House of R - The ‘Mandalorian’ Season 3, Episode 4 Deep Dive
Episode Date: March 25, 2023We must protect the children! And you must listen to the latest deep dive with Mal and Joe. They're back to dive deep into the latest episode of ‘The Mandalorian’ (09:02). Later, Ben Lindbergh jo...ins to discuss the history of Order 66 and the appearance of a legendary Jedi (71:44). Then they give away their episode awards and speculate on what's to come. Hosts: Mallory Rubin and Joanna Robinson Guests: 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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This is the forge. It is the heart of Mandalorian culture.
Just as we shape the Mandalorian steel, we shape ourselves.
All begin as raw ore.
We refine ourselves through trials and adversity.
The forge can reveal weaknesses.
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.
Back to the Armourer's Forge, but also to join us on the ringer's nexus podcast feed for all things fandom.
Joining me today to remind me that one does not speak unless one knows.
It's my training dart challenge mate in my house of our...
Worker.
Co-host, Joanna Robinson.
If the rule was we do not speak until we know,
These podcasts would be a lot shorter, Valerie, than they actually are.
So, boo to that part of the creed.
Yeah, eat shit, creed.
Yeah.
Once again.
But not Michael B. Jordan's Creed.
We support you.
Just the covert.
Adonis Creed.
The Dolan Covert's Creed.
Yes.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Joe, we are, of course, here today to dive deep into the fourth episode of the Mandalorians of third season.
But before you summon the Shriek-Chofferns.
training team.
Some quick programming reminders.
Next week of the midnight boys.
We'll, of course, have their instant reaction
to the fifth episode of this Mando season.
We will be back on Friday for our Chapter 21 deep dive,
but we'll be with you a couple other times
and a couple other ways as well.
We will be over on our sister feed,
the Prestige TV podcast, every Friday.
Double House of Our Friday action on double feeds
because we'll be breaking down every episode of the new season of Yellow Jackets.
Buzz, Buzz, Buzz, baby.
And...
Buzz, but...
I like that you say Buzz, Buzz, Baby.
That's so nice.
I prefer buzz, buzz, buzz.
You say buzz, buzz, bitches, yeah.
That works.
We've got another pod coming next week, Joe.
So exciting.
It's time to enter the house of who.
Can you give everybody...
Before you tell everybody how to find all of that, which I need you to do as well.
Can you tell everybody once more if they need the refresher, what to watch for the first Dr. Whoopat?
So if you are just hearing about this for the first time, which is possible, I have somehow duped Mallory Rubin, who is extremely busy all the time into watching.
I know.
I'm just kidding.
That's not a damn thing.
I can't wait.
I'm so excited.
I have delightfully enticed Mallory Rubin into watching.
A lot of New Who.
New Who is the Doctor Who run that started in 2005.
Leading up to the anniversary special that is happening in November, where David Tenet is coming back to Doctor Who for a little stretch.
So we are going to, for every other month for the next few months, going to be checking in on Mal's Progress through this watch, hoping that you guys are watching along with us.
I've already heard from a bunch of our listeners who are watching Who for the first time.
because of this and that thrills me to my core.
So we're starting off slow and easy
with the Christopher Eccleston season of Doctor Who.
That is the first season of New Who, again, start in 2005.
The first episode is called Rose.
The last episode is called The Parting of the Ways.
So episode one through episode 13,
the Christopher Eccleston season.
You can watch a Christmas special if you want.
We're not talking about it until next time.
So just 13 episodes.
Christopher Eccleson.
He is the ninth doctor.
Doctor Who, that is what we were doing.
And then Mallory and I will be talking about it.
On Monday, this episode will have like a little bit of extra like history of Doctor Who and why it's important and stuff like that.
And then we'll be talking about that season and then going forward, we will let you know what the next chunk will be and the next chunk will be.
I am over the moon to share this thing that I love with Mallory.
I know that she is going to love it because it is a very emotional show along with all the cool genre stuff that we love.
So here we go.
Did I miss anything?
I can't wait.
I wouldn't know if you had.
That's part of the joy.
It's all new to me.
How do we?
And like, just to say, if you've never watched Doctor Who and you're starting with this 2005 season, the 2005 season is much hipper than like the stuff that aired in the 60s for sure.
But it's still got some hokeyness.
That's part of Doctor Who's charm.
So if you're watching and you're like, Joanna, why am I watching this thing where the aliens are wearing like rubber suits in a couple episodes?
A, it gets better and B, that's just part of Doctor Who's charm.
Just roll with it, I promise you.
I love it.
Can't wait.
Joe, how can everyone follow all of that?
The Whoopod and everything.
I'm so glad you asked me.
Okay, like, first of all.
Why don't you just subscribe to the ringerverse?
