you do the finale and everything that is involved in that.
I don't know any of that information.
Maybe they go up into the gunship into the fire spray and it's the three-minute finale.
But it just really feels like the, I mean, like maybe Sophie Thatcher will someday give an interview where she's like, oh yeah, I had three episodes worth of plot.
And also there was an explanation for my baffling accent, like something like that, you know what I mean?
but instead we just get something that really does feel like a callback to an
existing relationship that we never got to see at all.
So, you know, it is all part of what makes this season feel hollow to me.
The major domo.
I could not love this character more, Joe.
I completely agree.
I completely agree.
Baffled by the people who don't like him.
Oh, my God.
Is that a thing?
I'm honestly, like, genuinely not aware of that.
Is that a thing?
I loved it.
I loved that he asked Boba to write a message and Boba wrote like a,
an epic poem very quickly.
Quite quickly.
I wonder if you use a shorthand.
When we go down the list of things
that Boba is and isn't good at,
we have to put,
can compose an epic poem
with some insults in it.
My guy has some literary flair.
I was impressed.
He's got bars.
I was like, Boba,
the raw copy is clean.
I love it.
As the editor, Mal jumped out.
No notes.
No notes.
No suggestions.
in Google Docs straight through.
Hitting the copy desk, let's pub.
Does Boba have moves?
No.
But he's got bars.
He's a soul of a poet.
He's a poet.
That's what this should have been about the whole time.
I actually really,
I know we're like halfway joking,
but I actually really think that there's something to that
because if we think back to earlier in the season,
and I do want to go back to the major domo and just talk about whether we ship him
and Pelly,
which is the single thing I'm other than Gorgh,
most interested in talking about.
Obviously.
So my apologies to the entire Jawa population.
of Tatuim, but she is off the market.
She's like,
this isn't the time,
you know, we'll get back to it later,
maybe in season two.
The soul, the poet thing,
I find really compelling
because, like, if we think back to
earlier episodes of the show and of our pod
and why,
what about the character drew us
in in the first place?
And we think back to
Boba's, like, lizard brain quest.
the bonding with the Tuskins, his rebirth coming out of the Sarlac Pit,
the visions in the Bactapod of those shots of him solitary alone on Camino,
watching his father fly away, his life and upbringing as a clone,
you know, this journey that he had, this evolution across his life.
I do think there's some poetry to that.
And I do think that his reflection and introspection is elemental to why this version of the story
was actually, like, for me personally, I can only speak for myself, more interesting than just
seeing Boba, like, out as a badass bounty hunter on missions doing cool shit, which would have
been fun, certainly.
I was really excited to see a show grapple with who Boba is and what he's been through
and what it means to be an unaltered clone of one of the most famous people in the galaxy and
lose that and try to forge your own family with assholes like Orr Singh and lose yourself
to the quest for vengeance against characters like Mace Windu, et cetera, and work your way.
through the bounty hunting ranks until this highly mortifying sequence with the Sarlock Pit
and then become reborn and forge these bonds with the Tuskins and lose that and then work your
way to a moment with Fennick where you talk about the power and the need that they didn't make him
weak, that they made him strong that you need family. Like that's in the show still. It's just very
present as a central focus for four episodes and then very much obscured by two episodes that
ultimately were more successful.
And then by one episode
that relies on us
caring about that,
but,
you know,
bowls it over with
annihilator droids.
Do you,
who are about to arrive,
do you think that
this show
would have been better
if it had,
like,
if Bobafet,
soulful poet,
reflective Boba Fett
were like journaling
his way through all this
and we got like a,
a voiceover.
Just like,
like a Carrie Bradshaw,
a Carrie Bradshaw,
like,
and just like,
that. Oh my God. And I had to wonder, why can I always find a Mandalorian but ever a man?
You know what I mean? Like, it's a, it's a version of the show that I would definitely watch.
Oh my God. Yeah. The nose, the, uh, the nose lizard diaries. I would, I would, I would, I would read them.
So many ways we could go with it. And Jets like that. Okay. So, um, you know,
Annihilated droids, the scorpionic, as they're called,
relatives of the Droidicas that we got to know in the prequels with their impenetrable shields.
This drove me crazy.
Oh, okay.
Because they're not impenetrable.
And, all right, I'm trying to be, I'm trying to be, like, fair and reasonable.
Because on the one hand, I don't think it's reasonable to expect that everybody watching the show has seen every episode of Clone Wars.
We've talked about that a lot.
That's actually not a thing that the people making any of these live action shows should expect.
But so much of this show does actually call upon that knowledge and that history.
It's like hard not to think about time our characters in the animated shows I've spent with, say,
Saw Guerrera learning the technique of just the slow roll.
The slow roll of the grenade under the shield and the exact annihilator tech compared to the droidic attack.
Maybe there are just some canonical differences in terms of the strength of that shield.
I think that's totally reasonable.
But there's also so many Dune comps with the Shields and Dune and the slow, like, deliberate entry here.
And when the shield is made vulnerable eventually after the Rancourt attack and Dyn is able to work his way through,
you know it's going to net out there.
And that's fine.
It's fine for the characters to take some time to figure that out.
But it's a large stretch of the episode spent firing flame throw.
throwing rocket launching at a thing without, again, like the kind of like strategic,
wait, how could we actually penetrate that? Like Dinn says, our energy weapons aren't going to
work. Our kinetic weapons aren't going to work. So it's like, all just like pack up and go home.
No, you got to figure it out. Try something different. Try the thing that we know from elsewhere
in Canada. It might work. No, we got to go get a rancor, obviously. Check off Rancor.
So glad to see our guy rail in the rancourt. Just felt really bad that his own teammates
turned on him. Didn't make me happy. I think the question of the shields, when.
it works and when it doesn't is tied to this idea that watching din jarn fight before grogou
shows up versus after grogues showing up is just a completely different ballgame you know what i mean
and like is it true that the rancor rican's the shield yes but what's also true is that when din is trying
to use the dark saber before palimodo rolls up in the middle because again how could she know
that a battle was going on because there's they're literally only fighting in like five person
pods. So, like, the streets are empty. And then she turns the corner and she's like, oh,
there's a war going on in this one corner of Mossespa, I guess. Anyway, she brings the baby.
But the streets empty because of the battle. Like, everybody, everything around the sanctuary is
completely abandoned in the first place. And then everyone else in these other quarters,
we see them flee once the attacks begin. Are we talking about the reunion now, though, the actual
moment of the reunion? Is that where you brought us? I mean, I just want to say that, like,
I just want to say that, like, when we, it has to inform the way that we've been thinking about the
Dark Saver, right?
To watch Dindjaran struggle with it, as we've seen him struggle with it elsewhere, and then
Grogu shows up and he can suddenly wield it.
That's just another piece of information we have in the Dark Saber lore of, you know,
our understanding from the rebels' training scenes are, you know, and the training scenes that we
got in episode five is like, you know, if you can't fight the weapon, you're, you're, you're
fighting the weapon. I honestly don't even know what that means. But if you told me that a dad
fights better when his, when his son is in danger, then when his son is not in danger, I do know what
that means. Right. And I think that that will be significant. Yeah. Yeah. It's a, it's a great
observation. And it's, it's an interesting new data point because while it aligns, as you're
noting, with some of what we learned, it also kind of conflicts in a way that I think is important and good.
because we've talked about the dogmatic failings of some of these creeds.
One of the things that we've heard in the Canaan's Bean training,
in the armorer training with din, etc.,
is this idea of like there's like conflict inside of you.
You're distracted, right?
Your thoughts are elsewhere with Grogu in that case
and that that's like a limitation.
But to see that the opposite could be true,
that the attachment, yes, exactly, is a strength and a boon is important.
And I think it's also like we get the corollary
with the way that Grogu uses the force
when he is around Din.
Now, of course, we just are coming off an episode
where we see Grogo's force training with Luke
and there are moments where he's, you know,
struggling to force jump and Luke is a complete fucking asshole.
Like, is that all you got? Luke?
Fuck off.
Like, channeling my inner Logan Roy, fuck off.
But then we also see these great force exploits from Grogo
who's doing all of these wonderful things.
So it's not like he wasn't using the force before.
Wouldn't it be better narratively if we had seen him and he was having trouble using his force and Luke was maybe like, well, I got a dud, I guess. And then when Grogu was back with his dad, if Luke said, I got a done, he would never recover. Never. Never. It was bad enough to see him say you're trying too hard. Bad enough. But Grogu is able to tap in. I mean, we've seen this time and again all the way back with the mudhorn, the force healing, fending off the fire of Gideon's attackers, etc. On and on and on the list goes.
and when he pulls the bolts out of the annihilator drug,
which I love because it's like,
and he literally receives the razor crest knob from Dinn
in this episode as well.
Like he just loves these shiny bubbles.
