House of R - 'The Mandalorian' Season 3 Episode 1 Deep Dive
Episode Date: March 4, 2023This is the way ... to the best deep dive in the galaxy! Mal and Jo are back to dive into their thoughts on the epic Season 3 premiere of ‘The Mandalorian’ (09:15). They then begin their deep dive... with where the Mandalorian people are and what adventure awaits Din and Grogu (21:43). Later Ben Lindbergh joins to discuss the lore of a special hyperspace whale (01:58:00), all before giving out their episode rewards and theories. Hosts: Mallory Rubin and Joanna Robinson Guest: Ben Lindbergh Senior Producer: Steve Ahlman Social: Jomi Adeniran Additional Production Support: Arjuna Ramgopal Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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When you're lost in the darkness, look for the pod.
Specifically, the Prestige TV podcast on the Ringer Podcast Network,
where we're breaking down every new episode of HBO's The Last of Us.
On Sunday nights, grab your battery and join Van Lathen and Charles Holmes
for an instant reaction to the latest episode.
Then head back to the QZ on Tuesdays for a deep dive with Joanna Robinson and Mallory Rubin.
From character arcs to video game adaptation choices, story themes to needle drops,
we'll parse every inch of this cordyceps-coded universe.
Watch out for mouth tendrils and follow along on
Spotify or wherever you get your podcast.
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Do you still have the saber?
I do.
Then you lead them.
Wave that thing around and they'll do whatever you say.
So you gave up your designs to retake Mandelor?
Your cult gave up on Mandelor long before the perch.
Where were you that?
And welcome into the Ringerverse here on the Ringer podcast network.
I'm Mallory Rubin and it is my absolute pleasure to invite you not only to Calavala.
There's plenty of room.
But also, to join us on the Ringer's Nexus podcast feed for all things fandom,
joining me today, suddenly demanding that we refer to her as the Pirate King whose name is familiar to all in this sector.
It's my favorite bad baby
and my house of our
co-host Joanna Robinson
Mallory
The armor was able to build this
helmet in a cave with a box of scraps
We're back
We're back with Manalorian.
I'm so excited.
We've never done a full season
of the Mandalorian together.
We've only done Boba-Fibaba Fed episodes
that are basically
Mandalorian episodes.
We only did Mando
Season 2.5 together.
Yeah.
Oh my God.
I'm so excited.
This is thrilling.
I'm brimming with joy.
I'm so,
so,
excited to talk about the show
with you every week
for the next eight weeks.
Before we climb in together today
to the N1 Starfighter, though,
let's hit those programming reminders,
Joe,
there's a lot happening across the network.
The Midnight Boys,
Biu!
Poo!
Of course.
already have their instant reaction to the premiere up on the feed.
All season long, you'll be able to get the Midnight Boys Instry Action on Wednesdays.
You'll get our House of Our Deep Dive on Fridays.
If you're still wondering about some of the lore-centric history, you're like,
oh, there's all this stuff about Mandelor and Dark Sabres and this,
I'm interested in learning more about this Boca Tan who's popping up at the end of the premiere.
Go back if you haven't yet and check out the primer pot that we did.
We went through our most essential Mando moments to ready for the season,
and we went through a lot of the animated canon that's going to be really,
we assume, essential for the journey to come here.
So check that out if you haven't yet.
If you're wondering what else we're up to outside of Mando.
I was.
I was wondering.
We're still in the Cordyceps Apocalypse as well.
A couple more weeks left.
The tendrils are reaching.
Of The Last of Us, a show that we are loving and loving covering over on our sister
pod, the Prestige TV podcast. You can hear Van and Charles with our instant
reactions on Sunday night. We have our deep dive on Tuesday. So pop over there and check out
those pods if you haven't. And Joe, is there something you want to remind folks about that's
coming a few weeks from now and might warrant a little prep in anticipation?
Speaking of a hot daddy and a spaceship with a companion, we are going to be doing a
year-long, re-watch, revisitation, first-time watch for Mallory, exploration of the TV series,
Doctor Who, leading up to the anniversary special that's airing at the end of this year, I think,
in November, I believe.
So we're starting with our first installment at the end of this month.
So we are in March, at the end of March, the first installment of the Doctor Who revisit slash
first-time watch for Mallory.
We are starting with the first season of what's called New World.
Who Who.
Right.
And it is the Christopher Eccleston season.
So if you go to HBO Max and look up like the Doctor Who episodes, because they're all over there on HBO Max, it's season.
That's what it's called over there.
So like all we're covering.
It's just that season of television.
It's not much to ask a quick little weekend binge, if you will.
And we're really excited.
I'm like so excited to bring Mallory into this world.
So, yeah.
I can't wait.
We got a lot.
A lot of fun shows and stories to talk about every next few weeks.
And it march is totally clear of other shows, so it's the perfect time for us to do this.
Logan Roy has an update for you, Joanna.
I heard that there were some cannibal girls in a wilderness somewhere.
Might have something to say about that.
Joe, how can the folks listening at home follow all of that?
Oh my gosh.
I'm so glad you asked me.
Listen, if they want to subscribe to this feed, the Ring Reverse feed,
I can't see any reason not to at this point, right?
First of all, secondly, Sister Pod, as you mentioned, PrestiHTV,
why don't you go ahead and subscribe to that one too?
I would, if I were you.
Also, if you want to follow us on socials, our pal Jomi at Dineron is just like crushing it all over the place, TikTok.
I saw him mention on a TikTok like he was some sort of like famous social media guy.
He is.
That's Jomey.
And he's doing it on TikTok, on Instagram, on Twitter.
Follow us at the ringer, at Ringerverse on all of those platforms.
And then last but certainly not least.
We got a space skater in this episode.
We got a little grogoo.
In spirit, that is Hobbits and Dragons at gmail.com.
That is still our email address.
The joint is jumping over there.
The apple debate rages on.
The mushroom recipes are pouring in.
We got some dipping dots take this week, Mallory.
I expected as much.
Yeah.
So, you know, and we got some great Mando emails, which we'll be reading this week in the episode.
So if you've got Mando thoughts and feelings, last of us thoughts are feelings,
poker face thoughts or feelings, because that's where those go to.
And then like any sort of food take that we happen to smash on you over the head with Hops and Dragos to Gmail.com.
Back to you, Mallory.
I love it.
Keep the emails coming all season long.
And last thing on the reminders front, as always, bear in mind, please, our friendly neighborhood spoiler warning.
Today's podcast will, of course, feature plot details, all of the plot details from the Mandalorian season three premiere.
But also all of Mando.
Anything in the Mandoverse, that means Boba Fett, Clone Wars, Rebels.
Spoilers for Star Wars.
All of Star Wars.
It's all on the table today.
So if you don't want to hear any rebels deep cuts, for example, though, why wouldn't you?
Proceed with more caution than the armorer did.
when holding a creed baptism in a creature layer.
Just pick a different spot.
That's all.
Yeah.
We'll talk about that.
I have some like event planning questions.
Oh, man.
Event planning questions.
I can't wait.
All right.
We have so much to get to.
Let's just dive in.
We are here to talk about the season one premiere chapter 17, the apostate.
We love, we had fun.
We had fun with the Bazvisla, apostate line.
our primer pod. I just have to say, like, I'm proud of us. Like, when this episode title came up,
when it was the apostate, I was like, Mallory and I talked about the word apostate for literally
minutes on our primer podcast. Wonderful stuff. Joe, who penned, who helmed this episode? How long was it?
Give us the quick facts. Written by John Favro ever heard of him.
Of yon, yeah, directed by Rick Famu Youa. This is only a 37-minute episode with credits.
It's a real shorty.
We have a real shorty.
But I have some thoughts and theories about that.
So that is what we're here to talk about today.
Already teasing Theory Corner.
And we've only just begun.
That's just a pro move.
It's a pro move from you, Jim.
Honestly.
Part of what's exciting today, not only talking about the premiere,
talking about the season, hearing your theories,
we also get to hear something else.
And it's whatever new sound design,
our beloved producer Steve Allman has for season 3 in the Mandalorian,
we don't know yet.
We're about to find out in real time he's surprising us today.
So let's start, as we always do in a deep dive with our opening snapshot.
Welcome to the Port of Ringerverse, gem of the outer rim.
Wow.
Peppy.
Okay, John Williams.
Look at you.
Okay, knock off John Williams.
Oh, boy.
Joanna Robinson.
Yeah.
Overall impressions, quick snapshot.
We'll talk more about what we thought of all of the specific aspects of the episode as we go, of course.
But give us the opening snapshot of your impressions of Chapter 17 The Apostate.
Well, I'm really glad you asked me, Mallory.
And I'm really excited to hear your impressions because you went to the premiere in Los Angeles.
So I'm excited for your update.
But I will just say that, like, this is a shorty of an episode.
There was a lot of recap for folks who,
hadn't watched Book of Boba Fett, not just in the previously on, but like we have repeated
beats in this episode or just quick moments of exposition. We've got two spectacle moments, right,
with the Gator Fight and the Pirate Fight, and then like so many Googles and coos and cuteness
from Grogum. And so what it felt like, I mean, there's a part of me that feels like this
could be probably latched on to episode two to give us like a supersized premiere. And that might
have felt like there was a little bit more like textual meat on the bone.
But in terms of a, like, mood setter of like, welcome back.
Remember how cute this baby is?
We know you remember how cute Pedro Pascal is.
We're not going to show you his face, though.
But, you know.
We got to see it in the previously on.
That was something.
Thanks for that.
But yeah, for like a mood setter, for a phabro flexing a little bit about like this is what we can do.
This is what we do here, adventure.
This is the tone.
especially after not just the last of us,
which is like a different tone of this story
that we're watching around HBO,
but after Andor,
and we'll talk about that in a second,
but just sort of like a,
I think a needful dunk
in the living waters of this show, if you will,
to remind us where we're where.
How about you, Mel?
Yeah.
I'm just so glad to be back in the Mandalorian universe,
and it was really fun.
Van and I went to the premiere,
and they surprised us
in real time by show on the second episode.
It was just so fun to gasp aloud and laugh
and clench my heart when Grogukud or did a cute thing
and then hear that echoed in the room, right?
Like, it's always just a really neat experience.
So that was just a really fun shared Mando fandom night.
I thought that the first episode was really good and really fun
and had that Mando energy that we need to like reaclimate,
yes, the few lines that we get that are if you miss Boba Fett lines,
of course, if you like us watched the book of Boba Fett,
then that feels a little awkward.
I think it needs to be there for the people who didn't,
and I think it's appropriate that those moments are there for the people who didn't,
because you don't want the conductive tissue across the expanded universe
to start to feel like it's prohibitive to continue the journey if you miss it.
So I'm glad that people who didn't see Boba.
I hope everyone checks out those Bob episodes because the Mando ones are really wonderful.
But I'm glad that people who didn't see those get to just pick up.
And, you know, I think there's this interesting question of should the Boba hours have just been the Mando season three kickoff instead?
And I'm like of a couple different minds about this because on the one hand, as you know, Joanna, I love a connected universe.
I love when we get these cross-show appearances, if it makes sense,
and if it feels appropriate and like it's the right time and place for that.
And this is the Mando timeline.
That's the stretch of Star Wars that we're in now.
That will also be true for Soka.
That will also be true for skeleton crew.
So it makes sense to see these characters appearing in each other's stories.
And while episodes five and six of Boba,
and just a couple scenes of episode seven
would have been like an astonishingly rich
and compelling opening stretch
of the Mandalorian season three
if they had gone that way.
The flip side is pretty apparent,
which is we would have had to wait
for our core duo,
our lone wolf and cub.
Check out that pot if you haven't yet.
The trope's course,
always there for you.
We would have had to wait to see the reunion
and to kick off with them together,
to have the thrill of Grogu
popping up in the bubble,
seeing him in his little Bessar shirt,
the episode put us back in the world.
It put us back with our core pairing.
And now from here we move forward
into whatever this season seeks to explore.
So was this the single best episode
of the Mandalorian ever?
No.
But I thought that it was kind of like
unapologetically itself
and really felt like a contained adventure of the week.
Here's what we need to take care of right now
before we go move on to the next quest.
Like traditional Mando episode
in a way that I actually really like appreciated and enjoyed.
It's not trying to be something.
else and knows what it is. And the thing that it is is something that we've all loved. So it felt
good to be back in the world. I still feel pretty strongly that those Bob episodes should have been
Mandalorian episodes, but I'm not like as irritated by it as I was. I left those feelings back in
2022. It does make me sad if anybody, if anybody like missed those stuff. You have to go watch them.
I'm sorry to tell you. You don't have to watch all of Boba Fett, but you have to go watch those
episodes. There's so much in there. And so I think it's a little like,
it does feel a little like you have to watch all of them to understand everything,
like the true depth of everything.
So I still think that was a little shesty,
but I think that ultimately, at the end of the day,
it doesn't matter.
This all feels like one large story.
They're telling we're watching all of it,
so we're not missing anything.
And I think, you know, an analogy I used to you when we were sort of texting about
this last couple days was, you know, thinking a lot about Andor
and like how much we loved Andor,
that Andor felt like delicious granola,
like brain food of a kind, right?
And that this is like your sugary Saturday morning special cereal
that you get to watch with your like cartoons on Saturday morning.
I don't know if that's how cereal worked in other people's houses
and it actually isn't even how it worked in my house.
But I've heard tell that you get like special sugary cereal on a week,
weekend morning, right?
Every day for me.
Never in my house.
No sugar A series.
It's really loud.
It was like...
Mainlining sugar smacks, now honey smacks, and crunch berries.
I think the reason I associated with weekends is like I would get it at Friends House.
Like, we went to a friend's house.
Oh, yeah.
They might have like Coco Krispies or something like that.
So that's what this feels like.
It's sugary.
There's not a lot of nutritional value, at least in, especially I would say in this episode.
I'm sure there's more to come.
But there's nothing wrong.
Like, both of those things are good.
and it's good to have both of them, and this is just a reminder.
Like, you know, let's throw down the bowl, fill it with milk and cereal.
Like, this is what you're eating right now.
And you're like, okay.
So it's a good reacclamation.
Yeah, I think that it's not a surprise given how impactful and engrossing Ander was for so many Star Wars fans.
If that feels like a bit of a phantom presence, just in general, across really any TV show.
it was such a wonderful viewing experience,
but we talked about this during the Andororan,
and I feel it really strongly here,
part of the joy of Star Wars
and part of what makes Star Wars successful
when it is operating at a high frequency
is that there are all of these different flavors
and vibes and character sets and intentions
and elements to the world.