Like, what are you doing with yourself?
You haven't already done that.
That way you get all the House of Our content, all the Midnight Boys, the Mint Edition,
everything that's happening in the feeds, great stuff.
You know what?
While you're there, give us those five stars, folks.
We haven't asked in ages.
Yeah, five stars.
Maybe I haven't asked on House of Our ever.
Give us the five stars.
Give us a five star.
Give us a nice review would be nice.
Sometimes we get not so nice reviews.
So if you have something nice to say,
That might be nice.
And then press the Sibi podcast feed.
I recommend you.
Do you subscribe to that as well?
Also want to hit us with a five star over there.
That's great.
So that you can catch up with the...
Five stars.
Catch up with yellow jackets and succession and all the stuff we're covering over there.
Balls and social.
Yeah.
Jomey is just crushing it all over the place.
Instagram, TikTok, while it still exists.
Twitter, et cetera, et cetera.
At ringerverse or at ringer.
And did I miss something?
Oh, Hobbits and Dragons at gmail.com.
There were kind of sort of dragons on this episode of the Mandalorian.
So we are once again relevant with our email address.
But that's where you can sell.
It said, Yellow Jackets' Thoughts, Doctor Who Thoughts, Mandalorian thoughts, Apple Thoughts, anything your heart desires.
We are ready.
The doors are open.
That's it.
Wonderful.
Back to you.
Okay.
Last program reminder is the old neighborhood spoiler warning.
We will be talking today about the episode of television that you're here to listen to us discuss.
The Mandalorian Chapter 20, The Foundling, will also be discussing and considering fair game.
All of Mando to date, other Star Wars programs such as the Clone Wars, Rebels, Bad Batch.
Really, all of Star Wars canon is on the table today.
So if you don't want to hear about, say, various prequel-era starships, consider this your warning.
Okay.
Chapter 20, The Foundling, directed by Carl Weathers, written by John Favreau and Dave Theloney.
This checks in at just north of 32 minutes, and that includes the previously on, the intro, the credits.
We have followed the longest ever episode of The Mandalorian with the shortest ever episode of the Mandalorian.
And that gets us to our opening snapshot.
Welcome to the Port of Ringerverse, Jim of the Outer Rim.
Joanna Robinson.
Overall impressions of Chapter 20.
And quick temperature check on season three at the midway point,
because that's where we are.
We're at the midway point.
This reminded me in a lot of, I mean,
I have a lot of notes for a lot of institutions that we see in this episode.
Yeah.
And a lot of feedback ready to ready.
and raring to go.
But this episode reminded me a lot of earlier episodes of The Mandalorian that just felt like pure plot, sort of, you know, it's a very adventure of the week kind of episode.
We do get a flashback and some important, you know, unearthing of trauma and stuff like that.
But it just felt, it feels so tight and taught and straightforward.
I saw some people liken this, I think because the characters are on a beach at one point.
liking this to beach episodes in anime history or if you're not a huge anime fan but you watch
Avatar, there is an episode called The Beach, which is the fifth episode of the third season.
Beach episodes in anime tend to be like, it's almost like a bottle episode in animated form
where you like press pause, your characters on a beach and usually there's some like
emotional introspective and often flashbacks. But I don't know that I would necessarily like
call this a beach episode. But I think.
the Mandalorian would crush a beach episode.
And then do you want my temp check or do you want me to wait on that?
Hit me with your season three midway point temp check.
So we're midway.
Yeah.
How, I mean, Mallory and I like to say this a lot.
How we feel about this season is going to depend on how they land it, right?
Like, I'm open to being delighted by the back half and then just say, like, this is a great
episode, a season of television.
Right now I'm floundering a little bit to see the big picture.
You know, and I think that's just because in the first two seasons,
the Mandalorian did have a very clear purpose that he was sort of like reaching towards.
And we thought in this season his very clear purpose was like,
get to the living waters.
But then he got that out of the way.
So now the question now is like, what are, you know, what's the plan now?
And so I can I talk about a little bit about footage we saw in trailers?
No spoiler.
I don't know any spoilers.
But just like I was rewatching all the like trailer footage to see what was remaining.
And there's a shot of our guy Carson Tiva, who we met in a previous season, saying to Dinn, there's something dangerous happening out there.
By the time it becomes big enough for you to act, it will be too late.
That is extremely tantalizing.
They use that overfootage of Pershing, but like we know that that's sort of a misconduct.
direct or unless he's talking about the cloning plot.
That'll be interesting.
But that's, I'm like, when are we getting, when is Carson Tiva showing up?
And then more, something that feels more concretely connected is there are a bunch of shots
of a whole bunch of Mandalorians fighting on Navarro.