This one hit him right in the mithril, Joe,
and it knocked him over,
and I was very worried,
but thankfully he was safe and protected.
It's a little, like a little...
And of course, I know we're jumping all over the place,
but the extent of the force power that he displays
and both with the droid and with the rancor are direct,
because he is protecting thin.
He is protecting Mando directly.
The power on display there,
which again, of course, leads to his little,
and we skipped over the reunion,
which we'll talk about in a second.
We're going to get to the reunion, don't worry.
We're going to go back.
Which is the rancor moment.
A little snoozeola, a little joids.
Simply put Pantheon,
one of the cutest moments in the history of the world.
And it's like, is that, that is he,
Does he actually have animal bond, which is a force power?
I think that's very likely based on what we've seen from him.
But the extent of what was required there is supreme.
And Dana's right there fueling him.
He's the reason that Grogo is doing that.
So all of all of you out there, Luke, anyone else who's like attachment, dangerous, bad,
eh, Yoda, Mace, from the past, talking to all of you, eat shit, okay?
Well, okay.
So I've been reading Reddit, which is both good.
for me and bad for me. But something that I've been seeing, this discussion of the question of
attachment, as far as I understand, I never read the legends books where, you know, in those
books, the EU books, like, this is a good Ben Lindbergh question, but he's not here yet, but like
that Luke starts his Jedi Academy and Luke starts the Jedi Academy that, you know, is a kinder,
like more relaxed Jedi Academy, right?
But this question of attachment, the parsing of the word attachment is something that
it was very key in those books because it wasn't like, yeah, you can love someone or
you can, you know, whatever, but attachment is something a little bit more possessive.
And I think we do see that with Anakin as Hayden Christensen plays him.
You know what I mean?
Like Padmey loves Anagan, but Aniken has a weird, I mean, because he's traumatized because
of his childhood, but like a frantic attachment.
to her. And that is the danger more so than love. And so I don't think, I think we think of attachment.
When we look at Dan and Grogu, we think they're attached to each other because we're not thinking of it as an unhealthy word.
But I think if Star Wars Legends wants to put that word attachment in an unhealthy bucket, what we can look at to, I'm going to regret this, but to quote the Hillary Clinton presidential campaign, stronger together, man.
That's the theme, right?
That's a whole, like Boba just out and says that, you know,
it's the theme of the episodes, Stronger Together.
And Mando and Grogu, the Force Power and the Dark Sabre, stronger together.
I totally agree.
And I think that actually, there are a lot of flaws in the prequel,
but that's not one of them.
I think that's actually very present.
And that's what makes it interesting is that there's a way of the frustration that
you feel with the Jedi for the nature of their strictures at that moment in time
does not negate the fact that Atticane was so ripe for manipulation from Palpatine
because the thing that he wanted, the level of possessiveness was actually unnatural and unholy.
Unnatural.
Unholy, right?
But that does require-
I thought the Zoom was glitching for a second.
No, I was just attempting to channel my inner peltie.
Just somehow your Palpatine impression returned.
Okay, got on.
Natural.
But that just requires the nuance in.
in the language and the idea,
so that it's there first to parse.
And Luke literally said,
however, you will be giving into attachment
to those that you love.
That's the way Luke put it.
So I think that more broadly,
you're right that the part of what makes this idea
really interesting to parse across the canon
is that there are some subtleties to assess.
I'm glad Groger was with Din instead of Luke.
Should we talk about the reunion?
All right. This is exactly what I'm going to say right here,
which is this.
Oh, my.
I want an entire hour of reunion between, well, first of all, I need them to be separated longer for me to really feel that reunion is like, you know, because...
So are you back there? Because you had said initially you wouldn't want the emotional impact of the season two departure to be sapped by returning to a too quickly.
Then you thought, well, we got in chapter six was so emotionally potent that you were reassessing your initial stance there.
But now you're back to this happened too quickly?
I mean, is that fair?
It makes me sound like I will never be pleased by anything.
No, that's not how I meant it.
I just want to understand what's in your heart.
A feedback that I've seen is that some people are like,
the fact that they're back together so quickly makes season two,
the Manilorian feel like fruitless if the whole thrust of the season is,
I got to get Grogu back to his people.
You know what I mean?
I don't agree.
But continue.
Calm down.
I think the ultimate result of that is that.
his people all along and he keeps saying his people and it was an interesting turn of
phrase because when you say his people like maybe the first thing we think of is like people who
look like him you know like other Yoda-esque characters um but then you know what we understand
it means is like other Jedi those are his people and then what we really understand is that
his people is Mando like that's his people that's who we really needs to be with um hmm I
I think, I don't know that it saps the separation of, of season two, but I think if you, especially since we spent some time with it at least, but I think if you watched it all in a binge with some people might do when they go back and rewatch things, it's going to feel a little like, oh, he's gone, he's back again. Do you know what I mean? Like, do you disagree?
I don't disagree with the binge point, but I spent a real full year of my life wondering when I'd see them together again.
a full year of my life, right?
And I think this is kind of a good old two things can be true at once.
I think that I'm, again, shocked that we got it here instead of Amanda.
It feels to me like, and I don't mean this in a bad way necessarily, like a declaration
of intent in terms of how these shows will function and relate to each other.
It is the MCUification of Star Wars TV.
You will not be able to skip one thing if you care of.
about the other thing. You will have to watch it all because it's all fair game. Anything can
happen anywhere. And there's no stronger way to reinforce that with Star Wars fans than doing
something with Grobu outside of his own show. So I guess in that sense, I'm not shocked,
but still I was shocked. I, the other two things can be true at once part is, I don't want to,
I hate to spoil other stories inside of a Star Wars pod. I'm going to say something about Marvel.
If you don't want to hear this, fast forward 45 seconds.
Okay. It reminds me a little bit of like Infinity War and Endgame where there's there was always this conversation about the fact that the characters who were lost in the snap came back. Like did it sap Infinity War of its stakes in some way? And for me and like mileage may vary and that's fine. Not everybody has to feel the same way about something. For me it just, that was never an issue because the watching those characters mourn and process what it was like to lose those people and the impact that that had on them was real and was a part of their growth.
and evolution. And I think, done talking about Marvel now, the same is true for Grogo and Dinn.
The impact that that had, that departure and that journey had on them is elemental to who they are
moving forward, no matter how quickly they came back together. I guess I'm, I think I agree with you
about the Marvel thing you just said that I won't get specific about. But like, I agree,
I definitely agree with you about that. I do get a little on edge about the version of
of this that that drives me the most crazy is a fake-out death.
Unless it's Cobbant and then you want it to be a fake-out death because you love him.
But I'm so mad.
I'm like, why did they even pretend for that long that he wasn't there?
But like for stuff like I think I'm still frosty.
Okay, spoilers, I guess, were season five of Game of Thrones.
Like, I'm still frosty about the whole John Snow manipulation.
You know what I mean?
That's just like, that is something that's forever going to stick on my craw as like something
that just felt unnecessarily manipulative.
And so, like, this idea of we're going to separate, well, and the other question about all this,
to your point about this larger, like now everything is must-see TV if you're invested in Star Wars.
If Grogu is going to get up to stuff outside of his own show, you got to watch it all, right?
The other question, and I raised this a couple weeks ago, and some of our listeners disagreed with me,
I said, I don't think you could do Mandalorian without Grogu, right?
And a bunch of them were like, no, you don't need Grogu.
And like, whether or not that's true, Lucasfilm believes that you can't do
Mandalorian without Groku, right?
And like, I don't want to watch them try.
I'm not advocating for less Groku.
But I'm just saying I do know that some of our listeners were like, no, I want to see
Mandalorian season three.
I want to see Mando out there doing this stuff without Grogu.
Not that I don't like Grogu, but I don't need him.
And I'm like, I think you do.
I think that's the story we're watching.
We're watching Mando and Groku, and it's not the Mandalorian, it's Mandalorian, it's
Mandeloreans, or if there is The Mandalorian, it's Groku, it's not dead.
You know, like all this sort of stuff.
Like, that's the story we're watching.
I believe that Faloni in particular is so interested in Mandalore and the lore of that place
and all of the characters.
Mandalor lore.
Yeah, Mandelor lore.
Who are associated with it.
That I felt strongly for a while that season three would be, and I still do, that season
through would be focused heavily on that. I think that, you know, murmurs and who knows how many
shows will eventually get of like a Bo-Katan spinoff. Maybe more of that happens in a show like that
instead of inside of this story. But even if this story does ultimately focus on reclaiming
Mandelaura, the Lord of the Dark Sabre, all this other stuff we've talked about a lot,
Grogo will be, he's just inextricable from the heartbeat of the show. He is the heartbeat of the show.