Like that scope and that variance is what,
makes Star Wars so fun? And we chat about that often in the areas that have been less successful,
you know, The Rise of Skywalker, why does everything have to circle back to X, Y, and Z? Why does everything
have to feel the same? Like, it can get off the rails quickly if everybody's trying to emulate
each other. And so again, that's why I said earlier, like the fact that this just felt so purely
like an episode of The Mandalorian. Like, here we are, back with our pals for another week of this
adventure show, was I thought really, like, refreshing and heartening. And I think that there will be a lot of
and depth.
There's, you know, one of the things
that we, I think,
both really enjoyed
about doing our top moments.
PrimerPod
is tracking those
through lines of the mythology
of the idea of the creed
and the way and the rigidity
of these strictures
that have guided the characters
and how can this relationship
and the foundling bond
and the mudhorn
and the clad of two
and the overarching,
like the overarching questions
and sort of like
which are outside of Star Wars.
sort of fundamental questions of identity and belonging and all this sort of stuff.
Exactly.
And so I think that that's one of the things that the show does well in his position to do
really well this season is explore those thematically compelling questions and through lines
while we're popping across the galaxy with our pals and their N1 Starfighter.
So I'm hyped that we're back.
I can't wait to talk about the season with you.
I did want to ask one last thing before we dive in, which is just do you feel a compulsion
to comment on the John Feverod timeline?
explanations that have been absolutely dominating internet discourse this week,
or does that way lie badness?
It's just what I feel overall is just needlessly baffling.
Like, I just don't think that any of us, I mean, I'm sure some of us, someone asked him
that question.
Like, the people who need to know every granular detail of Star Wars and they exist, and often
they are us, need to know exactly how much time has passed in X, Y, and Z.
But I don't know that was like, just at me, bro.
I don't know there was like a big burning.
I know.
Mal likes to write down her like BVY days and something like that.
Yeah, and it's like at the top of every doc.
You can find like a 20 bullet point deep timeline.
Yeah.
True.
But like I don't think that it was like a big like point of confusion until now.
Right.
Like that Favro on like in like a couple junk in interviews and then an attempt to clarify on the
red carpet of the premiere was asked about.
or offered up information about the timeline.
And this is my final takeaway, which is,
and you pulled the, in our notes here,
you have the quote from the Red Carp Premier
where Mark Malkin asked him,
this is my final answer,
which is Favro is telling us that thus far,
the show is operating in real time,
which is to say that Grogu has been with Dinharan
for as long as we have seen him be with Dindjaran,
darn in our lives, years had passed.
This has not been like a couple months or whatever.
Similarly, Grogu was with Luke Skywalker from the time of the season two finale to when
we saw him leave him in Book of Boba Fett, which was a little over a year.
And then it's been another year again since that where Din and Grogu have been together
bombing around.
That's my understanding.
So just to think of it in sort of as many years as we've been.
with the show that so many years have passed in the story of these two folks.
Do you agree with that assessment?
This is the biggest question I have is how many public transit space shuttle rides
Din Jarn was checking the Dark Sabre on before he got the N1 Starfighter, if that's the case.
It's a great question.
So that's the thing I, that is the thing I simply cannot shake.
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Is it time to dive deep?
Let's do it.
Is it time to bathe in the living water?
of the season three premiere.
Oh, Steve, you have a little equatic sound at the end.
A little trickle.
The lapping waves.
Oh, so excited.
Okay, here we go.
Great stuff.
Steve, you're a one of one.
A treasure.
You're great.
Our own and Zellon.
Pod Smith.
Remember how Steve, before we started recording,
he was like, yeah, you'll yell at me during the pod.
And I was like, do you mean compliment you, Steve?
Is that how you receive compliments?
All right.
Oh, boy.
All right.
Let's start right at the beginning of the episode with the armor.
We open with the armorer forging a new kiddo helmet leading this ceremony where a foundling we can assume will be taking the creed.
A couple things here.
We get the hammer.
You already quoted our guy Obadiastain.
You already noted this, this parallel.
And of course, it's all part of the existence.
extended favover verse of the hammering sound, the hammer and tongs that we got in the opening
helmet sequence and then we go right into the armorer. This is a very armor centric, even beyond
just the fact that we're at a creed ceremony, a very armor centric opening to the season,
which feels notable. She came up a lot in our preview episode, Joe. She really did.
What did you think about opening with her? Well, I think because
almost any time we get
like creed or philosophy
or whatever downloads
they come from
Emily Swallow as the armorer
they just like love
giving her these lines
because she's so good
at delivering them
in a way that just feels like
mythic
and her costume design
is like maybe my favorite
of the entire series
so I love checking in
with the armor
I love that we hear it
before we see it
which not like
has to make us think
not only of Iron Man
but of Endgame
right when we hear
Tony Stark's hammer
is like the end sound
of the Infinity saga
you know what I mean
and so it's like
I felt like
in such a Marvel headspace
when this all started
but yeah I love
the we're opening with her
this does feel
a little bit like
this part of the scene
is only here
if you didn't watch
Book of Boba Fett
and so they dressed it up
with a bunch of other things
including a giant
gator fight
you know what I mean
but like
I love that we're starting
with her. And I feel as we continue to look at Dingerian's identity, where he belongs,
like if it's been a year since the last time he talked to the armor in the book of Boba Fed episode,
you know, he's been spending a year wanting to come back, obviously. So, yeah, what about you?
What did you think of the armor here? I loved it. It feels like she'll be a very significant figure in the
season in in Dinn's personal journey and what is currently an obsessive quest to pursue this
redemption and to be forgiven and to be welcomed back into the covert.
But also, you know, when we, when Dinn asked the armorer in Booba chapter five about
Boatan, we got to hear what the armorer thinks of Bo.
They're on these very different sides.
We obviously also got to hear Bo just spew these indictments of the children of the watch.
So these characters have opposing philosophies.
They're both very central in Dyn's life.
So getting both of them as the book ends.
The opening and closing of this episode felt very, very purposeful.
I also just thought, at the most basic level,
it was fucking cool to see a helmet forged.
Like the Mandalorian helmet is one of the most iconic things,
not only in Star Wars, but in pop culture, certainly in the nerdverse.
We spent a lot of time across the Mandalorian seeing armor forged.
but to get to see a helmet forged,
this was just wonderful.
And I love our pal Ben Lindbergh.
Well, of course, as always,
and the Star Wars poppy joining us later today
for a little lore corner.
Hell yeah.
He had a little line in his wonderful weekly episode breakdown,
which everyone should read on the ringer.com.
What a great website about, you know,
this liquid that she pours in
whenever we see her forging something being,
he assumes perhaps,
from the living waters that we keep hearing about,
which I thought was really neat.
I also just liked seeing her spray paint the helmet.
We know that Sabine Rann is going to be coming to the live action in Soak Up,
perhaps sooner, perhaps this season we'll get to meet Sabine,
given how Central Mandelor is going to be.
And when you think of spray painting a helmet, you just think of Sabine.
So there were all these little fun connections right away that I enjoyed.
And then we go out of the cave, we follow the armor out,
into this cove, into this ritual, take us through, Joe, what we hear, what the vibe is,
and the very overt religious parallels on display.
This is a baptism ceremony, right?
And we see that the covert has grown significantly since we last thought.
It was a covert of two.
And now, you know, there's a ton of helmets on display here.
Mallory's merch-loving heart is salivating over all the helmet options.
One of the most brazen, here's all the...
the new merch we're going to be able to make plays in recorded human history, and I, for one,
respected it.
I love it.
We see a bunch of foundlings already have their helmets, and, like, some even look smaller than
this boy, so it's not even, like, and we know that, like, foundlings, the way it works,
it's not, it's not necessarily, like, an age ritual.
It's, like, a when you come to this covert and when you have been fully embraced, because
there are, like, smaller kids with helmets than this kid.
might be 175 by the time he says the words.
You know, you're never too old.
So we get this kid standing in the water, and yeah, it does look like a classic sort of baptism, ceremony.
He's not wearing white, but other than that.
And then we get this recitation of these words.
I swear on my name and the names of the ancestors that I shall walk the way of the Mandalore,
and the words of the creed shall be forever forged.
in my heart. I love, you know, forged, forging words as part of the creed. I think it's great.
Yeah. I mean, we're on a, as anyone who's listened to us talk about the Mandalorian will know,
we're on a pretty, pretty set, fixed, let's abolish this zealotry path. Yeah.
But the poetry of forged. It hit the mark joe with the hammer and tongs.
Yeah, you love a water-based ritual. You do.
You do. Did you think this was a flashback? Because I definitely did. And I think many people did. And I think it was intentional. And that's what I'm curious to ask you about. There are a few different reasons that they could have been trying to cultivate that response or assumption in us. What seems most likely to you? To me, I think, I don't know a person who didn't think this was a flashback. And like that's one of the enjoyable aspects of, you know,
this cult that never takes its helmets off like they are ageless, right?
So you can do a flashback with the armor.
She's always been here.
She always looks that way, right?
Who knows how old Paz Vizal is under there?
Eternal.
He's eternal.
But I think that I think what we're meant, if we think it's a Dyn Jaran,
then we're thinking about how young Dinn was when he went through the ceremony,
how long this has been a core part of it.
of his personality.
So it's not something
that's easily shed
when Boca Tan
when she first meets him
in season two
and is sort of saying
like listen man
this is not the way
it's all way
and he's like
literally what are you talking about
this is the only thing I know.
This is the way
is the only way
she's like no it's all way
you don't have to have
helmet hair for the rest of your life
my friend.
And so
but these things are not easily
like this kind of programming
or culture, if you prefer a less insidious word,
is not easily shed in general,
and definitely not if it happened to you
or happened for you as a child
and a child who was lost
and grateful to be taken in.
So I think that that's...
I think it's really smart in that way
to sort of trick us with a pseudo-flashback,
but make us think about young Dinhar.
What do you think, Mel?
Yeah, I agree.
I liked...
I liked being briefly duped there for the opening few minutes.
I think part of it is because when the attack comes, it's an interruption.
From this moment on, I shall never remove my helmet.
From this moment on, I shall never, oh, wait, halt, pause.
We have a battle to wage.
And so in that second where we're still thinking it's din, there's a little bit of a,
does our guy have a loophole?
Did he maybe never finished?
Okay.
I don't know what you were talking about,
the water-based ceremonies
because I can't think of any that I love,
but I do love a legal loophole.
Yeah, you love the ocean,
and you love a legal loophole.
So I think this is all really coalescing
for you here.
There's also, you know,
what you already noted,
just the surprise of the sheer,
the head count,
the sheer volume of the people in the cover.
It was one of the things
of the Boba chapter five episode
that was always so funny
because it's the armor and Paz.
Then they're just thrilled
to have Din back.
Paz says there are three of us now,
and then he's immediately excommunicated back to two.
So we just are amazed.
It wouldn't occur to us
that they could have recruited that effectively
that quickly and swollen their ranks to that extent.
But I think the main thing is what you already said,
just the reminder of how young Din was.
And we had that nice moment in an episode we love,
Chapter 4 Sanctuary,
where in season one where O'Meara asked in
how long it had been,
since he'd taken that helmet off and he said yesterday,
which is still very funny every time you rewatch it.
She says, I mean, in front of someone else,
I wasn't much older than they are.
And he's looking out the window to where her daughter is playing with Grogo.
The children are.
So we knew that he said the words when he was that young.
And the thing that he expresses,
because she's, as anyone, would be like,
shocked and appalled, right?
You haven't shown your face to anyone since you were a kid.
And what he replies with is gratitude,
gratitude for the group that took him in after he lost his parents, after the tragedy and trauma of his youth.
And it's like you said, like, we have these moments of frustration.
Dan, you don't have to do this thing just because they tell you to.
The bond you have with Grogu is, that's the new way for you guys to plot together.
But when you're reminded in an instant like this of the truth of his existence and the gratitude that he associates with that truth, yeah, it would be a hard thing.
it would be a hard thing to shake.
And I think it's important for us to remember that,
which will ultimately make it more rewarding
if he is able to move beyond it.
Yeah, it helps us establish those stakes
of what he would be giving up
if he decides to give up this life.
Before we talk about the stakes
that come out of the body of the dinosaur turtle,
which, by the way, is the official name
on Wikipedia dinosaur turtle,
just remarkable stuff.
That's some real avatar naming of a creature.
I do have to ask you because one of our favorite corners, a corner that, frankly, you never leave.
No, I live there.
Is Whigwatch with Joanna Robinson.
Yeah.
Big Wajum.
Wow.
Steve, you've outdone yourself.
You have outdone yourself.
You've broken me.
That's the funniest thing.
Oh, boy.
I'm going to need to do Wigwatch like 17 times for episodes so that we can just
Keep hearing that.
Oh, my God.
All right.
But I have to ask you, because in the Mandalorian, helmets, they are wigs, Joe.
Sure they are.
Characters, it's all we see.
We never get to see the wig.
We never get to see the hair.
So what do you want to say here on Helmet Wig Watch Corner about this vast array of new armor that we got to see?
All of these color rays, we got to see a couple fun signets, which we'll talk about maybe in the Easter Egg section later.
What's to that out?
Okay.
Do your trained eye?
I saw.
that you put this in the note so I wasn't going to let you down. I certainly wasn't going to give up an
opportunity to talk about wigs, even though helmets aren't wigs, but that's okay. And I certainly
didn't want to miss an opportunity to hear that stinger that Steve created. But I went, I went back
through and I was pouring over the various helmets. And there's just nothing in that scene that can
top the armor's helmet, like the horns and the brass and the rocketeer vibes and everything
that's like going on with her is so amazing. The only thing that comes to
comes close to me, is at one point when the young ones are like scrambling at the back of the
crowd to get away, there is one founding with like a Kelly Green, like solid Kelly Green helmet.
I love that one. It's like a Philadelphia Eagles throwback jersey.
I was thinking like it's a very like St. Patrick's Day, true Kelly Green. And since we are...
You weren't thinking about the Eagles throwback jersey is weird.
I'm always thinking about Ireland, actually, in my heritage. But it's March. We're in the month
of St. Patrick's Day. We're only two weeks away.
too late to get your spray paint in your helmet,
Kelly Green, so you don't get pinched
on say Packer's Day. So I'm going to say the Irish
founding. I would also like to
port in wigwatch from another
show entirely. Oh, wow.