And so to close the loop on the moment of the reunion itself and that idea of two things
could be true at once. Of course I wish we had
not had to rush through it. Of course
I wish that we had been able to just like luxuriate
in it for a little bit longer. I could have
just watched them look at each other
forever.
It was also like...
You got the shirt.
Concentrated bliss to me.
Like I love a large cup of coffee, but this
was an espresso shot of love
and joy, right? The moment
like I was like fucking
sobbing
when first of all, Joanna, he's under his little blanket.
Oh, God.
Oh, yeah.
I can't.
I'm so excited.
Welcome back to another segment of Valerie Rubin describes a grower scene.
Okay.
Okay.
He's under his little blanket.
No, no, I'm serious.
He's under his blanket.
What happens next?
I'm closing my eyes so I can just get, yeah.
First of all, this is at the 34-minute mark of the episode, right?
34 minute mark.
And Pelly
rounds the band.
Oh, all our characters are together.
Hey, Mando, look who's here.
And she's pulling a blanket off of him.
And he's cooing.
And Dyn says, what?
And he gasped.
We hear it.
The subtitle say, parentheses, gasp.
It's just so precious.
He says, hey, what are you doing here?
And then we see what is the, like,
I think just, I, if I,
If I ever, like, have a child of my own, I'm sure I will experience, like, another level of joy and love, right?
But to this point, my time with Halo, my time with my childhood cat and best friend Jeremy, and now this moment are like at the top of the list of pure distillation of happiness.
See, Crocus, force jump into Mando's arm.
to hug him and then he reaches out with his little hand to touch Mando's helmet and it makes you think
back to that just gorgeous moment in the season two finale when dint takes up his helmet and
let's go see his face and he touches his cheek. I wept. I shook. I felt purpose and the
possibility of love and meeting in the world. I have. I
couldn't have been happier.
And then, of course, he says,
okay, little guy, you know,
I'm happy to see you,
but, like,
we're in the middle of something here.
Keep your head down,
stay safe.
And then you shift very quickly
to just being very worried
about Grogo
and hoping that he's going to be okay.
And then you're pulled right back in
because Lenderandoz putting him down.
He pulled down his little collar
and he sees the best guy,
he sees the meth and he says,
hey, that's the shirt.
You got the shirt.
And I just,
I just don't know what could be better than that.
Other than the rest of the episode
being better or else,
I found it. So good.
Beloved Mallory Rubin, you and I have been podcasting together now for like four or five months or whatever.
I have heard you do this on binge mode, but I have never been in the presence of a full-blowns.
And what the listeners don't...
What the listeners don't understand is that you were dead this morning.
You woke up.
Really not feeling well today.
Dead this morning.
And your love for Grogu...
Oh, it carries me through.
Given you full mana and you are back in the habit.
And I am, I feel lucky to have been in the presence of that.
Thank you for indulging me.
And it made me cry a little bit, actually.
Just you describing it and crying made me cry a little bit.
Oh my God.
I just love them.
I just love them so much.
I still think it didn't need to happen on the back of my theater.
But, um, okay.
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I've known you a long time, Bobo.
One thing I can't figure, what's your angle?
Okay, let's talk about something that I think you like a little less than that beautiful moment,
which is Bovo versus Cad,
Ben, the showdown, right?
Something that you mentioned before
when you're talking about Saw Guerrera
and the bombs, rolling the bombs under the droid shield,
is this idea that, like,
in a live action,
Star Wars show,
it should not be required
that you've watched all of Clone Wars
and all of rebels in order.
And it certainly should not be required
that you are aware of a scrapped episode
of an animated show
that informs
the Boba versus CAD
showdown here.
I think it's still effective
mostly because Cad
Bain is an incredible evocative figure
no matter what. The voice
performance is incredible. The physical
performance is incredible.
Boba's given me
mid-Dilorian
to quote Chuck, but
you know, Cad Bain's bringing it
level 11.
dialed up to 11, right?
But still it is a very, it's a scene that is very reliant on, you know,
it's not just reliant in an obscure way.
The text, the text says this isn't the first time I beat you out on a job, right?
The text is saying like, just like your father.
Like all this are stuff that animated series watchers will know a lot of the backstory
about like cabbing training under Django or like all this sort of stuff.
But like it's all this meaning that would be used.
full information for people who are just coming to the show without having seen the animated series.
And in that way, it's something to go back to Thrones.
It's something that Dave Chen and I, when we podcast about Game of Thrones for years,
me having read the books, him having not, the constant conversation we would have is,
okay, so I can come and tell him what the book context is or something.
And his constant argument is like, that's great, but the show needs to be able to stand on his own,
and I agree.
And I think in a moment like this, I think there's a, the skills are tipped a little too much
and you need to have read some explainers
in order to know what you're watching here.
What do you think?
Really good question.
I am maybe self-aware enough,
unlike Boba, to recognize my own relationship to a thing.
And so I don't know if I can separate my fondness
for that material and how happy I was to see it pay off
from what it would be like to watch it without that.
The rationally I understand.
that that would be true. It reminds me a little bit
of
Mando season two
Asoka's live action
arrival, Boca Tons live
action arrival. These things that were
I had the distinct pleasure
of joining Chris and Andy on the watch
after the Asoka arrival and the prompt
was in essence
this seems to really mean a lot to you who is
this person and why should we care
right? And then my little shock you to hear
I talked for an hour after that, right?
So I liked
the, I mean, all of the Cadbane in the episode I enjoyed and I just, again, like, I refuse to
accept that he's gone, but even if he is, I believe that we will see him in live action earlier
in the timeline and so I can hold on to that. I can see how it would be less fulfilling for viewers
who haven't watched the unfinished Dave Floney Clone Wars arc where we see how Boba got
the dent in his helmet, which is Gunfire from Cadbane, how Cadbane gets the plate on his head,
gunfire from Boba, that direct draw, that showdown between them, and how that itself has history
behind it. You already mentioned Django and his relationship with CAD, their history, which the loss of
Django, like the specter of Django is such a defining thing in Boba's life in ways that suit him
and hold him back. And characters who have history with his father, that dynamic is always so
fascinating for us to parse when we watch Boba. And there's an episode I've referenced it before.
It's a really incredible Obi-1 arc, actually,
where they devastatingly change his face
at the animated Obi-1,
one of the best-looking characters in the world.
You know how I feel about this.
They change his face, devastating.
And he infiltrates a prison,
ends up teaming up with Cadbane.
And Boba is in that prison, too,
and is, like, working with CAD.
He's kind of taking orders from CAD.
They have a lot of history together.
And so I think, like, a moment like...
CAD saying to him of the Tuskins and the Pikes,
CAD being the one to reveal the Boba what had happened there.
It's like, Cad Bain is a bounty hunter who's hired to do a job.
But one of the things that's really cool about him is he is completely willing to fuck
anything up at any point and go rogue.
He always believes that he knows better than the people who have employed him always.
And so there's a part of that where you're watching that sequence.
And it's like, well, he knows that he's attempting.
He's hoping that he can destabilize Boba with that information.
you get the, you know it's true,
which is like a great Star Wars language
callback and Easter egg.
But this moment where it's like,
a character only says that to another character
if they have a deep shared history together, right?
And so if you appreciate that,
you really appreciate it and the moment really lands.
And if you don't, maybe it's a little less effective.
And then you really have to count on Cad
just seeming like a cool, interesting character,
which I think he probably does,
and maybe those scenes work anyway.
I loved the,
in their first exchange, which Fenwick kind of comes out and disrupts.
You know, let's do this on our own timeline, not his.
Another really interesting dynamic moment between Fenwick and Boba.
One of the, I don't even know if we'll talk more about Boba's relationship to the spice,
but like Fenick disagreeing with Boba and the spice was a fascinating one that I think could
bear fruit in the future too.
But Cad says, you're going soft in your old age.
And Boba says we all do.
And again, that just speaks to how long they've known each other.
Like, Bobo was a kid.
A kid.
when he met Cadbane.
And that line was so satisfying for me
because it made me think of the time
that I've seen them spend together,
but it also just feels true
and like a wink to us as an audience also
because we've been talking about Boba's evolution and change, right?
And how he's so different from this other version
that we expected and to hear someone inside of the show
say that to him was like really fulfilling.
But maybe not as fulfilling
if you haven't watched them together
when Boba was a kid. I don't know.
Let me compare it to,
so you mentioned the,
introduction of Bo Catan and Osokitano.
I think those are, it's different.
I'm not saying you were saying they were exactly the same, but it's different because
those are A, introductions of characters, not like the culmination of a season, the final
showdown of a season, right?
And B, they were meeting Mando who's never met them before, right?
So, like, Mando meets Bocatan and Mando meets Asoka.
And so we are with Mando meeting these people for the first time.
We learn about them as he learns about them.
Whereas this show is like, let us present some deep, rich history between these two characters
for a lot of the audience.