In a very irresponsible fashion and address
this email. We love a smuggle.
What do you mean? We got an email from Kimberly.
Yay.
The cause back. I missed it.
I really did. We got an email from Kimberly
who wrote an email about
I don't think it just debuted last night
So I don't think you have a chance to watch
Daisy Jones in The Six
But this is an Amazon Prime Video Show
that a lot of people are watching and talking about
based on a book that I really loved
Our guy Timothy Oliphon, aka Cobb Vantth, is in there
There are some truly atrocious
Crimes Against a Handsome Man
It's the 70s wig action happening
on old Tim's head
So
Cobb Vant has like
Some of the best hair in the galaxy
We're splendid.
But Tim and Daisy Jones
it's a bad situation.
There's also like, if you guys watch,
if you wind up watching the show,
I need you to be on scarf watch
and tell me exactly how many scarfs
you think Tim is wearing at any given time.
So that was just a wig watch sidebar.
Back to the Dino Turtle.
Okay.
Here's what I would like to say
about the attack of the Dino Turtle.
The Croc Turtle.
the alligator turtle, the lizard, whatever you want to call it.
Another innocent creature, slain for no reason in Star Wars,
this is just an animal going about its business in its own fucking backyard.
And it did not need to die, and I am appalled.
Appalled and dismayed.
We only, I mean, this is going to make it sound like we have a ton of you.
We only have a few emails this week, so forgive me for slamming two back-to-back,
but needs must, because I really loved this email we got from Shane, so I want to read it.
Shane writes,
when I saw that familiar striking silver ship,
I was sure there were setting stuff
for Grogo to come save the day
and gently put,
he doesn't say dinosaur turtle,
but let's say,
dinosaur turtle to sleep,
then take a nap with it or something.
Oh, yeah,
wring horse style.
Yeah, showing the progression
of his ever-growing force powers.
I was not ready for Dant to just fucking blasted.
I was especially not ready
for the poor creature
to explode the boys' style.
five minutes into this family-friendly Disney Plus show.
I thought of the whale from the boys, too.
It's hard not to.
I literally exclaimed what the fuck who was left shock for a minute
and then they just move on like nothing happened.
Honestly, it made me think of the previous conversation in the pod
about Filoni and Fabz growing up playing with their Star Wars toys in the backyard
and that maybe someone should stop them for bringing too much of that energy to shows,
especially after that awful boba finale.
As you've also discussed in the pod before,
the best fight scenes tell you something about our characters.
And that Star Wars is usually so good about this.
And I thought all the fights in this episode were lacking very much in that department.
What did the fight with our sweet, innocent, chompy boy tell us about these characters?
They prioritize protecting the young and we'll put themselves in danger to help another member,
both of which we already knew from season one.
And that's about it.
The rest is just cool.
They have cool jet packs and grappling hooks and faves has a big cool gun.
And Mando has a cool ship.
So that's from Shane.
My tolerance for like it just looks cool is like a little higher than Shane's appearance.
to be, but overall, I kind of, I mean, I kind of agree. I think both the fights, this and the,
and the, you know, pirate chip dogfighter just sort of like, ain't this cool? And that's okay.
If it's, as we discussed, this is the intro back into the world. And I think Favs did want to, like,
you know, and Rick wanted to show off a little bit about like, here's what we can do.
I anticipate that a lot of the fights we see in the future in the season will have,
especially since we've got a magical blade bumping around, are going to, are going to
be much more weighted, not to use a dark saber pun, but yeah, there we go.
I did think both battle sequences were more fun and looked cool.
I liked the asteroid belt pirate chase a little bit more.
I think that the one thing you could argue they achieved is positioning Dinn yet again
as just superior in like every respect.
and that that being for a group of characters who, as we will hear Boca's hand, again say at the end of this episode,
will only follow someone who is wielding the Dark Sabre.
Well, there's something there about this sanctioning, this knighting, this validity,
but it's also what that represents, which is like supreme strength.
There's a little bit of a call-a-sar, you know, a call who cannot ride is no-call aspect to this, right?
And so I think that continuing to show Din as even,
among a group of warriors who are supposed to be really, really fierce at another tier.
Like, it's just, this is, we're watching Mike Trout.
However, I will say, though, that the flip side of that, and one of the things, one of my, like,
we have some notes on the Dino Turtle sequence show is that I think it was really weird,
while it was fun and cool, really weird that they kind of bo-bud the entire covert.
Like, you remember during Boba Fett, how could we forget?
What a dominant conversation that that was, like that Boba wasn't this fierce fighter that people
recalled, that he was getting dunked on, that he was getting posterized.
I always saw it with Boba that was like slightly overblown because he was, he's like,
his most famous cinematic moment is just getting absolutely clowned into a sarlac pit.
Yeah.
However, for the Mandalrians more broadly, given that they're supposed to be these like formidable,
untapped warriors.
You could go head to head with the Jedi.
I'm like, a couple dozen of you
really got annihilated
by this lizard who was just going for a swim.
Pretty embarrassing.
Kind of a weird choice.
I don't think he was just going for a swim.
I think he was going for a swim and a sand.
That enriching ore.
I wonder what that's like coming out on the other end.
Yeah.
It can't feel good.
You know that rule about like
not swimming after you've eaten.
I think you have to, like, really extend the weight period if what you've eaten is Besskar.
Yeah, I mean, I love seeing our guy Paz Vizla get humiliated because I kind of hate that guy, right?
It's a thrill.
Yeah, to see him embarrass himself.
What I will say is, like, I did feel a little bit like, what are we doing here, a little bit in the sequence.
But if you want to talk about, like, smashing your toys together in the backyard, I will never not have a
nostalgia-infused thrill when a fly-boy shows up to a fight out of nowhere in Star Wars.
You know what I mean?
Like, that's my favorite moment in the Force Awakens.
You know what I mean when like chewing Han are just sort of like, you know, it's just like the fleet's here.
The fly-boys are here.
The Lennyum Falcon is here.
And you're, you know, they saved your neck once again.
So, you know.
It's a great look for our gal, Pallimato, because the N-O-1 Starfighter is top-notch.
really doing its job.
We're like, hey, there's our old pal the N1 Starfighter.
If you didn't watch Bobo, you're like, wow, look at this awesome new ship.
I can't wait to go buy a new toy.
But more importantly than the ship arriving, Joanna.
Yeah.
This will be, I believe if you do a control off in the doc, you will see this line.
I think 10 times.
It is one of the most important moments in TV history.
And here's the first one we will talk about, which is...
Italyzing up.
She italic.
I emphasized it.
Kroku rising up in the bubble to show us his precious, perfect little gumdrop of the face.
I knew a joy that I didn't know was possible.
There's a line from the Oceans franchise that I think about a lot.
And I think it's from Oceans 13.
It's from one of the lesser installments.
And it's The Nose Plays, right?
Matt Damon wants to wear a fake nose, the nose plays.
the Grogo Place, like, no matter what.
It works every time.
And you can feel yourself being shamelessly manipulated by coos and babbles and waddles and little reaches and little...
Do it.
Manipulate me.
Yeah.
I'm like, more, again, sir.
Every time it lands.
Every time it lands.
And we immediately move into the next scene with another one of the most important moments in TV history,
which is getting to watch Grogo waddle in.
The subtitle here is panting.
He's just a little baby panting as he waddles in to hear this conversation between Daddy Dinn and the Armour,
which a good portion of the audience has heard before in another television program,
The Book of Boba Fett.
Ever heard of it?
I guess some people haven't because we get it again here.
interesting framing.
Yeah.
The Mythesaur skull, which we also saw in the opening helmet forging sequence visible over the armorer's shoulder during this exchange, during this recap.
Very much the cameras is centering on that.
There's like a shaft of light from nowhere because we're in a cave, like gleaming on to the Mythosaur skull in the wall.
It's like very reminiscent of you on Zoom mid-morning.
It's true.
When it's just a beam of light plays across your face.
This is good on you.
to draw the eye.
People love when we take them behind the curtain.
People don't know that my face turns into this white
Caucasian glowing mask because of the sunlight
of my office.
But that's...
You have removed your helmet.
We heard the armor say, what's worse?
You did so of your own free will.
You are no longer Mandalorian.
Just top to your stuff from Grogo here.
He...
Subtitles are...
Gurgles curiously.
He's really engaged.
He's interested.
He, like some of the audience, was not present
in Book of Boba chapter 5.
So he's hearing this for the first time.
He's the avatar for the Chris Ryans of the world
who are like the Book of Boba Who?
The what effect?
Yeah.
Here's my one note on this.
Again, I'm glad that this is here
for the people who miss Boba.
I would love a, as I already told you,
or hey, man, nothing's changed since we last talked about this.
Remember apostate?
We went over this.
You're excommunicated.
Acknowledge that the conversation took place before.
because then you still get the benefit of the information download if it's new to you.
But if it isn't new to you, it doesn't feel as purely like repetition, which again, given just the relative brevity of the episode then stands out more.
I think it's so interesting that the, you know, Dinge Arn has like a very, like, we have let go of the previous motivator for Dinn for the last two seasons, which is like, protect the baby, find the baby's home, right?
like where does Groga belong?
And then they're like, never mind, he belongs with me.
You know what I mean?
Like that's what we've decided.
Great.
So now he's a new mission, which is redemption, right?
And this gets underlined here.
And what we love about this idea is the creed teaches of redemption.
And she's basically like, no way, pal, you need the living waters and the planet's destroyed.
So it is unavailable to you.
But what we love about this about like her rejection of him, her saying you took your helmet off,
we know all the circumstances as to why he took his helmet off.
And usually when a character is seeking redemption,
they have blood on their hand.
They've got red on their ledger, right?
You know, they've got blood on their hands.
They've done something that we as an audience are trying to grapple with
as we empathize with them.
I think it's such an interesting, different kind of tension
for us to watch a show and be like,
Dindjaran innocent.
Dindjaran did nothing wrong.
Dindjaran took his helmet off for his son, you know,
and like for that to be the redemption that he's seeking,
It's so interesting because it's like, we're like, but that's wrong.
Like, don't seek approval from these assholes who think you taking your helmet off
to give your beloved son a fawn farewell for at least one episode.
To do it in front of Mayfeld because he needed to find Moppedian to do it to say goodbye to Grogo
so they could look at each other.
Or because you're literally dying, you know, the first time.
So yeah, exactly.
It's like every time he's taking his helmet off, it's not just because we want to look at Pedro's face.
It's like, we're like there is an emotional story-centric, important reason why.
And for the armor to have no space for that, you know, is, puts us, introduces a really interesting tension.
His goal is clear, redemption in the living waters.
But we are not necessarily rooting for that for him.
And that's a fascinating place to be.
I am so invested in the moment when he says,
this is the most right anything has ever felt in my life
when Little Grogues puts his little claw on my jawbone.
Why would you tell me that was wrong?
And if that's wrong to you, then is this the way that I want to live my life?
It can't be the way I want to live my life.
I think that the, I love the way you put that.
And because that is so top of mind for us as viewers,
It is particularly, it is particularly interesting to experience the dissonance once again of Dyn.
And this is a consistent thing for him, looking on the bright side of the creed.
When he says, as you noted, that the creed teaches us redemption, it made me think of the exchange that the armor and Dinn had.
This was also in Boba chapter five, where he's, they're discussing the Jedi way and the armor is explaining to him that Jedi have to forego all attachment.
And he says that is the opposite of our creed.
loyalty and solidarity are the way. And his response there wasn't, wait, let me think about how
these might be two sides of the same kind of toxic limiting coin. It was, but this is how we build
and foster community. This is how we protect each other. This is how we move forward together.
And it made me wonder for a second if the show will ultimately come down on that side.
if the show will embrace the creator
is interested in that at all.
I say no still.
I think you and I are completely aligned there
that does not seem like the
story that Favs and Follone
are interested in telling.
I think particularly given
the now long-running history
that Filoni has in the wider
Star Wars canon of
centering his story
on characters who break out
of some sort of rigid structure.
Asoka, Ezra, Canaan, Sabine.
Yeah, but like Assoca is,
most important creation.
Cherished character.
Right.
And her rejection of the Jedi Order is like so important.
Absolutely.
So I'm still there.
I'm still there.
That idea that you mentioned that the armor says,
sorry, you can't attain that redemption because Mandelaar's been destroyed.
I thought it was interesting, too, that that was actually what Din voiced when she told
him about the Living Waters in Bova.
He's like, but wait, I can't do that.
The minds are gone.
And so we feel a little bit of the passage of time in a helpful way there that he has gotten to the place where he's not viewing that as a limitation.
But I will find a way to do this.
I must.
Because he has something a little bit of rock candy.
I thought this looked delicious.
Tell us about the rock candy.
I will like Grogu in one of the most important moments in TV history, pull myself up to the table, watching him move up to the table.
Joanna. Grogu grunting was the subtitle here. Just top tier astonishing stuff.
The way you and Grogu are bonded in a, is that a snack approach?
Yeah. To this viewing experience is I think we both have low blood sugar.
We just need. I'm surprised Grogu didn't try to gum that shard from the Jawa, you know what I mean?
Who said he didn't in the past. Not too far away from him.
Force zoom in the orange skin over to his mouth.
Oh, yeah.
I just want to shout out our pal.
Ryan, area over the screen crush feed breakdown of Mandalorian, because he pointed out
that a redid to her head figured out that the inscription on the shard here is from the Old
Testament.
They just like translated the Old Testament into Mandalorian, fun.
Exodus, some Exodus stuff.
So, you know, a people without a homeland sort of very, very, I think it's interesting that
they just like decided to literally do the old.
Testament. But yeah, he's got this item that to him proves that there is some spark of life
left. I guess if the Jawa's could go get this, then like people can go to the surface of the
planet. Does that seem to be the conclusion that you feel like he drew? Yes. And I thought
they had very different takeaways. Again, once again, they're opposed because he's saying,
I got this chart, I got this piece of crystal from a Jawa who got it from a traveler who said
that they went to Mandelor.
So do they know definitively
that that account is accurate?
No, but it's about interpretation
and the way that they are able
to see a different path forward.
So to the armor,
holding that crystal,
holding that glass,
it's just proof
that the planet is in the state
they thought,
that the empire's fusion rays
obliterated it
and turned everything
into this substance,
that there's nothing
there anymore
other than a thing
you could hold in your hand
as a relic, right?
Again, and I don't think it's required because I think you get it, but if you want to know more about like how that happened and why and what's going on, I mean, it sounds like self-promotion, but I really do recommend the Mandalorian Primer podcast that we did.
A lot of these moments that we've talked about already were things that we sort of highlighted as things to drill down on, but also the animated primer that Mallory put together that I watched that was so helpful to me to refresh, we get a download of what happened to the planet.
and like the actual destruction of an entire world.
So I would recommend that.
But I think, I think, again, because we hit the, this is the way, right?
Dins says, if I visit the planet, I can bring you proof that I bathe in the living waters beneath the minds of Mandelor.
Then by creed, the decree of exile will be lifted, and I would be redeemed.
She says, this is the way.
again, like
if you're going to pick
one repeated line
from the Mandalorian
it's this is the way, right?
And I think that, you know,
even though Favreau has said recently,
like, we don't have an end goal in mind.
We're not aiming towards something,
you know, this could be gun smoke.
We could do this forever sort of thing.
Favs loves talking about gun smoke.
But I think that has to be something of the,
of what we're aiming towards
is an analysis of what
this is the way means.
Like, again,
already said this is a way, but like this is not the way. And is that what Jen is headed towards?
We got this great email from Zach who wrote, I feel like every time the armor, I feel like every time the armor and other characters too say this is the way.
There's actually a different unspoken line of dialogue meant in its place, much like I am Groot and the MCU has an untranslated meeting every time Groot says it.
For example, when Mando gets exiled a book of Boba Fett, the final, this is the way is the armor saying you could never rejoin us.
What do you think of this interpretation?
How would you interpret this episode?
This is the way.
For this episode, I sensed extreme reluctance
and her willingness to admit
the possibility that Mando could find redemption.
It felt like, yeah, I guess, technically, but good luck.
Yeah, I think that the reading of each utterance of this
is the way carrying a different specific meaning
and in whatever the context of that moment
and that exchanges is spot on.
I didn't read her reply here as, I mean, there's definitely good luck, yeah, but I don't think she's hoping he fails.
I think that this is, these are characters who've shared a lot of life together and they would welcome him back gladly.
I think that that fucker, Pas Vizla and the armor were both like pretty bummed when they realized they had to excommunicate him.
And again, that tells us something because if the armor feels that way and does it anyway, it's one more bit of reinforcement for.
for us that the blind adherence cannot be a good and healthy way to live.
I loved tracking Grogu's.
I mean, of course, I love tracking Grogu's face, but like the way he was turning his head
looking before them as they were like volleying back and forth, soaking up everything
that they're saying and what's happening and why jumping.
I did want to ask you, though, like to that idea of proof because he says, I will see you
again. He's like, you're going to, you're going to walk me back. I'm going to do it. It'll all be fine.
What's the proof? What is the proof, Joe? Is it like pool selfies? Like, how is he proving
that he went into the living waters? What is his, when he's, when he's saying this, what do you think he means?
Did you, did you think of pool selfies first? Because you wanted to envision Pedro Pescal and like a man cany
with the helmet still on? Just the helmet.
Yeah.
Imagine the tan lines.
Oh, my.
Oh, God.
Great stuff.
Yeah.
I take my word for it, he says.
I've been to the living waters.
Yeah.
I mean, I suppose if he can like describe what it looks like, you know, maybe that's something.
Interesting.
Interesting.
Okay.
I feel like they should have gone over.
Maybe he had a more specific agreement.
Bring back a vial of the waters.
Yeah.
Like, I'm running low.
on my supplies. Ben Lindberg has identified that the particular Bescar brew I need.
Can you fill up my vial? Fill up the old Naljean, bring it back?
Yeah, exactly. Exactly. There we go. Where was that exchange? Anyway.
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Sometimes you can't have an exchange because you're sleeping.
You're catching some zes.
And that's where we find din in our next scene, which is,
amazing and wonderful and majestic and incredible.
It is the N-1 Starfighter in hyperspace.
We are mostly going to talk about this later
because we got to see Pergels in live action.
This is an absolute thrill if you were a Star Wars rebels fan.
We'll chat about the Pergill Canon,
the hyperspace connections,
the Ezra Thron Rebels connections,
what this might be pointing toward in the future,
the potential Grogu, Animal Bond, Force Power,
all of that with Ben Lindberg,
later today. The thing I'll just note here is that I love, love, love these moments in Star Wars,
because while Dan is sleeping, Grogo was up in his bubble and he is just looking around. He's wide awake,
and he's just soaking up the sights. The reason he sees the pergull at all is because he's looking
at the hyperspace lane. We get moments like this like with, we've had it with Ezra, we've had it
with Omega, we've had it with a number of younger characters who have this awakening. Like I'd love to think,
You know, we talk all the time, obviously, about Luke and the binary sunsets and hearing the force theme kick in as he's looking up, right?
What did Anakin want to be, too?
A pilot, like this idea of the way that flight and space and travel can unlock, like a literal portal here to possibility.
Seeing that in Grogu's eyes was honestly just really special with me.
It was so beautiful.
This is my favorite moment of the episode, this most sequence.
Again, we're going to talk about it.
But I think that, like, the contrast of Grogu's wonder and didn't taking a snooos because he's seen it all before is, like, a really good, like, you know, didn't, didn't see it.
I've seen it, but for the Cubs.
Yeah. The Cubs, it's all new.
Yeah.
It reminds me of when my sister and I, we were younger, like, traveled around Europe and I would take a nap on the train.
And my sister would just, like, press her face to the window and look at, like, everything going by.
And then shame me later for missing the, you know, the Belgian Pergles or whatever.
But also, what made me go full Mallory Rubin and literally start crying was Grogu hopping up into his dad's lap.
You need to set it up properly as one of the most important moments in TV history.
Okay.
Because it was.
Put your italics on.
Put your italics on.
This is one of the most important moments in TV history.
Thank you.
It's when Grogu bops down from his little bubble, down into the cockpit.
hops up into Dinn's lap, snuggles himself, and Dyn's sleeping, but like, adjust his hands a little, you know, to make my heart.
This reminds me, I don't know where Halo sleeps, but like my head's just like this, in my arm, in my elbow
nook as I cradle him.
Yeah, my cat has to be, like, touching me at all times when I'm sleeping, right?
And she's sleeping.
And she will often, like, she likes to really, like, curl up in, like, the small of my back.
That's her favorite thing to do.
So it's just like one of those moments of.
of like your little pal, your son or your cat, however you prefer, just like coddles into your
arms. This is a thing that like my cat does all the time. And it's just sort of like you sleepily,
like make room for them. And it's just like and it's so peaceful too, especially like in a,
an episode that is marked by, you know, two dramatic acts of action and violence. Like, you know,
this just really peaceful father and son moment.
incredible.
Co-assign.
Just one of the most special things
we've ever had the privilege of seeing.
By the way, this is something a cat does.
I'm not a dog hater, but this is something
a cat does is not something a dog does
quite in the same way.
And I think that when we get to later,
it will just be very clear that
whoever worked on this episode
is a cat lover.
Definitely is cats.
Grover reminds me so much of Halo.
You say the same about bug.
This is one of our favorite things to talk about.
This was a real true, true.
True, true cat lover moment.
The constant presence of danger in the Mandalorian universe, and you get a moment like this,
and in addition to it just being really, really cute and really sweet and just so precious,
it encapsulates so beautifully the trust and the safety.
And as you said, that peace and comfort that they have found with each other.
Wonderful.
Wonderful.
It gave me flashbacks to, like, if you ever been to, like, an aquarium,
some of them have like the tunnels that you walk through where you're like under the tank.
It's just the lighting and the whales, all that, really beautiful.
And there's just something like, okay, you're right, I do like water-based things.
There's something just so calming about that.
I think some people get stressed and claustrophobic.
I find it absolutely a Zen experience.
Me too.
I'm not sure if you find, and again, we will chat more about our beloved space whale pergels with Ben Lindbergh later today.
Stay tuned for that.
I'm not sure, Joe, if you find lava flats quite as soothing as an ocean vista, but I would like to take us to a million dollar listing Navarro, the newest program on Bravo.
Because Din heads there next.
This former shit heap is thriving.
Real boob times.
Flourishing.
Even our beloved monkey lizards.
Like, if you've had a painful experience in the moments where you've seen.
a monkey lizard grossing on a spit.
I've got good news for you.
You just get to watch them shaking their asses in a tree this time.
Groboos enthralled.
So are we.
There's a band.
Street music.
Street music.
Art has come to Navarro.
Survival is insufficient.
We are living on Navarro.
Traveling symphony hit Navarro.
This is, I think, Joe, the moment,
even more so than the swelling of the ranks for the covert,
where you feel maybe the truth of the timeline fast to get out.
There's a lot of development on Navarro.
Yeah, we see like an arch, stone arch that was once crumbling is now in perfect condition, et cetera.
Yeah.
We're going to talk more about IG11 later when we get to the repair attempts.
But this is when we see him for the first time.
We see the statue in the town square.
Dan asks Grog's, do you remember your old friend?
I love a previously on, I will say, I wish they hadn't tipped IG11's return in the previously on.
It was bizarre.
Yeah, I was like, I guess IG-11 is going to be in this episode.
I was like, it's Tyca in this episode?
What's happening?
I'm wondering if you want to use this moment to share your appalling droid take with the world,
or if you want to do that later, when we get to actually repairing IG-11.
What if I zagged and decided instead to drill down on this phrase, old friend, right?
Wow.
Expertly done.
Expertly done.
Old friend is a really important phrase in Star Wars, right?
Okay, so this is like very famously something that Obi-Wan says to Anakin,
like his last exchange before their fight, right?
Goodbye old friends.
May it force be with you, et cetera.
Some of the, a Clone Wars episode that we talked about, old friends not forgotten.
There's another, there's another Clone Wars episode that's just called, you know, old friend.
I think go by old friend, maybe.
No, just old friend, okay?
This is a phrase that we see again and again.
then uses it to refer to Grie Kierga,
and I think that's really interesting
because we have to think about, again,
several years ago, I guess, in the canon
when we first met them,
and, like, were they friends?
Kind of, Mendo is like how we would greet him.
But, like, I thought he was saying it about IG 11 to Grogo.
Oh, that's so funny, I thought he was talking about Greek Carga,
but he also says, I guess it's both, right?
Because he says when they're flying in
and they ask him at the spaceport who he's out of sea.
That is a member to Greek Cargag.
And then the other one is in reference to IG-11, right?
And I might be reading too much into it, but I think that that idea of, like, old antagonist
turned for it because both IG-11 and Grief Cargo were antagonists at some point in the story,
and now they're old friends.
And there's something about the passage of time and, et cetera, et-eater.
And I think as we, you know, we'll talk about this a bit when we get to Boe at the end of this episode,
but I think this question of friend or foe, old, what does it mean to be an old friend?
I mean, Star Wars has always been imbued from the first we meet Ben Kenobi, and he has all this old history with Anakin that is like referenced.
I wonder if he means old Ben Kenobi.
I just think, you know, we have to pay attention to these like Star Wars phrases as they pop up.
And I'm just wondering if that idea of like old friend, a foe that is a friend, a friend that is a foe is going to be an important part of the season.
I love this. I think having this exchange in front of IG's statue is a particularly poetic place to do it because of that reprogramming idea. Not only the progress that Din makes with his entire relationship to droids and worldview around droids with IG in particular, and we'll hear him mention many times in this episode. This is the droid I trust. He's my friend, this amazing progress, but also with IG in particular, that idea of the reprogramming, the moving from the hunter to the nurse droid, the way that paralleled Din's evolution. That was something we chatted about in our
primer pot a lot. So, and, you know, we're, we're with grief who we had heard previously Gide
referred to as disgraced magistrate. When we first meet him, they're working on the bounties together.
Then he's magistrate in season two. Now he's high magistrate. So yeah, I think that's a great
observation, this evolution that we track with each individual course and then how that how that morphs
together on a shared journey. Can you track the old friend thing effectively if you don't know how
much time has passed in the timeline of the story.
We'll find out together.
It's part of the fun.
What is old mean anyway?
Yeah.
What does old mean?
I stand with Steve.
I'll just say it's that's IG 11's actual body.
It's fucking appalling to put that in the town square.
Make a statue of him if you want to honor him.
Don't put his corpse there.
And by the way, if you thought you could restore him, why did you fucking wait?
Well, he didn't want to restore him until he, like, really needed him.
You know what I mean?
And that's because Denjarn is an noted droid racist.
But also, I think if you're asking, is that IG-11?
Is that IG-11's body?
Are we worried about it?
What does our ends up saying, it's not friend anymore?
Memory circuit broken.
Well, are you still old friend?
Are you still IG-11 if your memory circuit's broken?
I do think we have some ship of Theseus questions to work through with IG-11.
I think we do.
However, maybe we'll come back to this when we get to the actual repair sequence,
but we've seen IG-11 rebuilt before.
Quill rebuilt him after he...
Let's not forget that Mando shot him in the fucking head in the series premiere to protect
Grogu.
That's how the show started.
And then Quill rebuilt him and trained him.
And he has that lovely sequence where he talks about the patience that was necessary,
that he had to build that personality over time, like minute by minute,
much like we're getting to watch Din and Grogo do together build brick by brick.
It's just, it's all connected, Joe.
It's all connected, including the pieces of IG's body with the statue plinth.
And it's horrifying.
And now I'm on the record standing with Steve.
Speaking of pieces.
Yeah.
Let's talk about the huge tracts of land that Agreef Karga is trying to.
offload here on Navarro.
Did you feel like all was right in the world when you heard that signature?
Maddo for the first time again?
Did it just take you back?
And then I was immediately confused by the roller skate droids who were like holding his train.
Why?
Because you're like, why wouldn't you have even more droids holding your cape?
Why wouldn't you have taller?
Taller droids.
Oh, oh, droids who can hold your garments higher off the dirty ground.
He's only clearing like an edge.
He's not saving that garment from dust.
Are you kidding me?
Well, what I want to ask you is what you think he's clearing from the real estate deal?
Real estate scheme that he's clearly involved in because...
This is like...
I mean, this has to be an arrested development reference to Carl Weathers' character in rest of development.
100% has to be.
Yeah.
Oh, God.
Yeah, this is a pyramid scheme if ever I heard one.