They've never seen them interact at all.
Do you know what I mean?
So that's – and especially in a show that has an entire device that serves backstory and flashbacks for Boba,
there was so much opportunity.
Like, Cabain showing up was such a fun end of season, like, thrilling moment for him just wandering out of the desert.
Really powerful.
at the same time, would it have fueled that final showdown a bit better if we had seen in flashbacks some Boba,
young Boba Cadbane interaction?
So we understand the weight, how much his words can slice and cut this kid because he's been in, he's not a kid anymore, but he's been in his head since he was a kid.
You know, like all of that stuff is something that I just wish everyone could see.
Yeah, there's like a probing quality to a Cadbane.
line, like he has the ability to knock you off your bearings in a way that few other characters
and Star Wars do. And it is really so menacing and effective. Like, again, I already mentioned this,
but the, I've known you a long time, Bobo. One thing I can't figure out what's your angle line
is, I think in some ways, the biggest indictment of the episode, that line. And it's in a scene
between characters I really like. Yeah, of the season. Yeah. Yeah. Because on the one hand,
it's like a huge moment.
CAD is speaking for the audience.
We don't totally know this either.
If Boba doesn't know it
and is really wrestling with it
and trying to figure out,
where do I stand?
Why?
What do I want?
Why?
I think that would be very dramatically compelling,
but to get back to a word you used before,
that like inert sense
of sort of bouncing in and out
of moments of introspection
doesn't quite give you that clarity
and ends up feeling like it's like there's this opaque.
You know, the sands of Tatooine
are like blowing across
our screen and our ability to see that really clearly like we'd want at the end. And when he replies,
you know, this is my city, these are my people, I will not abandon them. We then get that Tuscan
moment. And so it connects because you mentioned the pod and the flashbacks, but also like all of these
echoes and relics of Boba's past and these relationships that have been very defining in his life,
like surfacing in this crucial moment where he says, don't toy with me.
I'm not a boy any longer.
And again, I think there's a part of that that's like a nice and interesting callback to
their shared history, to our history with Boba, to Django, to Boba's role as a clone
inside of the story.
We get this amazing dig of now's about the time you jet off to your back to tank, which is
like, iconic, great ship for my dude.
Not wrong.
Yeah.
No.
But then this, you gave it a shot.
You tried to go straight, but you've got your.
father's blood pumping through your veins, you're a killer. And he's kicking him and he's pinning him
down. And he says that you already mentioned though, this isn't the first time I beat you on a job.
There's no shame in it. Consider this my final lesson. Look out for yourself, anything else's
weakness. If we've seen those characters live their lives together and interact with each other
time and time again, that's like a really immensely powerful moment. I thought it worked in some
ways and didn't in others because you you lead to it leads to cad pulling off boba's helmet
stripping off the father that he just alluded to stripping off the legacy of that armor and he's
speaking about his father his kid the killer inside being an individual and boba unmasked closes his eyes
and he's thinking back to the opposite lesson that he learned which we heard him talk to fenik about
by the fire in chapter four
that strength from
his life with the Tuskins, the power
of the tribe, which he is now trying
to rebuild. Those scars on the inside
that he said last longer
are healing and the scar tissue
can ultimately be the lesson
for Boba, the lesson about tribe.
And so he picks up the gaffy stick
when his armor wasn't enough to beat
Cad who was shooting him and beating him and outdrawing him.
It was faster than him, was quicker than him.
And he beats him with the Tuscan weapon.
And there's a part of me
that's like, okay, this really lands thematically
because of everything we just said,
the armor comes off, the individuality comes off,
the singular essence comes off,
and he taps back into the thing
that he found with other people.
It lands a little bit less
because we can't quite shake our disappointment
that the Tuscans are not back,
that the Warriors not back,
that the kids not back,
that they were just theirs,
this device for Boba's growth.
And also because even just that literalization
of that lesson,
we've seen multiple times this season,
We saw it on the train heist when he had to use the stick when other weapons failed.
We saw it in his battle with Crescenton when the tech, he couldn't get his hands around it enough.
And the stick was the thing that he was able to use.
And so I was just like, man, what is Boba thinking about here?
Is he thinking about the meaning of that moment?
Is he thinking about does he have any remorse for the kitten striders that he wrongly killed?
Now, they did some bad shit to channel Steve's energy from Wednesday show.
They did.
It's true.
you know, they did. But is he thinking about that all? Is he reflecting on the fact that he opened the
season by saying, I'm a crime lord. And then, and of course, we're jumping across time. You're under my
protection, Garza Fipp. Nothing bad will ever happen to you. Right. And like he, he, this isn't the
flashback, but like he tried to tap into the spice trade as a business. And a lot has changed and
happened since. But you're almost forced to like stop and piece it back together in your
your mind rather than it feeling fully cohesive at the end, which to your point about the power
of a character like Cadbean, you shouldn't really have to stop and pause and think you should
just feel it all in a moment like that. The TV text was formative to me understanding how to watch
television, understanding genre, understanding all of that. It is, I will always come back to it and
it cannot be pulled away from me despite the fact that...
Are you say Buffy? It's going to be Buffy. I'm going to talk about Buffy for a second.
I always feel guilty about it, but here's what I'll say. In because...
Coming part two, which is one of the best episodes of television ever.
Buffy's boyfriend, Angel, who is like turned evil, has her cornered.
So there's so much, oh, there's so much shared history there.
There's so much going on there.
And we've seen it all play out.
And he says to her, that's everything, huh?
No weapons, no friends, no hope.
Take all that away and what's left.
And he has got, like, he's got a sword.
And he's swinging it down her and she grabs a sword.
She just says, me.
Then she kicks the shit out of him.
And it's like, that's what you want to see.
It's like, that's what you want to see is like,
a shared history that you understand
a person beating down,
a person stripped away to nothing
and them just being like me,
motherfucker,
or my sense of community
is valuable.
This lesson that I've learned,
that's what I have.
I'm going to stab you
this gaffy steak.
And then insult to industry,
to injury.
There's some industry here.
We heard the bikes talk about margins.
We don't even think
the Cadbane is dead here.
Right?
I personally refuse to accept it.
I mean, the beeping and blinking of the red light on his chest plate,
I don't know what that is exactly if it's maybe like a transmitter,
sending a signal to someone to come get him,
if it's some sort of tech that is actually helping to keep him alive.
My guy's got a lot of gadgets on.
So I'm not, I'm not ready to, I'm not ready to take goodbye yet.
That said, he's, you know, he's old.
So it could be the end.
And he could just be in stories earlier.
I don't know.
not dead.
I'm saying not dead.
I agree with you, not dead.
We see Boba does have the respect to the people
because he brought his pet to the downtown
and had to destroy a bunch of things.
And they're like, that's what we look forward to leader.
You saved me.
Thank you.
Thank you so much.
And he says to Fenwick Shan,
we're not suited for this.
If you want to talk about
Boba and Mando being reunited,
undercutting all the season two of Mando,
don't agree,
but that's how some people feel.
Let's talk about the final line of a season
undercutting the entire season.
Then what have we been watching?
This was a tough one.
What have we been watching?
I can't believe I'm repeating myself
in the second hour of our podcast.
I'm repeating myself a little bit,
but I do think it's probably in this context
worth saying again.
There's a version of this that works.
The version of it necessitates Boba
not being such so certain in all of his wrong decisions along the way.
Like, he doesn't really doubt his conviction.
He thinks that he is right.
He thinks that he knows better.
He thinks that he's outsmarting people.
We talked about how that manifested a lot in the arguments and disagreements that he
in Fenwick had.
He fully believes that he has gotten the better of the Lorth Appeals of the
He believes that he's going to be able to outsmart the three families.
He believes that the huts, I guess, hey, I guess he was right about that one.
They didn't come back.
Good for you, Boba.
You were so sure.
I'm so sorry you didn't get your incest twins again.
But I raised this because I think that part of Boba's arc and part of what's interesting about
it is that there is a lot of growth and progress.
That's good.
We want to see characters.
change and grow. We just have to understand how they got there and have to be with them every step
of the way. And that more than anything is where, as much as I loved, love, love chapters five and six,
I think leaving him for those two episodes ultimately was really for the detriment of being
able to land his arc fully at the end. The spice question specifically is, I think, the embodiment
of this, but it's his relationship to leadership and to what he's doing. And most, that's a question
you raised in the very first pod. Why does he want this?
It's a microcosm of it.
I'm going to let Ben Lindberg address your Bobo Fett season two question.
But the way that Ben, it constantly undermines him, and she's right plenty of times, you know what you mean?
Makes us go, why are we watching?
Like, this guy doesn't know what he's doing.
He was right to trust in those sweet Gimorians.
They stuck with him until the end.
They stuck with him until they literally walked off of a fucking cliff for him.