He's fixed on getting Mando to opt in to the point where he is actually infuriated when his droid interrupts them.
You can sense the urgency of getting Mando to commit the number of times I do.
I will say I thought that the hot springs offer set you up with a prime tract right over here by the hot springs.
That sounded nice.
I liked that.
A beautiful parcel?
I mean, sure.
Who says no?
Where you're from you may be an apostate, but here you'd be landed gentry.
Just great stuff.
Gentry.
Just remarkable stuff.
I got a whiff here of the only murders in the building gut milk scheme.
Like, I have a certain number of bottles of gut milk.
I must move.
I have a certain number of prime tracks by the hot springs that I must move.
Good old grief cargo is like always working all the angles, right?
Because there's clearly some sort of like shiasty real estate deal that he's involved.
But also he needs a marshal as we find out, right?
So he's like trying to get, he's trying to get.
But it's working all the angles, like you said.
He's trying to get Dinn to like invest heavily in real estate so that he's locked into Navarro and can't leave.
Yeah, right, exactly, because then it's an easier job to lock down if he's already there.
Do you think he would have had an easier job landing the sale if he had paid a little bit more respect to Grogu?
Well, while they're looking at redfin links together, the entire.
time this conversation is unfolding. We're treated to one of the most important moments in TV history,
Joe, which is Grogu, they had actually released this clip ahead of the season. It was one of the little
teasers they put out still landed. We got to see it in context. Grogu's spinning around in Grief Cargo's
office chair using the force to spin himself. I hadn't seen the clip for some reason. I don't know
way. And so, like, my brain had a moment where I was like, he has little legs and little arms.
How is he spinning himself? And then I was like, using the force. He will use the force. He will
force him, as we mentioned earlier, a little snack into his mouth. I always love when Grobu
when Grobu needs a snack. He, right here on Navarro, zoomed the, the blue macaroons, then
vomited them up on the planet escape later.
Whomst among us, you know?
Whomst among us indeed. We get an exclaiming playfully.
during this stretch in the subtitles,
just 10 out of 10, no notes stuff right there.
I think that aside from how darling this is,
it is actually significant that we get to see Grogu
just more casually using his force powers
without needing to take a nap.
You know, the macaroon thing that we just mentioned,
he doesn't immediately take a nap in class after that.
It's not like we've never seen him use the force
and not fall asleep right away,
but he's doing this for a while.
It feels like a way of showing us
in a cute, fun, casual way.
Yes, cash.
That this is just a thing he can do now.
Yeah. A thing that Dinn does now is tell people Grogu's name. Steve, can we just hear this?
You win the little one? You can settle down. You can hang up your blaster. Live off the fat of the land.
Grogu. Come again? His name is Grogu. If you say so.
Come again is one of the funniest things I've ever heard. Town of 10 delivery from Carl Weathers, right?
So funny. He said so. Come again. I loved this. I think the first. I think the
fact, because we got something from Peli in the boba finale in episode seven where when Grogu
Swithard, she gets to learn his name from Art 2 and says, wow, that's a terrible name. Sorry about that,
pal. No way I'm calling you that. I hope this is a recurring thing that stays with us where characters
learn this and comment on it. And it's a continuing ongoing wink to the audience about what the initial,
now we all love it. We can't think of him as anything but Grogo. But in real time, it's like,
I'm not sure I love it. I love it now. He's only Grogo to me. But I'm, I accept it.
to me. But at the time, I was like, can we take
another pass on this? And now he's just Grogu
forever. Did you see Petter Muskell
in the Graham Norton show? And he
calls Grogu Baby Yoda. And he
has like a complete mental breakdown
because it is like against Lucasville
policy to use the phrase
Baby Yoda. And he's like, oh
no. Oh, no.
And he has to like put his, rest
his head on Helen Mirren's
shoulder. He's like so scared about
the Disney Snifers. Yeah.
Sweet baby. Grog's. This was
a very funny and wonderful exchange. I did think it was notable, though, that when Grief asked about
him, like, I'm confused. Why is he here? I thought you'd completed your quest. This was the
Boba redux that I didn't understand as much. Not that we don't need to catch up on what happened
in Boba and how the characters are reconnected, but because they didn't actually explain it here.
Like if you haven't seen Boba, you don't know that Luke forced this choice upon Grobu.
You don't know that Din went to try to visit him and wasn't allowed to.
You don't know that he gave him the little Mithra, the little Beskar shirt.
I thought that the summary here maybe should have included a couple more details.
What did you think?
Yeah, so he says, it's complicated, I completed my quest.
You return to me.
I remove my helmet, and now I'm an apostate.
I will say the flip side is, that's pretty funny.
It's a funny distilled version.
That's the name of the episode.
It's complicated.
Yeah.
That's a really yada yada.
Yada from Dinjarn here.
I don't know if they just didn't want to, like,
they're like, oh my God, if we mentioned Luke Skywalker,
it's just going to be like too much of a pit, a sarlac pit for us to get out of.
You know what?
We can't like just fleetingly.
One does not fleetingly mention Luke Skywalker.
Maybe.
You might be right.
Sometimes you do have to fleetingly shoot some pirates, though,
because the interruption, the aforementioned interruption from the droid,
is about the lurking pirates.
They're loitering in the town center.
They're loitering in front of a school joe.
So our crew is summoned, and we meet Vane.
He's a Nicto pirate and a absolute creep who is insisting on drinking in a children's school,
and I have to hope is on multiple galactic watch lists.
this is the beginning of what becomes a recurring journey in this episode of hearing Pirate King Corian Shard uttered aloud.
That name got a lot of airtime and a lot of runtime in this episode, Joe.
So I have to guess that they're coming back, which is different for the Mandalorian, which is like so often has in the past contained its antagonists and its conflicts to like, you know, an adventure of the week.
this feel like is laying ground for our future.
I do want to shout out a couple things.
Vane, the name of the Nicto pirate,
feels like a reference to Charles Vane.
And I didn't need anyone to tell me that
because I have seen the Star series Black Sales
wherein Charles Vane has an eight-pack
and is allergic to shirts.
So if you are interested in that,
may I suggest black sales to you?
But Charles Vain is a famous real-world pirate
that, you know, is surely the inspo here.
But yeah, Pirate King Gorian Shard.
I mean, I thought the pirate stuff in this episode was, like, kind of baffling because
it just felt like we, why are you here?
But if you're here to pay off later in the season, I can accept that that might be the case.
So, yeah.
The thing I struggled with is seeing a weakway pirate and it not being Hondo.
I was like, surely this will be the path to Hondo being in the Mandalorian.
Maybe, maybe one day.
I won't give up hope yet.
Fair to dream.
My theory, because shortly after this, we get the aforementioned Marshall Exchange,
when grief tells Mando that he needs a Marshall, the way this all went down, the, you know,
we get a little bit of the classic Mando DNA here of a Western-esque duel.
Yeah.
Then we get later the dogfight in the asteroid belt.
don't think that Vane pirate king Gorian Shard or anyone else in this pirate gang is just going to
accept Grief Cargis parting words, tell Captain Goryan Shard that Navarro is no longer friendly to pirates.
Now get out of here. I think they're going to say, no, we will not get out of here.
And then grief is not positioned to challenge them after Din leaves because it is not a marshaler, doesn't have the help he needs.
And we'll have to summon Mando back for assistance.
That's my guess.
Yeah, I'm really worried about the street musicians.
This is like the thing we like to talk about.
It's like showing us the shire before the scouring of the shire, right?
Like, show us the thing that's at stake here that's losing.
So if, like, the pirates come and they take over Navarro.
Right, we just saw all this progress.
Yeah, and, like, destroy all the piece that we have found there.
And, yeah, I can see a showdown of Navarro being once again, like, a finale situation.
Yeah.
Din took out multiple members of the gang
when things looked like they were going to get really woolly there at the end.
But before that, we did get the vein grief.
Sounds like you went soft.
You think so, try me moment.
And that ruled.
Sorry me.
You think so?
Try me.
Great stuff.
You know, who would have helped in this is Cardoon.
Where is Cardoon, Mallory Rubin?
Okay.
Let's chat about this for a minute.
Shocked and surprise.
The Marshall Reveal.
The Marshall Reveal.
The fact that Grief needs a Marshall comes with a couple explanations about a couple missing characters.
Here's what we got about Caradun.
After she brought in Mof Gideon, Grief Cargge says, she was recruited by special forces.
That's it.
It's very special.
Ben Shapiro is now Star Wars Canon, Joe.
A special way to get rid of a character that was supposed to have her own spinoff.
Oh, my God.
It was, what did you, what did you think of the handling of the explanation?
It's fine.
They had to do it.
You had to explain it.
Yeah.
The Gideon update that immediately follows this, I thought, was actively puzzling, though,
because Dyn says what came of Gideon and Grief says he was sent off to a new Republic War tribunal?
First of all, why do we need to know here, other than the fact that his name was mentioned, I guess,
anything about Moth Gideon, like presumably there will be a more natural moment for that to come up later,
but also in Boba,
Dean is the one
who provides basically
that exact explanation.
So for him then to ask about it
was just weird.
Paz and Boba says,
did you kill him?
And Dyn says,
no,
but he was sent off
to the New Republic
for interrogation
and he will face justice
for his crimes.
Again,
they really, like,
put themselves in a weird spot
by like putting all this stuff
and felt it the most.
Yeah,
like, you know,
the Book of Boba Fett move
was a weird one.
I feel like they did
it because they felt like that season of television needed an injection of, like, core legacy
characters other than Boba Fett, I suppose, that we were like more emotionally invested in.
I think it was like kind of a bit of a rehab job on Book of Boba Fett, but like it, it complicated.
But I, you know, all of these little moments are very, again, it's a very short episode.
And they dealt with it as quickly as possible.
And in some ways, if you rewatch the Book of Boba Fett episodes, it jars a little.
But I don't think it's a deal breaker.
But what is a deal breaker to me?
Is Cobb? I'm not being mentioned here.
Is to mention a marshal and not mention if he's like, if Greece's like, oh, we need a
marshal and did Jarn was like, funny you should mention it.
My boyfriend's a marshal.
Like, healed up in a bathtub tank, modified, ready to roll.
I don't know if Cobb would leave free town.
He would not leave free town.
He's a hometown kind of guy.
Yeah.
But like, he goes to the Dylan Panther.
game every night, like every Friday night.
Like, he's invested in the town, right?
Like, he's a booster.
But, yeah, if you say Marshall, I think,
Timothy Elephant, so where's Cobbant?
If we don't get him this season, Mallory.
We will.
You promise me.
We will.
Come on.
I just don't want to, like.
I feel certain we will get Cobbant.
I'll be astounded if we don't.
I don't want to set myself up for disappointment.
And dismayed, but astounded.
Dinn rejects the offer.
So sorry, I've got, I've got shit to do.
You can't beer marshal.
The last thing I want to note here that stood out to me is that when Dan says to Grief,
why don't you just ask the New Republic for help?
Now, we know what Din thinks of the New Republic.
But grief's response is the last thing we intend is to bow down to yet another far-off bureaucracy.
No, under my watch, Navarro, will become the first truly independent trade anchor in this entire sector.
And that made my Star Wars alarm bells, Blair, because not to be confused with the Confederacy
of independent systems, which was, of course, the separatist alliance. But when you think of a
planet in the Star Wars canon that says we're not picking one of these sides and it's whatever
galactic strife is playing out right now, we are going to remain neutral and not partake and not
align. Bad things tend to happen. One of those planets is Mandelor. Look how that went. So that
made me nervous for Navarro's future. I'm concerned. I'm concerned. I'm also concerned to
about IG-11 turning into a scene from The Terminator here.
Let's talk about the zombie corpse sequence where...
Again, you know, we've already talked about a lot of this,
like this idea of reprogramming and all, like,
the deeper meaning of that as it pertains to IG-11.
Yeah.
But again, how can you say that this is IG-11?
You know what I mean?
I think Shepathesis is really good.
But like, to defend my point of I don't think Rief Karga was dishonest.
entering IG-11 by erecting a monument to him in the middle of the town.
And also, the point I made when we talked about this off-pod before you decided to throw me
under the speeder was that there are monuments or whatever that exist all the time when you take
someone's ashes and you incorporate it into like, we talked about the brick.
The bricks from Andor.
Endor, right?
I mean, like, injecting a real piece of a person into a monument is not uncurt of.
brought IG11 back to life as we see here and instead they didn't serve a purpose before.
That's awful. He's a being. He doesn't need to serve a purpose to be restored. He's their friend.
We here didn't say that the reason he's here is because he needs, he needs IG11 specifically the droid that he trusts.
I need a droid I can trust to help me explore Mandler and he's that droid, that bond, the heart of it.
Beautiful, wonderful. I love it.
where was that bond when you didn't think to try to rescue him before?
That's all.
I, listen, agree to disagree.
Agreed to disagree.
Grogo perching on the table, I think we can agree, was precious.
The way he was watching the repair, darling.
I don't think that that's IG 11 anymore.
That's all I should say about that.
Well, I guess we'll track the reprogramming efforts across the season
because when he wakes up here, Joe, he's OG IG 11.
He has reverted to his original programming.
He is no longer the nurse droid that Queel rebuilt.
He is instead a hunter.
And so he sees Grogu and his red lights activate.
And he says the bounty is mine,
asset to be terminated and tries to kill Grogu.
This is up there with showing us Grogu in the crosshairs in sanctuary
and all of the other times that we have seen our beloved baby boy in peril.
It's difficult and painful Lucasfilm.
You are once again on notice here on the Ringer podcast network, protect Grogu at all costs.
Here's my question for you, Joe, on the reprogramming front.
When Dinn says, I think he defaulted to his old programming, did it make you worried?
Because to me, it seemed like a warning.
If we're saying, as we've talked about before, that this like parallel track of IG-11 going from Hunter to Nerstroid,
Dinn going from bounty hunter to a member of Clan Mudhard,
the Foundling father, a clan of two,
and this ongoing quest for reprogramming away from the way into Away,
then to watch this reversion.
Is that a warning?
It struck me as maybe a warning of a backslide coming for Dinn.
Did you feel this at all?
Maybe, I would maybe feel that if we'd seen him,
like if he was walking around with his helmet off now.
But what does he have to backslide?
Like he hasn't strayed far enough that a backsliding back into, I need to go do this and I have to keep the fucking helmet on as opposed to saying, oh, great when I felt those little claws on my cheekbone.
Right.
I'm just saying I don't think he's, I mean, first we have to see him front slide before you can backslide.
And I just don't think he's front slid yet is the point.
Far enough.
Okay.
Speaking of sliding, let's slide right into the Ed Zelen.
Joy of my life.
Dream of my life.
my workshop. Okay, listen.
What is time to be Steve Alman, number one Boba Frick fan.
Oh, oh, no, no, no, no, no.
He picked him in a draft.
Steve and I, Steve, get on the mic.
Steve and I are co-presidents of the Bobby fan club.
Shared custody here of this fandom.
How did it feel for you both?
I mean, I also, I loved Babu.
Definitely one of the lone highlights of Rise of Skywalker.
It's that and like Carrie Russell's costume design.
Thank God Babu Frick was there.
So this is not actually Babu.
other members, other Enzelins,
what did it feel like to meet all of these
little workshop mates?
I only have one way to describe it.
I think I was like this.
I love Babu Frick.
I am so thrilled that they cherry-picked
one of the only good things out of Rise of Skywalker
and to give us the Inzellans here.
I love this whole sequence so much.
There's like, though, you know, obviously this is, we saw Babu do a very similar thing with C3PO in, you know,
Dry Go Bleck, like all that sort of stuff.
Even like the idea of memory and memory.
A memory.
We're sorry, memory and a giant, yeah, yeah.
It's so amazing.
They look amazing.
The character design, fantastic.
So good.
Yeah.
Puppets all around.
Puppets for days.
Love a puppet.
You know what I mean?
So does Grogo.
Because when you first saw them, the look on his face, the reach, even before
the hug. He was like another OG trilogy-esque puppet meant for the digital streaming age.
This is just top dear stuff. What we really need to talk about is Sir Carl Weathers,
Knight of the Realm, High Magistrate himself, getting down on his hands and knees to translate.
To translate in the scene. I know that this was all very funny and very cute. The whole scene
was great. Absolutely do yourself the favor if you haven't yet of watching this with your
subtitles turn on
so they can soak up
every precious gem
including of course
this is a sequence
where the
instant panthe online
bad baby occurs
when we pan out
and we see the Dinn
is sitting huddled
in this tiny workshop
and then we get grief
leaning down to translate
I know let me just say
because Dinn can't understand
he asks if they speak Hutties
now I understand
canonically that Hutties
is the second
most commonly spoken language after basic.
This is actually a reasonable question to ask,
but I thought this was, particularly in the outer rim,
I thought this was outrageous.
Din, try to engage with the Anzellans.
I thought said pretty clearly,
what do you want when they first showed up?
Well, eventually he gets it.
They're sliding in and out of Anzellin.
Yeah, but eventually he's like,
I don't need you translate anymore.
I get it.
Exactly.
I understand how they speak now.
I thought,
I was dismayed, you know, when we got the report, Joe, from the Anzell and pals that
without the memory circuit, quote, IG, no think, right?
You know, you've, you've, you've, you've, you've zeroed in on this.
Friends.
It's a key data point.
Not friend.
It's not friend anymore.
This one, Poodoo, though, is a bridge too far.
I'm sorry.
This one, Pudu is a bridge too far.
It is beyond the pale.
This is the corpse of a cherished pal.
Can we all?
show a shred of decency and respect.
He scooped up Grogu after Quil was fucking murdered.
He spun into town.
He annihilated the troopers.
He saved Dienjaran's life with his back to spray.
They had like, but let's needlessly detonated.
One adventure together.
Old friend they are not.
It was all it took for me to know that you were the one.
Sometimes one adventure is enough.
damn it.
Before I cry, Steve,
before I cry from that beautiful thing
that Mallory just said to me
that obliterate my point.
Can you take us to,
and I'm going to need to italicize,
underline, and highlight this,
one of the most important moments
in TV history.
Genuinely, though.
Genuinely.
Steve, can you play this for us?
No!
Not a pet.
No, it's crazy.
Not sweet, not sweet.
Bad baby.
Sorry about that.
He's young.
That's bad, baby.
Joanna, we're lucky to be alive to watch this.
I don't know what else to say.
We are lucky to be alive to watch this.
If you've been tracking my progress in podcasts throughout the weeks, you know I'm like a little sick.
So I can't let myself fully laugh because then I'll cough.
But like, so I just had to like, we.
through that, but oh my God.
Unbelievable.
This is now, as you know, Mallory,
this is now the background image on my phone.
Yes.
Is Grogo squeezing the Nzelen?
No, Squeezing.
The hug was basically the best thing ever.
I love Groger as much as I love anything in the world other than Halo.
There's like 10% of me when something like this happens after the frog lady egg escapade
that does wonder if he's maybe intending to eat to eat the creature in question.
100%.
This is as love and affection and really just embracing the cuteness all around.
Everything's a snack to grow-go.
Everything is a snack.
He just wanted a hug in a nuzzle.
If you get him more, he wouldn't need so many fucking frog lady eggs for a snack.
If you look at the Anzellan's like little feet as they're dangling, and I have, like,
they're dangling on the image that's on my phone.
So I look at them quite frequently.
They're like little frog feet.
And you can, like, just sort of imagine them disappearing into Grogo's, like, gaping ma.
So, yeah.
Dyn's saying sorry about that.
He's young.
Just.
No.
Squeezy.
Come on.
He's more than 50.
We don't know how much more, but he's more than 50.
Oh, he's a bad baby.
I'm sorry.
Unbelievable.
Bad baby is just, I mean, it's in the lexicon forever now.
We will always be quoting that to each other.
What a gift.
What a gift.
while Din has maybe not told Grogu quite clearly
when it is okay or not okay to pick up another sentient being
and snuggle them in your arms in the middle of a task that are trying to achieve,
we do get another lesson.
We leave with another quest, right?
They don't have the memory circuit they need.
Din says, I'll get it for you.
We say our goodbyes.
Grief Carger expresses some real doubt that even Din is going to be able to find this.
He's like, if Danzellin's couldn't do it, man.
I don't know if you can.
our pals head off.
They leave Navarro.
And before we get our asteroid belt dog fight,
we do get one of the most important moments in TV history.
Grogu waves goodbye.
He appears to wave goodbye to grieve Kargai.
He lives as the land.
I wanted to do the magic hand thing.
Waves goodbye.
And then they go into space and Dinn teaches and Grogu learns.
Dyn says being a Mandalorian's not just learning about
how to fight. You also have to know how to navigate the galaxy because you never know where you
might be headed next. Now, there's one part of me, a tiny part that's like, Dan, if it really
has been a year since you guys reunited, why didn't you tell him this sooner? But I get past that
quickly and I'm just like how wonderful this is. Very much Dean's experience in his life, but also
the more broad, the, the Mandalorian scattered across the galaxy. Exactly. The Exodus, the Exodus
sort of vibes. You never know where you might be headed next. We are people without a homeland.
Yeah.
Like, you know, we got to be ready to bounce at any given moment.
And so what an important lesson for Grogo and his potential future, but really a true embrace.
Grogu is, he made his choice.
And he is, doesn't mean he's not a force user.
He didn't have to stay at Luke's school to still be a Jedi in his own way, much like Asoka is a Jedi in her own way.
But he is also a Mandalorian and a foundling.
And for Din to teach him this central Mandalorian love.
lesson was this really meaningful thing to witness, but also even beyond that, I thought it was
amazing because so much of the earlier journey was Dinn saying, I need to get you to a teacher.
I need to get you to someone who can tell you how to live your life the way that you're meant to.
And now he's doing that.
That's the role that he's serving for Grogo.
He's the teacher now.
And this goes back to something that you like to talk about a lot, which is this idea of Grogo embodying the best of the Jedi Creed and the best of the Mandalorian Creed.
that he's not just a force user or Jedi if he prefer,
but I prefer the non-denominational force user, right?
He's not just a force user, he's also Mandalorian,
and so these are the various lessons that he's absorbing
in order to become the Uber leader,
and perhaps wielder of the Dark Saber, we shall see.
But yeah.
Just as Din is given Grogu a tour of the display,
and he's teaching him about the end,
enemy proximity indicator.
Lights up.
Lights up.
Dane and his new comrades are there to attack Mando.
And Joanna, we are treated to one of the most important moments in TV history, which is Grogo
buckling up in Dad's lap.
He is sitting on Dyn's lap against his chest.
And I believe he is wearing the ammo belt as his seat belt.
Yeah.
Real baby Bjorn energy here.
Wonderful. Wonderful.
Again, I thought pretty fun space battle.
The question of the relevance of Pirate King, Gorian, Shard, long term, we will find out in time.
I mean, there's...
We see an asteroid. We think of Han. We think of Obie. We think of two of our faves.
That was nice.
Yeah, but also Django and Boba, right?
I'm less interested in thinking about Django and Boba, but yeah, they're part of the scenes.
Again, though, also another time where we're like, Manda's just better at this than everyone.
I want to mention Gori and Shard.
who some of us doesn't.
Casting-wise.
Yes.
So he may look like a vegan pizza the hut, as some people have been saying, or a tasty bowl of kale salad, as Mallory said here in our notes.
I love kale salad.
But this is non-so-nozzi who played Zaro's own Texas in Game of Thrones and also was in the Netflix series Sweet Tooth more recently if folks saw that.
But that to me implies, that's an actor to me implies more than just like a fleeting.
I agree.
You know.
Yeah.
Yeah.
I agree.
Do you want to go back to Carth? Does it make you want to go back to Carth?
Never again. Shall we return to Carth?
Where are my dragons?
Oh, boy. We are going to Castle Crees, though, Joe. Do you think Zarozo and Daxis is still in that vault?
No, he's dead. Okay. And maybe one day someone will discover his corpse and put it in a town square.
In honor of the great leader that was Sarasone Daxis.
Dera, too. Her corpse is in there with him.
treacherous. I did like that Valerian Stone Vault, or that was cool.
Anyway, that's a different television show.
Joe, they use Grogu's favorite secret button to boost out of there to Calavala.
A planet in the Mandalorian system, we've heard it mentioned.
It's mentioned in Clone Wars in our intro to Satin in Voyage of Temptation, an episode
that you've heard us mentioned 5,000 times before and we'll hear us mention 5,000 more times
in the future, watch it if you haven't.
You mentioned Ireland earlier.
I thought this had a very Irish coastline feel to me.
It also powerfully reminded me of dragonstone.
Not only the cliff and the seascape,
but the kind of harsh jutting stone nature of the facade of the castle.
Seems like a great place to live.
However, it does seem quite lonely and very drafty inside.
Yeah, I recommend some tapestries.
We do have one mural of a Mandalorian battle.
There's that.
Drapes, some sickness.
Throat pillows.
What'd you think of our name,
Droid, pal?
He is painted blue
to match Boca tan's armor
and that I thought
was really cool.
And then when we go inside
and see that Beau
was completely alone
and that without the Dark Sabre,
her followers abandoned her
made me incredibly sad
because it's like,
you're a member of my clan,
but maybe you're the only one now.
Kind of found that devastating.
It's real like
Ray eating her little
weird bread pudding
by herself
energy from Bo in this episode.
Man, I was delighted to get
Bo in the episode. I'll just say, like, let's talk
about the, in just the big picture for a second.
We were
sending each other the links to this poster
they put out. I think the day of the premiere
right around it. This is an incredible poster.
It's Grogu on the side, looking precious,
as always. And then it's half
Dyn's helmet, half Bo's helmet, split in the middle
by the Dark Sabre.
Yes. Really signaling what is,
as we anticipated,
going to be like a central thing
in this season,
not an accident
to end the premiere
with the conversation
between these two
about this blade,
about the Dark Sabre,
about Mandelaar,
about Quest,
and really about belief,
more than anything about belief.
And so when we see Bo draped
on that throne,
Joe, that pose,
what do you think?
I mean, so, yeah,
broad villain energy
for,
for, to be draped,
on a seat of power like that.
Explicit
Darth Mall
on the throne,
Amanda.
Not just any, Darth Mall, though.
Your boyfriend, animated Darth Mall.
Oh, my.
I regret
forever telling you that.
Don't. Why? I think it's great.
You know, I think animated Obi-One is one of the hottest
creatures who's ever graced our screen.
And I love the chest tats on Darth Mall.
I think it's great.
The poster, yeah, the posters, I mean, like, what, it reminds me, not to talk about Thrones again,
but it reminds me of, like, all those Thrones posters with various people sitting on the throne
or the year when they had, like, people sort of White Walker fight or in the house of, you know, black and white.
It reminded me of the Eldoran splitting Lord of Morton Harry's faces in the Deathly Hallis poster, too.
Great, yeah, so great poster design.
Mando not necessarily known for its, like, poster designs.
This is, like, a really cool, like, sort of piece of flair.
I might have to get this poster.
Yeah, it's really cool.
I mean, especially depending on how this.
season plays out and we just don't know.
Like, I expected, I mean, Bo here is, I wouldn't call her antagonistic.
She feels defeated more than anything else.
But I expected, like, the next time they saw each other to be much more confrontational than it is.
I mean, it's still confrontational.
But she's so downtrodden, but it's not two warriors clashing on each other.
You know what I mean?
And again, similar to, like, the way that the armor feels about.
didn't take him off his helmet, didn't jar an innocent.
Like, he didn't take the dark saber from Bo.
He didn't steal it from her.
He didn't listen explicitly to her directions.
That would have been great if he had done that.
He didn't do it.
She wasn't clear about why she needed it to go down that way.
That would have been great.
It's a classic miscommunication trope.
But, like, he didn't take it, like, he tried to give it to her.
Right?
Like, he didn't try to.
He's not interested.
Adult wants to.
I don't want it.
I don't want it.
She is...
Her reluctant leaders everywhere.
He's been to meet a second to Bo.
He comes to join Bo.
Right?
He's a real joinder.
Did he ask you about that before we go back to the Dark Sabre actually?
Because I thought that was really interesting.
He announces himself and says, I am here to join you.
Yeah.
And do you think...
Not that I think he's acting with any sort of malice.
I think he means it when he says it.
And he's been on a progression in this respect.
But do you think that he's doing that because it's a helpful thing for him,
joining her cause to retake mandolice?
take Mandelor, gets him to Mandelor, or because he believes in the cause?
Because if we, okay, because like he, when they first meet in season two, episode three,
by the way, this is a caveat for our whole season.
I'm going to say season one, season two, season three, episode X, even though I know they are called chapter,
et cetera, because it's, I think, confused, if you say chapter 13 or chapter 50,
you then have to do math to figure out where this is.