He can hold on to that, that comforting thought.
And Black Crescenton and the mods.
You know what I mean?
Like he took all these,
a rag tag group of people under his wing.
But like,
see,
but to what,
to what end was all of Phoenix,
like,
all of that conflict,
it leads nowhere,
unless it leads to something
in a later season.
It's one of the things
that makes me feel more confident
that we are actually
going to get another season
of the show,
that specifically,
the fact that there wasn't,
that didn't come to a head at any point.
And also just that's something like
they're shared,
speaking of shared history,
they're shared history with Oman.
Now, I think it makes complete sense to me that that didn't surface here because then they would have had to say something like, Omega is alive or dead. And then we would know how bad batch ended. Right. So like I get that that didn't happen. But that can't not come up between these characters at some point. Also, let me just say on the cadbean front, devastated that we didn't get to see a phonic cadbane moment in live action given their history. Like a fucking devastated. Because you watch this and it doesn't even seem like she's ever met him before. I'm very sad that we didn't hear them talk about.
their history or like interact in a way that I mean she's again like telling boba to walk away but
there's no there's no like I want them to face off the last thing I'll say to just put a try to put a
bow on the the boba arc and boba motivation of it all is that I think the culmination of his arc here
both the breakthroughs that he has but also then that like comic regression at the end sort of
conflates the Tuskins and the people of Mos Espa being one and the same to him.
And they're not.
And actually the fact that they're not and that there are these fractures and fisions inside
of Tatooine is like an important part of a story.
And I think that to say this for the 50th time,
there's a version of this that works really well,
which is Boba actually like processing that,
that he failed in one area
with a group of people he cared about
and doesn't want to make that mistake again.
Doesn't want to let the people that he is
in a position to try to help and protect,
doesn't want to let them down.
And I think that that's powerful
and that overall his relationship
to the idea of tribe and family
is compelling to me.
But you go from like a chapter four moment
in the flashback,
but the recent flashback,
to you want to head of Gatra?
And his response to that is,
why not to these are my people and I simply must protect them.
Didn't he say when when caffeine's like, what's your angle?
I'm like, last we heard Boba thought he was smarter than the bosses and could do it better.
That's what he said.
Yeah, sick of the idiocy of others.
So it's a big evolution and probably just need a few more scenes where we get to to see him walk that bad.
where the mods are rude to Fetting Shan
and we slowly riding a bantha down that path.
But I mean, I think that's such an important thing to say
that Mossespa is not the same as the Tuskins
because one of the ideas we had at the beginning of the season
we didn't know much was like maybe his whole thing is
I'm going to make Masaspa or Tatooine in general
like a friendlier place for my adopted family, the Tuskins.
No, that's not what it was about at all.
You know, I don't know.
It's okay.
I still think this Tuscan thing is just, I don't know.
The Tuskans were in Mando season two, episode one,
and Boba is in that episode at the end.
He knows there are other Tuskins out there.
There are different tribes, yes, but like,
just no interest in checking in with any of them?
You know, you can only snort so many nose lizards in one lifetime,
is what I'll say about that.
Our post-crud sequence, of course, reveals that Cobbant is alive,
criminally turtlenecked.
his hair looks incredible in the back to goo.
I don't know how that's possible.
It's like a hair product for him, I guess,
just enhancing the great hairdo that he's already rocking.
He just looks fresh always.
Someone, one of the tweets we got was like,
is there a GQ outpost on tattooing because he's got like a high fashion cut?
Cobbant lives.
I also think he will get an arm.
Yeah.
And it's going to make him even faster and better than he was before.
Yeah. It's going to be great.
I have barely a single nice thing to say about the Mod Kids, and I feel guilty about that because I really like Sophie Thatcher as an actress.
So I'll just say this. The phrase womp hop hop is adorable and I loved it. And I liked how she said it.
Makes us think of Luke, too. No complaints. You know, the idea of the size of the wamp rep coming into play in conversation.
I grew up not a wamp hop away from here. Great phrase. Loved it. No problem. No notes.
We already talked about so many of them.
I think that my favorite Easter eggs in this episode were probably like the language callbacks.
Like we hear CAD say, well, if that isn't the quacta calling the stiffling slimy,
which was something that was part of a very weird and fraud exchange between Boba and Kaska
and the end of Manda season two.
All of the verbal callbacks, probably Bobo shouting, do it.
And channeling his inner palpi as Duku is about to be decapitated and the droid is about
to be annihilated here.
That was up there on my list.
So many Easter eggs.
Who's your secret scroll?
Yeah, secret scroll.
So last week you gave it to Deputy Scott, right?
R.A.
Deputy Scott, rest in pieces.
I'm going to give it to the weak way.
And here's the only reason why, W.O. Brown's character.
I just wanted an excuse to talk about his long gun, which was great.
of all the Western tropes brought into this episode,
I thought his like ridiculously long, long gun was a,
was a real moment.
You got a name too.
Tanty.
Tanty.
I'm sure I'm mispronouncing that, but yes.
That's a real wordle buster.
That's a real, if you play wordle,
you don't want that in your wordal.
It's a double A, you're never going to get it.
Forget about it.
Never going to get it.
Mal is your secret scroll.
I believe that earlier,
in the season, I threw out the modifier, and I feel more certain than ever, given the modifier's
return at the end here. This is some scroll stuff, you know, always in the thick of it in key
moments. Still my pick. All right. Are you ready to bring up, if we can't, if we can't look ahead
to the future of Star Wars on television, who can't? Ben Limber can. Let's bring him on.
Perhaps we should discuss what you'd be willing to read it.
Following offer.
Nothing.
You will leave this planet and your spice trade.
If you refuse these terms,
the arid sands of Tatouine will once again flourish with flowered fields fertilized with the bodies of your dead.
All right, Ben Lindbergh is here.
Talk with the future of Star Wars TV.
Ben, I just want you to know.
that Mallory has uttered the phrase Boba Fett season two, like five different times.
And what was your reaction?
Because I know what mine would be.
Anger.
Yeah, we should probably get into that.
All right.
So Boa's Season 2.
I'm here to take my victory lap, by the way, for calling that Kira and Crimson Don crossover.
You heard it here first, folks.
You really nailed that one, bud.
Yeah.
I made Joanna rewatch solo, so I'm satisfied.
I have no regrets about rewatching the film.
The true victory.
All right.
So public season two, the dreaded phrase, do we want it?
Do we think we'll get it, Ben Lindberg?
Yeah.
So Ming Na Wen deleted a tweet on Friday because she called what we just saw the first season,
which people took to mean that there was a second season, which was not what she was implying.
then she did a follow-up tweet.
She said she hadn't meant to imply that there's a second season,
but that she's keeping her fingers crossed.
Of course, she also has previously said that she was two weeks into shooting Boca Boba
before she found out that she wasn't on the Mandalorian.
So I don't know if she or anyone actually knows whether this is coming.
But I think we need it just because I have to know,
will the mods get their melons?
You can't keep me in suspense about that.
these things? Will we find out if the twins have a Jamie Searcy incest situation? We know the answer
of that. That's affirmative. Was there maybe a trampoline at the bottom of that ravine and my
Gimorians aren't dead after all? Here's my pitch for season two is how does Tatweens post-spice
economy flourish? Because that's what's what we're all wondering. Here's my pitch. You bring in
Grief Carga as an economic consultant to spruce up Mas Espa because you saw the job that he did
revitalizing Navarro. He turned the cantinas into schools. He put up statues. I think we got to get him
to tattooing. See if he can work his magic twice. But no, I think kidding aside, I don't know if I can
joke about this subject of a second season of Book of Boba Fep. But if there is one, I think it needs to be
a little bit different. I have some notes, a few notes, and they're not necessarily more Boba Fett,
although you would think that it would only be fair for him to have a season to himself once.
But if we're going to get into theory territory, maybe there's someone who can inherit the job from
him, right? I mean, in the first shot of the season or the first scene of the season, we see
Boba in the Bacta tank, right? And that foreshadows his rise to daimyo of Tatween.
the last shot of the season.
Right?
It's the only way you're going to get me.
We see someone else in the vodka tank.
Joanna's going to be tweeting hashtag make boba season two happen before we even finish recording.
Why wouldn't you call it the Book of Cobb Vance?
Why would you call it the Book of Boba Fett?
Why did they call it the Book of Boba Fett in the first place?
They didn't need to.
Yeah.
If you want to sell me and I'm already sold, I'm pre-sold, I'm pre-ordered.
Yeah.
On the Book of Cobb Vantth, I'm not.
I'm here. Yeah, that was my, I mean, that was my interpretation of like, well, if not us, who?
And at first I thought he meant the mods. And I was like, not them.
But the second time I watched it, I was like, oh, Cobb. And like if Cobb, who feels like so, yeah, like the, the marshal of the entire planet, which seems to have, what, three cities?
You know, like, he's, he's committed, his heart is committed to Freetown, but like, can he, does he have love in his heart?
for Moss Isley and Mos Espa as well.
Like, you know,
developed love very suddenly and dramatically for Moss Espa,
so I don't see why it can't happen.
It seems like the-
and the Tri-City area.
The Freetowners were not fans of Moss-Epa
from some of the comments they made,
but yeah, maybe they can learn to love it.
It makes sense to me because, right,
I mean, if Boba's not suited for it,
it certainly seems as if Cobb is,
he actually has the credentials, right?
He's qualified.
he's the lawman, he's the leader.
He has not made many incompetent decisions, as we saw both this season.
He hired Scott.
He hired Scott.
There's that, you know.
A permanent blight on his resume, if we're being honest.
Though, I guess now we know there are only like 11 other people in the entire town.
So, permanent options.
Limited choices, yeah.
But Boba can be the Western hero who rode into town and defeated the outlaws and
leaves again.
And then Cobbant sticks around.
Leaves to go away.
And he just like throws the sheriff's star at like, like,
like at the feet of Cobbant.
Will his rancor fit in the fire spray?
Like, where's Boba going?
I don't know where he can go from here.
Yeah, well, that is the question, right?
And I think we had questions coming into this
about whether Boba could carry his own series.
I think we still have some of those questions.
And possibly John Favreau and Dave Floney
had some of those questions, too,
given how the season was structured.
So maybe we relegate Bova back to his role
in Mando season two,
Right? Where he comes off the bench. So I could see him maybe teaming up with the Mandalorian.
We could get into theories for Mando season three here. But it seems like there's potential crossover because this is all just one big universe, whether we call it this show or that show or Mandorian 2.5 or whatever. It's all the same story. So maybe Boba crosses back over, right?
Yeah. Okay. So I do want to get into Mando season three in a second. I just need obviously circle back to Cobbman.
But my only argument against Book of Cobbam is that it gets in the way of the show that I actually really want, which is Dindjarn and Cobbath raised Groh Guga together on the road.
But it's never going to happen because, like, Dindjarn's a rolling stone and or he's going to go rule Mandelor.
Those are the two things.
And Cobbant's heart, for some inexplicable reason, belongs to the shitty planet of Tattoine.
So, like, there's Starcross lovers.
of Star Wars somewhat inexplicably too, right? That's one of my reservations is, do we need another
season on Tatween? We're already getting Obi-Wan, right? I've kind of had my fill at this point.
I mean, we learned some things about Tatooine. We saw some new sides of the planet this season,
but I think it might be time to move on. So maybe, maybe Cobb doesn't.
I have some bad news for you. The next Star Wars show, which comes out in May is set on Tatooine.
Yes.
Now, granted, it's early on the timeline. I want to be clear, I couldn't be more.
excited for Obi-Wan Kenobi. Could not be more excited, but will he stay on Tasmean?
That's the question. This is, I mean, look, if you put you in McGregor anywhere or you put
Oliphon anywhere, I know you two are in. So the settings. I regret. I regret to inform me that you're
watching. No, I'm in too. I don't have a life-size model right behind me at this moment.
It's not life-size. You're missing out.
You wish it were. But I put him away. He's not here. He was only here for one episode.
It wasn't a little distracting to look into his eyes while I was talking to.
But what if he has a bigger broader.
Wow. You're channeling to John Snow there.
To his eyes.
What if he has a slightly broader role?
What if we resurrect Rangers of the New Republic, right?
I like this.
The canceled caradoon show.
And we slot him into that role.
So he's not just a marshal of one town or one planet, but he's a roving lawman.
I'm crying at the thought of that.
Yeah, that would work for me.
I just want more comment.
All right, Mal, is there anything you want to say about Bubba season two before we rolled to Mando
Season 3?
There's not.
Okay.
Close in the book at Cobbant.
We will open it again when Disney wants us to.
All right.
So Mando's season three, Ben, you sort of tease that.
Do you want to talk like what your vision is for Amanda's Day?
Sure.
Well, it was kind of a flex, I think, by Favro and Flonie to resolve the most important pressing
plot thread before the season even started, which.
tells me that they must feel pretty confident, right?
That they still have a lot of story to tell.
Yeah, right.
Because they could have stretched that out for a season, right?
We would have watched just to will they or won't they get back together.
We all knew they would, but still didn't expect it to happen so soon.
So maybe Boba comes into the Mandelor plot that one would assume would be the centerpiece
of this season.
And it can kind of pick up from where we left off because Boba's looking for a tribe, right?
And maybe Mandelor and Mandalorians can become that tribe for him possibly.
And maybe he can also help Din realize that he doesn't need to follow those Bantha Fada rules, or at least not all of them, potentially.
So maybe they help each other out.
But obviously we're going to get Andalor, we're going to get Grogoo and Din just teaming up to go to that place.
Find the living waters.
Find those living waters.
Find that Mithesore.
Let's do it.
Exactly.
I can't fucking wait.
So my hope for Grogu, I think, is that he somehow gets the Dark Sabre fuses his Jedi and Mandelor foundling lineages, right?
As a combined Mandalorian Jedi, yeah, like Dark Saber creator Tarvisla, which would also be satisfying because we saw Moth Gideon hold the Dark Saber over Grogu's head in a traumatic scene.
So a little reversal of fortune here, have him wheeled it now that he passed up Luke's offer for Yoda's.
light saver, presumably. And then you get a little, sometimes the student guides the master and
we are what they grow beyond theme there where maybe Luke learns from Grogu.
He could stand to.
He could, yeah.
Put a seatbelt on that baby.
I saw people complained about Luke just delegating to Artu. Artu has saved the galaxy numerous times.
I'm just in Art2.
I'm totally fun.
Arturo is also fucked up.
Frankly, how dare you?
I'm standing right
We also in this finale
Saw Grogu's
Force soothing ability
Right which could come in handy
If there's another monster
That maybe Mando encounters at some point
Perhaps a mythosaur
I don't know whether it'll be a metaphorical
Mithosaur or an actual one
Is the real Mithosaur
The Friends who made along the way?
Exactly the way capital W
But
Wow wow yeah
That could happen too right
So if you see Groguu with the Darksaber and with the ability to tame the mythosaur,
they kind of make the perfect combo, right?
So I like that idea.
And of course, there's the question of what will we learn about Grogu's past, not just his future.
So we got a little glimpse here, but that is one of the most intriguing storylines for me here, too.
Yeah.
And I've been parsing what Asoka said back in the episode where she revealed Grogu's name.
And she says, at the end of the Clone Wars, when the empire rose to power, he was hidden.
someone took him from the temple.
So it doesn't necessarily say he was saved or that he was saved.
And then she said that after that it goes dark.
Right.
And so I've been wondering, A, does someone...
Emotional damage.
Yes.
And maybe that could be from seeing three Jedi cut down in front of him.
But maybe it's something else.
Maybe he extricates himself from the situation somehow.
We have seen him force choke, stormtroopers, remember?
Right? Not that big a leap to go from that to clone troopers. They look a lot the same. Maybe he was drawing on some previous experience in the temple when he did that. So I could see him. We know he's very powerful. He hasn't harnessed his powers yet. Maybe in this moment, he lashes out, right? And he saves himself. We see a little dark side, Grogu, and he blocks that out. That's why it's such a traumatic memory that he has repressed at all these years.
I was just thinking about the book of Cobb fan.
No.
I want to yes and something you said.
So you said that you want Grogu to get the Dark Sabre.
I feel like after this finale, I kind of want Dinh Jharing to keep the Dark Saber.
Because Mal and I were talking about a little earlier, like we've seen him struggle to use it.
And he struggles to use it in this episode.
And then when Grogu shows up, he can use it so much better.
Like he knows what he's fighting for.
He's able to wield it and he's able to drive it into the droid and stuff like that.
So I want to see Dinaran master the dark saber and like the force that he uses to do that is like the force of his child.
Like that they are a unit, you know what I mean?
Right.
And that like, you know, and that Grogu can use his force abilities better when dinners or Adam and stuff like that.
The other question I had is like, you know, obviously Mal and I've been talking about this idea that Mando's season three or Asoka or whatever like that we might see Ezra again, very soon.
soon and doesn't Ezra also have the like force ability to right yeah to soothe the monsters
beasts of the monsters so I was wondering like maybe the Mithosaur is too much for Grogu and it's like
it has to be Ezra and Grogo together soothing the Mithosaur after it but is that is that fan fiction
then they could cuddle grogher and the mythosur surviving like the rankor that'd be fun
guys that might be a rap for me if it happens I don't hide it
I don't know if I could go forward.
I'm just retiring.
Because there is the pesky question of if Groku gets the Dark Saber, how does he get it from Mando?