This is how we talk about television, all right?
Yes. Sorry to hate to bring it to you, Favs and Filoni.
I do like the idea of the chapter.
Anyway, so in episode three, when Din is the one saying, you know,
the planet's cursed, anyone who goes there dies, et cetera, et cetera,
and Beau says, don't believe everything you hear,
which Dan will bring back up later in this exchange,
our enemies want to separate us, but Mandalorians are stronger together,
and Din says, that's not part of my plan.
Then later in that episode, when she asks if he's sure he won't join them,
he says there's something I need to do.
So it's not like he's like, I refuse to believe this could be possible totally,
though, a little bit there.
but he's got other things on his mind.
Now, he did say fair enough
when she last implored him,
which was the season two finale.
If he should manage to finish your quest,
I would have you reconsider joining our efforts.
Mandalorians have been in exile from our home world
for far too long, and he says, fair enough.
So maybe it's, yeah, fair enough.
I told her I'd join forces,
but maybe it's just that he needs to.
I think he's just trying to get to the surface
so he can get to the living waters.
But then what would he do?
He'd be like, just kidding?
I'm not going to help you.
He's got to meet it if he's saying it.
He'll help them.
And then he's like, and now that we're here,
I just got to dip down to the living waters.
Oh, boy.
Well, it turns out, Joe, it's moot because Bo tells him that there's nothing left to join.
She says, when I returned without the Dark Saber, my forces melted away.
And she asked him if he still has it.
And her reply is so fascinating.
Then you lead them.
wave that thing around and they'll do whatever you say.
This is part of what we heard at the beginning of the episode.
Yes.
It's not exactly a ringing endorsement of his leadership prowess.
She is resentful.
You can feel the deep resentment, right?
Like, you don't care about this.
You don't want this.
You told me you don't want this.
But you have the only thing that will let you do it.
And that matters more than my conviction.
Resentment towards him and resentment towards the people.
Right. So wave that thing around.
That's all they need to see.
Other than the phrasing is such a dismissive thing.
Wave that thing around.
That thing also as if she doesn't like absolutely covet that weapon, right?
Then they'll do whatever you say.
That's a nag on the people, right?
They'll just follow the, they follow the blade.
They don't follow the men or the woman.
Because like she's bitter that they left her.
Yeah.
Without.
Like, yeah.
Setback after setback.
How many setbacks can one character take?
And so you can feel that despair here.
It made me think of the other show we're covering right now, a lot of us.
It made me think of Ellie and that line we've returned to a lot in episode four when she says
to Joel, if you don't think there's hope for the world, why bother going on?
I mean, you've got to try, right?
And that persistence, that insistence on trying has been this really defining thing for
Bo in like really dire circumstances against really, really drastic, stark odds time and time
again. And so you think back again to the way that the armor spoke about Bo to Dinn and about
the Dark Saber being gifted to her instead of being won by Creed. But what she said was Boatan
Creed was born of a mighty house, but they lost sight of the way. Her rule ended in tragedy.
They lost sight of their way and we lost our world. Now, Bo doesn't believe in the Creed.
We've heard the way she talks about it. But you still feel in this moment that she's starting to
believe that this is true, that the way other people think about her, that she isn't worthy,
that she can't do it, that that's, that that is.
actually a truer thing than her commitment.
And also, like, she's, I mean, from the start, if you watch the animated series,
like, she talks about not being the one to lead, you know, when Sabine is talking about
the Dark Sabre in the first place, right?
And she's sort of like, that was my sister, that's not me, right?
So this has been a part of Bo's character even before the setback.
Right.
Absolutely.
But Sabine has to really talk her into taking it and convince her that she's,
the one. I think the line was, Bo says to Sabine, I don't want it. I don't want it. And then
I saw the night king, Sabine. I looked into his eyes. Did I, am I mixing up my,
mixing up my canons? We returned to another one of our favorite Bo talking points here in really
central fashion, which is the projection, the hypocrisy that is really on full display.
Yeah. When Din asked her.
her about giving up on the quest
where you take Mandelaura, and she talks about his
cult giving up long before the purge, which we heard at the top.
And then she goes, where were you then?
Yeah, she's like, where was Gondor when the Westfold fell?
You know what I mean?
Like, where?
Oh, God.
I love it.
I do think she had a little bit of a little bit of a point there about the
children of the watch, those fuckers,
the nestled on Concordia's former members of Death Watch
avoiding the horrors of the purge.
But she then says something,
even more pointed. Steve, can we hear this?
The children of the watch and all the factions that came before
fractured and shattered our people.
Go home.
There's nothing left.
Joe.
We talked about Slaanar Primer.
I was happy to get this here and to have this be a central thing, I hope, in the season,
because I really like, though.
I'm really interested in the character.
I'm thrilled that she seems to be a big part of season three.
This is like astonishingly hypocritical.
These fractures, the shattering, she was so often directly a part of it.
She was a fucking Death Watch terrorist in the number two for previs-a.
She, like, bombed the city.
Yes.
Literally bombed the city.
And, like, so I'm excited to see how they grapple with that going forward or if and when and how, right?
But also, I think it's so fascinating that she says, go home.
There's nothing left.
Like, what's home, though?
right?
Like, this is the question
for the Mandalorians.
What is home
if it's not
Mandelor or Concordia
or whatever, right?
Go home
and then we know
Din has no place to go.
I mean, home.
Asgard is in a place.
It's a people.
I was just about to say that, right?
Wow.
He managed in one section
to hit
Thrones rings
and Marvel.
We did it.
We're talented.
What can I say?
I literally have written
my notes.
Mandilores in a place
it's of people.
I swear to you.
I love it.
But, like, there, like, his home is, like, in the cockpit sleeping with his grog.
You know what I mean?
Like, that's home.
But he hasn't figured that out fully yet, right?
So go home.
There's something left.
And we know for him, he's like, well, I don't have a home.
Like, my fucking covert doesn't want me.
Like, I need to do this.
Right.
Yeah, these are two characters who feel completely cast out.
And so, again, that question of, will they be able to then forge something together instead of
feeling like they're opposed is a really rich text, just like this idea with Bo is, because,
you know, the character has, I think, expressed clearly this evolving view.
We, back in season two, when she said to Dinn that the Mandalorians are stronger together,
that the enemies are the ones who want to divide them, it's clear that this is a character
who has learned a meaningful thing, who has experienced consequential change.
But will she grapple actively with her role in the very thing that?
she's constantly pointing to. I'm so interested to find out. Just as I'm interested to find out
what's next for Dinn, because he tells Bo about his spot day plans. It's like, I need to take a dip.
I'm going to Mandelor so that I may bathe in the living waters and be forgiven for my transgressions.
And her reply here is so fascinating and so sad, Joe. She says, calls him a fool and says,
there's nothing magic about the minds of Mandelor. They supplied Beskar or to our ancestors,
and the rest is superstition. Now, the superstition she's referring to is the one that
we've heard the armorer voice before.
The songs of Eon past, et cetera, et cetera.
Bo, a lot of her life is tied up in another superstition,
which is the idea that the story of the Darksaber carries weight.
And so that was so fascinating.
And maybe that's why she feels this way,
because she's come to resent the weight
that that lore carries in that respect.
So she has to dismiss the rest of it.
Everything is caught up in that storm of bitterness.
And, like, as a part of that,
she has lost her ability not only to believe and have hope,
but specifically to believe in a mess.
mandolorean magic, like the center of the culture that her entire life has been built around
trying to restore? This is like devastating. I think that, you know, she's self-deluded, right?
She obviously still believes in the power of the Dark Sabre, no matter what she says. And whether or not
she believes in the, you know, the mythosaur or any of that is sort of separate, but like this
wholesale rejection of, you know, magic and, you know, magic and, you know,
mumbo-jumbo and stuff like that we see this time again in Star Wars,
those characters on this faith journey, right?
This awakening, this belief in like the Jedi World Reel,
like all that sort of stuff.
It happens time and again, the Force.
What is that?
You know, Din has already learned so much that he didn't know about the Force.
And I think it's interesting when we think of Bo here,
and especially if we think of them, I mean, we should say,
I'm just going to say it.
Next week on the podcast, we're going to get to talk to Katie's
sack off about some of this stuff. We're thrilled. So, you know, we're going to get to ask Katie
about some of the stuff directly, but we don't know exactly how much Bo Catan is a co-lead of
this season, but given that poster, like, and a lot of this thematic setup here, it kind of
seems like she is. And so I think we need to go back to the title of the episode, because
a posse date so clearly refers to Dingerin because we've already heard.
We heard him be called that.
We heard himself refer to himself that.
Like, that's the obvious thing.
But an apostate is a person who's renounces religious or political belief or principles.
In many ways, Bocahattan is also an apostate in this scenario.
And so to watch them on their twin arcs, I'm hoping, which is a new development.
Again, as we talked about like this planting of the pirates, the corian shard planting,
to maybe pay off with the occupation of Navarro at the end of the season or something like that.
That's a guess. We don't know what's going to happen.
I think it feels like a different approach this season if we get Bo and Dinn on twin arcs.
That's an expansion of this story, which was a two-hander for so long.
And I'm excited for that because we fucking love Katie Sackoff.
We are interested by Boca Tampo looking phenomenal.
I should say, we're going to talk about her lid in a second.
You know, so I'm really excited for the possibility of this season.
Me too.
I really, I can't wait.
I'm so excited.
And despite everything she expresses here, she does guide them.
She says, if you want to go, here's where it is.
Civic Center in Sindari.
Is Civic Center a weird thing?
Civic Center is where I did jury duty.
It's like a weird, it's where I did mock trial.
Like Civic Center is such a weird quotidian thing to say in a Star War.
Like, I'll see you in hell.
Yeah, exactly.
Don't capital city of Mandlar.
Great stuff.
We glimpsed the ruins into the season three trailer.
But as we mentioned earlier, we glimps something else right in this episode, which
are our beautiful beloved Pergill.
And that means it's time to bring on Ben Limburg for our lore look.
It is time for our lore look with Ben Limburg, which means that we are now a clan of three.
Wow.
Wow.
Twist at the end.
I have an intro soundbite.
I didn't used to have one.
That's exciting.
Pulling out all the stops.
I've missed you both just as I've missed Mando and Grogo.
I've been on parental leave and I love spending time with my daughter.
But she knew it was time to make room for the other important baby in my life.
She loves Grogu, too.
So it's fine.
They're basically simply.
I love my daughter, I love my daughter, but.
My daughter, but.
My first gift for...
Unconditional love.
It's just that...
My first gift for Sloan Ben was a grogoo swaddling blanket, as you'll recall.
And I still wish I had gone for myself.
She uses it and likes it.
We're here to talk about another thing that we love, though.
Pergill.
Ben, what an amazing, amazing stretch of the episode.
Joe and I very briefly earlier talked about how just wonderful this was to witness,
but we saved the lore for you.
Let's dive right in to that.
hyperspace lane. Tell us everything we need to know about the pergill appearing in the significance
of this moment. Yeah, I thought this was a really special little scene also. And a reminder that
Toto, we're not in Andor anymore because Baby Yoda in a Naboo Starfighter staring at space whales
is about as on Andor as it gets. And I say that with almost unlimited love in my heart for both shows,
just as I have unlimited love for my daughter and for Grogu. But just different vibes, right? Different
pleasure centers, and I'm glad that Star Wars is big enough for both of them, because between the two, most of my itches are scratched.
And I think, imagine seeing space whales in the middle of a Mandalorian episode could be a bit confusing for some people in a way that maybe Andor wasn't often to people who were not as well-versed in the animated shows.
So that's what these breakdowns of lore are for, right?
So Pergill come to us from Star Wars Rebels and from the fedorred head of Dave Faloni.
And the idea behind them was that just as inventors on Earth studied birds to figure out how to build flying machines,
inventors in the Star Wars galaxy might have studied another kind of creature to figure out how to build ships that could travel through hyperspace.
So enter the Pergill, a semi-scientant starship-sized species that lives in space.
and can travel through hyperspace.
So thousands of years before the original trilogy,
not just a long time ago,
but a really, really long time ago,
the Pergel inspired the invention of hyperdrives,
and then the first hyperspace scouts would follow them
to find safe routes and fuel, just tail the whales.
And apparently the Jedi and Sith also used Pergul
and studied them to create wayfinders,
like the ones that Ray and Kylo used to find Exigal.
And then the downside is that once hyperspace travel becomes commonplace, the Pergill get in the way sometimes.
Occasionally, something will go terribly wrong and they will cause a deadly accident by crashing into a ship.
They don't mean to.
They're just big beasts.
And maybe Pergel inspired the Holdo maneuver too.
Maybe that's where Admiral Holdo got the idea.
So you can't have a galactic civilization without hyper drives and there might not be hyperdrives without Pergel.
So these things are pretty important to ancient Star Wars mythology, but they're also pretty important to present Star Wars mythology in that this sighting sets up the forthcoming series, Asoka, a series that I believe we're pretty excited about.
So I don't know whether Grogu is seeing actual pergul here or whether this is some sort of vision.
But either way, it's foreshadowing for us because this connects the Mandalorian to the events.
the characters of rebels, which are going to be a big part of Asoka and possibly some future
crossover with the Mandalorian involved as well. And I can tell you exactly how they factored
into rebels because that has a lot to do with Asoca too. Let's revisit this moment, this wonderful
rebels moment. So before this, Pergill had been seen on screen only twice, I believe, both times
in rebels, though they've been mentioned on other occasions on rebels and the Clone Wars and
memorably, Obi-Wan Kenobi.
Dale.
Bale used to chase Pergill.
They showed up for the first time on the Rebel season two episode, The Call, when the
crew of the ghost is low on fuel and power and they're headed for a refinery and they come
across some Pergill who get attacked by Thai fighters and the ghost saves them because
Ezra Bridger feels a bond with the Pergill through the force.
It's really fun to say Pergill I'm discovering as we go on here.
Later in the episode.
episode, Ezra rides the Pergul king, not to be confused with Pirate King or in charge,
entirely different kings, different monarchy lines.
And he realizes that the Pergul needs to feed on a specific kind of fuel to power their
hyperspace travel.