Right.
Because no one wants them to fight.
But if somebody else takes it for Mando.
Yeah, someone else takes it or they decide that they're not going to abide by these rules.
We got some, we got some Bowdoin tension coming.
But yes, I like the idea ultimately of them rejecting that narrative, right?
That media narrative that it has to be.
Right.
has to be one in combat and in battle.
I like the idea that you were talking about earlier,
just of in general, kind of Boba being in that din mix
because actually of the not just their relationship,
but the bow element, like thinking back to that scene
with Boba and Costco and Boe in the end of,
at the end of Mando season two was so great.
Like, don't you mean your donor, careful princess,
you're a clone?
I've heard your voice thousands of times.
There's a lot there to mine.
I'd like to see those characters together again.
Yes.
That would be fun.
But we're going to find out more about Kroghous past and what he's been doing for the past 30 years, one would imagine.
But because it's Star Wars, I doubt that he's going to be saved by the Jedi Temple janitor, right?
There's going to be something interesting that happens there.
And if he does kind of lash out, then maybe he passes out after that.
Someone else finds him.
Or maybe he was hidden, as Asoka said, but not hidden in safety necessarily.
Maybe he was taken purposely, right, by Anakin.
or Darth Vader at that point. Maybe Palpatine told him, hey, save the little guy who looks like Yoda,
right? Because he will live a really long time and I can just leach off of his force blood forever.
The Palpatine possibility really stands out rewatching that scene because it does seem like possible
that the 500 first is making a B-line for him potentially. Or does Darth have a twinge of conscience there
because it's one thing to cut down a room full of younglings, but another.
to kill an actual baby who looks like Yoda.
I don't know.
I don't know how much remorse Anakin was experiencing in that particular sequence.
No.
Yeah.
But maybe one of those two things.
Or maybe someone swoops in, right?
But that is, I think, one of the big draws here.
And then there's always Cadbane potentially, right?
I don't know which show he could be back in if he's back in either.
I mean, rude of him to die potentially right after I perfected my impression.
but maybe he didn't.
So you may have already talked about this,
but I think I'm kind of torn
just because he had that cool last line, right?
I knew you were a killer.
It doesn't work as well if he wasn't killed.
But it's also satisfying, I think,
for Boba's arc, such as it was in that series
where he kind of destroys his past self, right,
by killing Bain.
And I'm all for having some stakes, I think,
and I don't want everyone who seems to be
had to come back.
Don't worry.
Garso F.
Wip's dead.
Probably, I would think so.
Usually we say if you don't see the body,
then he could come back, right?
This time we saw the body,
but we also saw that beeping and blinking,
and maybe he's paging the modifier.
Phoenix survived the shot to the gut,
the long night,
and the very leisurely banther.
I just cannot accept that my dude who is coated in gadgets
is not going to be okay.
I just can't accept it.
Can I talk about another blue character?
I want to float a theory about you.
Max Revo is alive.
We did not see him die.
100%.
In on it.
Ryan Erie, who does great boba breakdowns on screen rant,
floated a theory that we know that Asoka is looking for Thron, looking for Ezra.
What if Thron is on Mandelor?
And it all sort of comes together there.
I've been wondering how exactly they're going to.
introduce the audience to the backstory that leads to Asoka, because I think that's kind of a more
complex, maybe a heavier lift than it is with these other shows, because in that case,
it's if her whole mission is that she's searching for Thron, she's searching for Ezra,
no one knows who Ezra is who hasn't watched Rebels, right?
So I think, you know, you could just say, oh, it's a lost Jedi who jetted off into space and
Thron people maybe know a little bit better.
But I think it would help perhaps to introduce them in a way that would overlap with people that, you know, characters that people have already seen in live action and wouldn't need me to come on and do a lore segment to explain who these people are.
I really recommend this video.
I think this is in his sort of like what's next for Star Wars TV breakdown video he did or something like that.
But he was talking about how all this stuff, all these plots, the Mandelor plot, the Thron plot, all this stuff,
is taking place in these outer regions of the galaxy
so that you could have some of these stories happening concurrently
with Ray and all of that
because it's in far enough reaches of the galaxy
where, yes, the First Order is coming back
but all of this stuff is happening
sort of on the margins of the larger story
because that's been the constant issue with Asoka
is how do we explain her absence?
And so like, oh, she's in another,
she's another realm or
she quit the Jedi Order at the time
whatever it is to get out of the way
and so this idea that like maybe this sort of
outer regions of galaxy
space is
a good setting to
have a lot of these characters off the table for the main
Skywalker saga as it goes forward
yeah the sequel trilogy it's kind of
confined in time and space
really there's less time
that elapses in that trilogy than there
is in the earlier trilogies and it
doesn't really range over as much
of the galaxy necessarily.
So I think it's easier to explain why so-and-so is not there at that time.
But you would think that while the lifespan of Groku sets up some sad scene with old man Mando
way down the line.
But I think it makes him very valuable potentially to Disney and Tolucas film as someone
who can bridge.
Maybe it's just ruling Mandelor peaceably while the sequel trilogy is happening, you know?
All right.
Anything else we want to say?
Young Garza Fhip,
well, younger Garza FIPP
in Obi-One.
Yes or no?
Yeah.
It's nice if Jennifer Beals had a reason
to have been cast.
Yes.
I have never laughed harder at the Midnight Boys
than when Van was like,
next time, get it up and comer.
Go to an acting class.
And hire someone new to play that character.
You're just going to blow up Jennifer Beals
and then not say her character's name
in the finale at all.
Yeah.
All right.
I look forward to the steamy
Tatooy Knights of the Ghost
of Satin and Young Garsof Whip
in the caves
with
a non-DH
U.M. Granger.
Anything else you want to say, Ben?
So the wookie gets a melon and I don't?
The quality of this series
fluctuated. Just a tad from week
to week, but talking to you too was
always a delight.
Oh, my God.
It was such a joy to have you here.
Genuinely.
Goodbye for now.
We'll always have your cat-bated impression.
Godbane and Ben-Linberg will be back.
All right.
We have sent Ben Lindberg off into the binary sunset,
and it's time to bring in our postmaster general of Tatumee,
and it is Jomey, dinner and I, Jomey.
I'm good. I missed you too, buddies.
You know, we're a bit of a bind here right now.
You've got to be careful to keep your head down.
But hey, you've got the shirt.
Wow, that's beautiful.
The shirt, you've got the shirt.
Honestly, really speaks to the quality of the bond, genuinely.
That was really touching.
Do you see the GIF that shows that, like, they're holding hands at one point in this episode?
Yes.
Thank you for mentioning this.
I can't believe I forgot to mention this.
The fuck is wrong with me.
I have watched that clip of Bando and Groger reuniting
Maybe a thousand times
Since Wednesday
They're holding hands
It's so beautiful
I love them so much
All right, let's get into these questions
Our first one from Andy
How would you rank your excitement
For each of the future live action Star Wars shows
Now I don't know if we have
This podcast is going on for
six hours.
You guys won't believe this, but we started recording at 6 a.m.
And it's, and it's 4 o'clock right now.
So it's just been a whole thing.
So we're going to go rapid fire with this one, I think.
Top three each maybe is a way to keep it tight.
Top three most anticipated shows.
I'll go and I'll say this is my top three and I'm not,
I reserve the right to change my list at any point.
This is always the case.
One, Mando season three, Grogo, obviously.
Two, Asoka, three, Obi-Wan.
That's my top three.
I'm also very excited for other shows,
but that's the top three.
And it's really more like 1-A, 1-B, 1C.
I'm so excited for all of them.
Joe?
Number one, because I like a miss,
well, I'll start at the bottom.
Start at the bottom of Obi-1.
Number three, Obi-1-Kanovi.
Yuma-Megroger, love him.
Number two, the known quantity,
Mando season two.
Season three.
Great.
Grogo.
Love you forever.
Number one, because I like a mystery,
is Leslie Headlands, the Akala.
I'm really excited for that to be something potentially very weird and cool.
I'm really hyped for that.
So I'm really curious what that might be.
I can't let me.
All right.
So my third would be Asoka, you know, excited.
But, you know, I'm ready to, you know, see what's going on there.
Number two, Mando, season three.
Like I was just saying, I love Grogu and Den.
So we'll be happy to see them back again.
And number one, Obi-Wan, clearly.
Got to see the dude.
And actually, my zero, this doesn't actually count because it's not a new show and it's not live action.
But I'm ready to see rebels, guys.
We're ready for you to see rebels.
We can't wait.
I'm tapped in.
Where are you?
Where are you?
I'm about to end season for the Kwan Wars soon.
Flying.
Ventress and what's his name?
Ducco.
General Canobie.
Canobie?
Oh, Grievous.
Grievous.
Yeah, Grievous.
They're on Dathamereemir.
now fighting.