And then the Pergill return on the Rebels series finale as the rebels, the titular rebels,
are fighting Grand Admiral Theron on Ezra's home world of Lothal.
it turns out that Ezra arranged for the Pergul to take out the Imperial fleet. And at the end of the
episode, Ezra has the Pergul grab Thron's flagship. So he's kind of communing through the force
with them. And he and Thron are still on the flagship. The pergul grab it and their tentacles start
glowing, which is a sign that they're about to jump to hyperspace. That means they're about to blow
their load, basically. Once they start blowing, you know, they're about to get out of there.
Wow.
And they do.
We need a bad baby for that, Steve.
Bad baby.
So they drag Thron and Ezra off with them to parts unknown.
And in the last scene of rebels, Asoka and Sabine Ren, who has a pergul painted on her shoulder plate, team up to search for them, which is presumably where Asoka starts.
So this is probably not the last time that we will see Pergill this year.
My heart is racing.
Couldn't be happier.
I thought it was smart, too, that they introduced them as these majestic, mysterious shadows instead of just putting purple space whales front and center, which could have been a bit jarring.
Then again, I mean, there's so many space whales in Marvel and Star Trek and Doctor Who and other sci-fi series.
Just surprisingly common sci-fi trope.
I was just thinking about the Doctor Who space whale.
Yeah, absolutely.
Extremely 70s sci-fi, I guess.
And not to mention just the whales in Wakanda forever in the way of water.
Like you can't get a genre show or movie made these days without whales of some sort.
So they had to get whales in here to get this green lit.
And by the way, if you have thousands of dollars to drop on the Galactic Star Cruiser experience at Disney World,
and I have not had the pleasure, but the ship slash hotel that you stay on, the Halcyon is a Pergul-class cruiser.
So if you go now you know what you're paying for.
And just a couple important notes as an editor.
Two copy notes here, because even some official Star Wars sources have confused these things.
It's spelled purr like the sound a cat makes and Gil like Gil Gallid.
Just two R's, one L.
Also the plural of Pergill is Pergel.
So Grogu saw a pod of Pergill.
Just so we're all on the same page.
Gill like Gilgallad just made me really happy.
Thank you, Ben, for that.
You're welcome.
This is thrilling.
It's just thrilling, pals.
Is this, okay, I promised Ben that I would not interrupt him in his segment.
I just need to circle back for a second.
As an editor, I have a quick correction, which is that Dave Floddy does not wear a fedora.
He wears like a cowboy hat.
Fedoras have implications.
And I don't like that.
Live on the pod.
I would never, ever, ever question Ben's Star Wars lore.
He obviously knows so much more than I do.
But Chicago is a habergashery segment.
That's wigwashed and jace.
Yeah, exactly.
It's a lid.
It's my beat.
Yeah.
Yeah.
So this could be a teaser for what's to come, obviously.
And you have a theory related to this, right, Mel?
Yeah, I do.
So I think that the main one is what you already said,
which is just that this is set up for Ezra and Thron entering the live action
and for the Rebels 2.0 focus of the Impanations.
ending Asoka show that feels clear, right?
Give us a little taste of this thing.
It made me even more, like, feeling more confident that we'll meet Sabine actually in
Asoka before Asoka, who knows?
The connection, you already talked about this, Ben, one of the most notable parts of the
Pergill plot is the animal, the force bond, the animal bond that Ezra is able to forge.
And that's a through line of the Ezra experience, you know, the initial attempt to connect
with the Lothcat, during his training with Canaan, building, building, building, building.
and there are a number of examples.
And Grogu is another character
we're watching this happen with.
When we get that rancor moment
in Book of Boba Fett,
we've gone from seeing him
thwart a mudhorn in battle
to reaching out to connect
with a massive, powerful creature.
So this feels like
not only directly leading us to Ezra and Thrawn,
but also evoking Ezra
and an aspect of his force power
to make us think about, again,
how central that is to Grogu's power and Grogu's arc. And then what might that mean? Well, I think
it could be a number of things, right? I mean, one of them could actually just be literally with the Pergill,
with Grogu and the Pergill forming a bond. And I'm interested to hear more. I think Joe and I both made
really excited faces when you mentioned the idea of a vision. So like, you can mention a little bit more
about your theory there in a second. Maybe it's just Grogu and the bond that he'll form with these
creatures. That would be amazing too. And that would connect nicely actually to the lesson that Din imparts
in this episode about traveling across the galaxy.
Like maybe Goroco has some pergill journeys ahead of him too.
But we all spent so much time on pods and articles everywhere.
Casual conversation with pals heading into the season talking about the Mithosaur.
We've been talking about it since the last time we covered this Mandoverse together.
And it was difficult, I think, not to think about that in this moment.
Like if we could be building toward Grogu, forging a force connection with the Mithosaur,
if the Mithesor does enter the store.
at some point? Do you think
that that is possible?
Follow up question.
How long of a map do you need
after a Pergill and or
mythosaur bond?
Right, yeah. The bigger, the beast, the longer than that.
He really needs to carbode, I think, before he
tries it, you know?
I guess the question is who gets to ride
the mythosaur? If Grogu is the one who is
making the bond, then maybe he mounts up.
Can we get a tiny little saddle?
That would be ideal.
It should be great.
Why the fuck not?
He's just as much a mandolarian as Dinh Jaran.
Follow-up suggestion.
Yeah.
We get the saddle is for Dinn, but there's like a little side car.
For a Groku.
Like a little Indianian.
Three, Sean Connery in the sidecars.
Oh, darling.
A Mithosaur is probably big enough for both of them.
Maybe they can just sort of side saddle situation.
I don't know.
Yep, yep.
you know what I mean?
What I was thinking of, though, with the vision, right?
I mean, it could be a sign of things to come, not just a vision for us of Asoka coming sometime in
2023, but also Grogu potentially playing some part in that, right?
Because, I mean, we don't know how Asoka and Sabine intend to follow the Pergul's path
and track down Thron and Bridger.
So maybe Grogu is the key, right?
Maybe Grogu is the one who communes with the pergul to find out where.
Ezra Rent. I mean, there's plenty of precedence, obviously, for Mandu and Grogu.
Yeah, right? I mean, we know that if you have a spin-off of this series, Mando and Grogu will show up and
take over that spinoff at some point, so why could they not start it off?
I heard a rumor he's in every episode of Skeleton game. Would that make a skeleton crew?
Like, do you happen?
So that would be a nice segue into Osoka, right? I mean, Grogu teams up with them.
And bonds with the perigal and knows where Ezra went.
Plus, now that Mando is teaching him how to navigate the galaxy, right?
And read maps.
I mean, it's all coming together, right?
Grogu can lead them right to Ezra.
Yeah.
The navigational lessons did feel like.
Stick out.
Yeah.
Significant.
Borgal connections there.
I love it.
Ben, thank you so much.
I really did miss you.
I really, really missed you.
I'm so glad you're back.
It was really happy.
It was mutual.
Likewise.
Thank you.
Thanks, buddy.
Well, Joe, we hit some theories there, but I know that you have another one.
And so we must visit Theory Corner.
This is the way.
This is the way.
This is the way.
It's like Aloha.
You know what I mean?
It can mean whatever you want it to mean.
This is the way.
All right.
I'll keep it brief this week.
I just think I want to zoom back to the founding ceremony that we saw at the beginning.
We talked about all the reasons.
why that might be in there. But I think another reason why it might be in there is to see it
then repeated, perhaps later, if we see Grogu inducted into a clan or house. We don't,
Mallory and I've discussed this off pod. We do not want a Baskar helmet on Grogu's little
head, if that happens. Can't allow it. Even if it has like little like holes for the ears or whatever,
no. Like I don't want to see it. Right. You just cannot cover his face. You just cannot cover his face.
I'd love for him to have a helmet that he just held, like an apple.
And like a little jontie hat, a Baskar hat, who knows, whatever.
But it's not, no, nothing covering that gumdrop face, as you say.
But being in the water, hearing or even saying the words, he's still nonverbal, getting, you know, getting a little baptism, something like that.
I think that could come back around.
And I'd love to see it.
It's beautiful.
Are you ready for Grogo to speak?
I don't know if I'm ready.
The idea of Groger reciting the entire.
creed. I'm like, are we prepared for this?
It's the same
as we felt about Groku. It's like, I think at
first we're going to be like, no,
I hate it. And then, you know,
maybe we'll be like, oh, this sounds right. But at first it's
going to sound wrong. No matter, they could get, they could
resurrect Jim Henson himself.
I mean, I know it's Frank Oz, but I'm just saying like
the, you know,
the, the,
the Muppet voice daddy himself, Jim Henson, or, you know,
they could call up Frank Oz if they want to.
Like, um,
I don't know. We're going to be resistant. And then
hopefully it'll sound right.
Or maybe I'll stay with nonverbal.
We don't know.
I can't wait to find out.
I can't wait to find out.
Just like I can't wait to find out
what your favorite Easter egg
of this episode was, Joe,
because it's time for Easter Egg Corner.
Hey, that's the egg.
You got the egg.
A lot of choices.
What was your favorite?
What are a few of your faves from the episode?
I love a mural.
So you mentioned already,
but Beau's like warm.
You love a water ceremony.
love a mural. I do.
That's what people always say about you.
It's no, it's no like dragon orgy mural from House of the Dragon.
I miss those tapestries. Those were remarkable.
But, yeah, so Bo's, you know, I love a castle, I love a mural.
So I would have to say that. How about you and Elaine are you on Cidde Watch?
Where are you?
Yeah, I enjoyed seeing the House of Isla, Cigna, during the ceremony.
The pre-death watch takeover, sigil swap.
was fun to see. That'll be my pick, I guess, because we've talked about many of the other things
that I might have otherwise selected. Though I think we would both nominate as a co-egg winner,
the armorer, Tony Stark hammering barrel that we already talked about. That was just delightful.
Delightful. Absolutely.
Yeah. Wigwatch. I don't know if I should transition by saying another delight or not. I don't know
what's coming in Wigwatch. It's going to be a journey in real time because the U.S.
have removed your helmet.
This one, pooh-doo.
Okay, the opposite of Poodoo this week, right?
Because Boca Tan has a new wig.
Katie Sackoff has been graced with a beautiful, sleek.
We call this a lob.
It's a lung bomb.
It's a lob.
I think it looks phenomenal.
The headband is still in place.
It's still there.
This is such an upgrade.
I'm astonished by it.
You best believe I will be asking Katie about this next week.
I would have to turn in my credentials as a ringer-verse correspondent if I didn't.
So we'll talk to Katie about this next week.
But I just want, I mean, we just need to say it.
This is one of the biggest wig upgrades of our time.
Monumental.
Monumental.
Just like the subtitles in this episode, Joe.
It's time for our recurring subtitle award.
We do this in honor of the Netflix subtitles.
We're going to take a different path each of us this week.
You're going to actually honor the spirit of the exercise, which is to create your own subtitle.
And I'm just going to share some of my favorites that actually were in the episode.
What should we call our subtitle segment?
Should we call it Coos Gurgles after Grogo?
Yeah.
Yeah, let's go with that.
Yay.
Steve.
Delightful.
That was so cute.
Do you want to go first or do you want me to go first?
It's up to you.
I want to hear your creation, what you whipped up.
Okay, so this is, what was the original Netflix?
Flesh descent, wetly, yeah.
Yes.
Some stranger things.
I'm going with viscera splatters needlessly.
Wow.
I think the Dino Turtle would agree with you.
Yeah.
Great one.
Bivid.
I felt like you were always out gooping me on these titles. So I really went for it. I had guts and then I changed it to viscera just to make it that much better. But you went the cute route this week. Mal, what do you got?
Here's my pick. My one favorite subtitle that was actually in Chapter 17, The Apostate. And by one, I mean eight. I picked eight because there are eight episodes of the Mandalorian. Here they are. They're all about Grogo.
This is an all-time shocking smuggled. This is the new record for smuggles, is it not?
They're all about Grogo. And let me be honest. It was hard. It was a whole about Grogo. It was a whole.
hard to gab it here. They are panting. Grogu Gurgles curiously. Grogo grunting. Grogu exclaiming
playfully. Grogu's squeals, giggling, coos. What a television program. Art. Who needs the eloquent
emotionally and philosophically and politically dense speeches of Andor when you've got Googles and
coos? Why not both? It's the old why not both meme for me, Joe?
Gurgles, gurgles and coos and panting.
Our love of Grogles is no secret, but it is time for another one of our favorite recurring bits.
I don't know if we need to explain this for anyone who might just be joining us in real time.
It's a long-running secret scroll Marvel bit that we now apply to every podcast, whether or not it's about Marvel.
And here, it is secret force user.
Oh, Steve.
Phenomenal.
I miss faceless.
Yeah.
Faceless was great.
Faceless.
All right.
Before you say yours.
Oh, by the way, I just do, I want to shout out Shirley Henderson, who's.
Yes.
Moaning MurderHol herself from the Bridges Jones films, famed actress.
Voice of Babu Frick is back to give us bad baby and no squeasy.
So, you know, I'm so glad that they, like, went back to.
to the best. I feel like there's only one answer for this question. Do you agree with me that there's
only one answer for this question? I knew who I wanted to pick, but then I had a second contender,
and I briefly flirted with going that route instead. But I wonder if the one we both went with
is the same. Okay. So I'm like really curious. So I suggest we say it at the same time.
Okay. Even if it's not the same, I think it'll be funny.
Ready? All right. On the count of three? Yeah.
One, two, three.
Pirate King, Gorgia.
Yeah.
I knew it in my heart.
I can feel it down in my ventricles that you and I would have the same answer.
I'm thrilled right now.
I'm thrilled.
Just here in the fungal mesh network that is Al-Savar.
Oh, boy.
I thought maybe an N's Ellen, you can make the case because of their supreme skill.
Sure.
But it had to be the Pirate King.
Yeah, Pirate King.
It's not the last we've seen of him.
All right.
That's it.
We did it.
We did it.
We're going to be back next week to talk about episode two, chapter 18.
We cannot wait.
Thank you, as always, to our exceptional and zealun podsmiths, Steve Allman, for producing
this episode.
Wipping up that amazing sound design.
Arjunna Rappel for his additional production work on this episode and Joomi Adoneron
for his work on the social for this episode.
Remember, pop over to the prestige TV feed for our Last of Us coverage.
Head back into the Ring Reverse next Wednesday for the Midnight Boys instant reaction to episode two.
And again on Friday for House of Our Chapter 18.
Deep Duck.
Until then, you have to know how to navigate the galaxy because you never know where you might be headed next.
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