Yeah.
Great.
And so I'm about to wrap that up with Savage and I'm not going to spoil it if you
have it.
Well, spoilers.
Darth Mall apparently comes back at the end of season four.
So I'm tapped it.
I'm ready.
Yeah.
That doesn't count.
But one of our listeners on Twitter called Savageo Press, the French Cologne.
And it made me laugh for like 20 minutes.
But I'm excited for rebels because I was talking to Mal about this.
all the stuff on Mandelor is special.
It's special television.
And so to know that, like, Rebels goes, like, you know, deep into that, I'm ready.
Let's go.
It doesn't count.
It's not live action, but that's where I'm going to love rebels.
We're so excited for your updates.
I'll just say I never thought there would be a scenario where I didn't answer that question
by having Asoka number one.
And again, 1A1B1C, but that's how hyped I am for Mando season three, in part because
of that.
Not only the Grogo and din of it all, but all of the Mandler elements will see Asoke on that
show.
I'm sure it's all connected.
They're all in the same timeline.
Not open.
Right.
But still, I can't wait.
Well, speaking of Grogu, our next question comes from Lauren.
And Lauren wants to know where is your favorite place that Grogu has napped thus far?
Wow.
I have a new favorite mailbag question.
It's a really good question.
This is incredible.
Holy shit.
Every nap that Grogo has ever taken is amazing.
If I had to pick just one, I think that my pick would be, you know, the,
the ice planet, Maldo Kreese in season two of Mando, episode two.
They're waylaid with Frog Lady and the Razor Crestes crashed.
This is before the attack of the ice spiders, just trying to get a snooze and Din sits down
to go to sleep and Grogo like curls up on his hip and just nozzles against him for a snooze.
That is my pick.
it is one of the sweetest things that I've ever had the pleasure to witness.
I don't want my answer to be this episode, but it's definitely this episode because he's
like, only does he curl up next to, he like burrows into the sand.
He like wiggles to get into place.
It's the cutest fucking thing I've ever seen.
So cute.
This episode.
Or last week when he, like, knapped in the middle of the crick, didn't he?
Like, after he was all tired out.
Luke's a little, little jerk.
He took a little crick nap.
Yeah.
Love that for him.
There's a, I can't remember.
the episode. But there's a gift where he's napping in the little hammock. Yeah. And I've,
I always want to be that calm and that relaxed. The hammock naps are great. Oh, to be a grogu
napping in a hammock. That's, that's the energy I want. When Mando takes him out of the little
the hammock bed and like holds him and cradles him as Grugoo naps in his arm before he thinks
they're about to say goodbye, that's very special too. Can someone on, uh, YouTube, just do a super
cut of all the Mando Grogu dad said moments and I'll just watch it whenever I'm feeling
low. Thanks so much in advance for that.
Inject that into my veins. I need it. Oh, God. All right. Our last question
Crumbs some S.E. Thai. And S.E. Ty asks, Bubba said he's not cut out to be
Darmio. What job should he try out for next? Jomi, what's your answer? We want to hear
your answer. We've talked about Bob all of the episode. What's your answer to this one? You'd take this
one. Man, I don't think Boba
can run a marathon,
to be honest. That boy
has no sense.
He's got no sense of awareness. He doesn't
know what he's doing. Right.
Look,
we all
saw the same thing.
Right? You spent all that time.
Man, I need to do this. I got
a bar-da-da. And the last
thing that we heard you
say is I'm not cut out
for this. You knew
the whole time.
You knew.
the whole time that this wasn't what you wanted.
And you sat, how many people died, Boba?
How many people lost their life?
Because you said, this is what I want to do.
But in the back of your mind, in your mandubla amlagata, you were like, hey, maybe this
say what I want, right?
And here's my thing, right?
Maybe you're not cut out for it, right?
But you got to want to try.
You got to be like, hey, man, I'm going to give it a.
shot. Even if I don't believe in myself, hopefully the people believe in me. Give me confidence.
Give me strength if you're going to be my dimeio. But nah, I can't do it. I don't have it in me.
What is that? And I'm supposed to, I'm supposed to trust you with my life, with my family,
under no circumstance. Under no circumstance. Like, if I've, if like, you know, if I'm like,
hey, I'm looking for work, I need somewhere to go and like, oh, I speak to the bar.
and Boba Fett's looking at me across the table,
I'm walking out, I'm leaving.
I'm taking my bag, I'm going home.
I don't want to work for you.
I don't want to work for somebody
who doesn't have faith
who doesn't believe in themselves.
It's embarrassing.
It's disappointing.
And frankly, the people of most ESPA deserve better.
So long story short,
he shouldn't try out for any job, right?
He needs to go home, re-evaluate,
think about himself.
Like, hey, man, what do I want to do here?
You know, he doesn't need to
to work. Maybe he said he got a lot of credits, right? Maybe go sightsee. Take up art. Right? No, no jobs.
Poetry. Don't lead people because that's not what you're about. You don't have the skills.
You don't have the heart for it. And that's okay. Two things. Number one. That's the funniest thing I ever heard.
Number two, I think your new Star Wars name is the Dublo. I'm just saying to use your brain, man.
you can't what if like what if somebody like what if somebody left they died in that scenario
and you overheard bubba going amen maybe i should have done all this but like you saying now
you couldn't have said that 30 minutes ago you could have said that when garza flip still had
all of her skin right i would be so bad no not worth it not worth it whatever lesson he learned is not worth
The loss of my beloved Garza Fhip and those and my pig boys.
I'm saying.
He's got to learn why he's ed.
He can't do it.
Special spin off Garso Fip and the pig boys.
Maybe he should,
maybe he should run a slam poetry night,
an open mic night run by Bubba Fett.
He's like he has a,
here's what he has a knack for.
Taking like broken weirdos in under his wing, right?
He's like,
hey,
He wasn't even a good Zordon to the Mighty Morphan Tatooine Wangers.
Like he could have like, you know what I'm saying?
Outfitted him with some cool stuff.
He'd even do that.
There was, Phenic is the real boss if it being real with you.
Right?
Like, I mean, you talked about a midnight boy.
Fenwick was out there.
She saved the Mighty Morphan Tattooing Rangers.
You know, she killed all the people in most eyes.
Like that's, you know, let's like, is Fennick their brains of the operation?
I don't want to start agendas, right, this late.
But like, where is the book of Phenick?
You know what I'm saying?
Like, what's going on?
Like, let's have this discussion.
Who should really be in charge?
Absolutely.
She was like, that's a bad idea.
And he's like, I'm going to do it anyway.
And then it was a bad idea every time.
God.
She's better.
She better to me.
I would have been upset.
We would have had that a problem.
You know what I'm saying?
John Snow, shout out to him.
Every time somebody was like, hey, John don't do this.
And he did it.
He was always right.
He didn't go back and was like, I told you so.
Fennick, if I was Fennick,
I would have been in Bubba's face every single minute.
You're wrong.
I told you so.
You need to do better.
Right?
I would have been this girl all the time.
She's a better human being than me.
You know, it's probably all the metallic guts.
You know, shout out to the mods.
But I just couldn't do it.
I couldn't do it.
That's the bottom line.
I would just, I would be insufferable.
All right.
Mallory, do you have any thoughts or feelings about what Boba Fett should run?
Take some time to spend with his.
with his rancor and write some poetry.
I like the poetry idea.
I think Boba should reflect.
That's what I want for him.
Yeah, he needs a break.
He needs a break.
All right, did we do it?
We did it.
We did it.
We had a long once again.
And this time I'm going to say all the things I'm supposed to say, which is number one.
Charles and I and maybe probably Van.
Jomey and Steve probably also.
We'll all be back on Monday, talk about Super Bowl and what we saw there, what
trailers we saw there. I'm really excited for that. Lord of the Rings ever heard of it.
Wednesday, the Midnight Boys, Poo-Pew, we'll be back doing something. We don't know what.
It's a mystery. So come back in here what they have to say. They're always funny no matter what
they're talking about. So I recommend that. And then on Friday, peacemaker finale breakdown with Mallory,
it's you and Charles and Mann. Is that who's doing that on Friday? Great.
stuff. I mean, a full week of content in the ringerverse. Can't miss. This episode
was produced by the great Steve Allman, who would never just walk off a cliff, as far as I know.
And he would keep his jetpack, you know, to stand, fueled by standards.
Filled up all the way. Social, King of Social, Jomea Dineron, who would not ride a rancore into downtown
Mos Esva.
just let the chips smaller where they may.
And of course, our great producer,
Juno Ram de Paul for, you know,
definitely deciding to not throw a baby into an X-wing
and not even fasten the seatbelt or anything else.
So thanks to all of those guys for not betraying us or letting us down.
And we will be back with so much for reverse content next week.
Thanks to you all.
Bye.
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