So it looks like we're headed towards possibly Mandalorians versus pirates.
And I will just remind you that it's been 23 days since we last saw the pirate king,
Gory and Shard.
So, but not 23 days since we last thought of him, Joe.
No, always in my thoughts and prayers.
So I'm wondering if I think we thought maybe we were headed towards like a
Mandalorian Civil War, but maybe we're heading just towards the unification under whose
leadership remains to be seen.
And then seeing the might and force in the Mandalrians as a united group, what could
they achieve if they are united under one leader, they could save Navarro and perhaps invest in some
real estate? But like, I think that's interesting to me, especially compared to season one of the
Mandalorian, thinking about the covert on Navarro and how hidden they were and how they did come out
of hiding at, you know, at a point when they were needed. But they were still sort of like sewer rats
San Navarro, whereas if they sort of repel in the way it seems like they might in the trailer,
that just seems like a progression for them as a group.
So I don't know.
I think that's really interesting.
So I think then the question remains, like, who will lead them?
And, you know, Bocatan's making a lot of a strong case for herself.
But we also think the show is called the Mandalorian because we think Dynchartan is our lead character.
So I don't know.
How are you feeling?
What's your quick time check on season 3 at the midway point?
And how did you feel about this episode?
Yeah, I enjoyed the episode quite a bit more than last week's installment.
The non-Grogu parts of it were obviously like it's impossible to measure up to a couple
sequences that are all grogoo all the time and just top tier like this is everything I want
the Mandelor to be when we get a Grogu training sequence or a Grogu flashback.
special. And some of the moments with Grogu and Din that we got in this episode were really
wonderful. And then I think when they parted, it showed us simultaneously what the widening of
the Mandalorian character set and the season and the scope of the show overall can afford,
which is like a really interesting conversation between the armor and Grogu, for example,
or a bow and the armorer at the end of the episode. And then also what I'm really hoping they don't
lose, which is Dinn and Grogu and their relationship as the, like, beating heart of this.
Because I think that the season has been mixed overall.
I'm with you that we have more than enough time, though quickly that could change and cease
being true.
But right now, we still have more than enough time for this overall clear thrust of the
season to take shape.
And I think also if this season ends up being a little bit more about establishing new dynamics,
establishing new character sets, establishing those new missions.
and quest so that everything next season feels like,
okay, this is what this is all about,
then long game still could be like a totally worthwhile pursuit,
even if it's a little bit uneven to get there.
But it reminds me so far, like I enjoyed this episode.
The season feels one degree off to me still,
and some of that is the balance between episodes,
though I will say like,
I always, in the long gap between seasons two and three of the,
The Mandalorian, I always thought it was a little bit strange when some of the conversation
about Mando because of the direction, you know, understandably the direction that we seem to be
heading in for this larger plot, lost sight of exactly what you identified, which is like,
this was kind of always an adventure of the week show.
And sometimes you would watch it on a given week and have absolutely no sense of a larger
forward momentum beyond just the joy of being with those characters inside of that adventure.
And I think that's ultimately to the show's credit and part of its charm.
And part of what I really loved about the second episode, in particular.
was that it felt like it knew how to strike that balance between maintaining that core strand
of what the mandolian DNA is while also giving us more lore, giving us more history,
giving us more characters, widening the intent and the mythology without losing that beating
heart. And so, like, Dyn feels like he is receded in this season in a way that is a little
concerning to me. And I think that's part of why the balance feels a tad off. Now again, if at the end
we're like, man, Bo Catan, who is a character that you and I are both very excited is in the season,
to be clear, we have a clear sense of Bo's role in the story. The Armour, we've learned something
about this character and this character's history, like hopefully, right? Etc. Then maybe in
hindsight, all the brew feels a little bit more balanced, but it's going to take a few more
episodes to get there. Yeah, I was having a conversation with a friend of mine about this, and he was like,
does it feel like Din Jarnes no longer the main character of this show? And I was wondering if, like,
you know, that poster that we like to talk about for this season where it's Din and Bo and the
dark saber between them, and that what that implies is a clash or a something between two equally weighted
characters. And we spent so much time with Din, and if you are a non-animated series watcher,
you had spent very little time with Beau.
So if they had to like, you know, tip the scales and heavily feature Bo in order for it to feel like to lead characters versus, you know, guest star of the season and versus Dan or something like that, I think that that's kind of interesting.
But, and I love Katie and I think this character is super interesting.
And I'm thrilled she's here.
But I think it's really interesting.
I mean, we're going to get into talking about the episode, but the episode opens from, like, Bo Catan's point of view.
Like, that's, we are in her POV for much of this episode when we're not in Grogo's little head.
So, like, yeah, I mean, that's a fact.
And to what you said, I was making a face that our listeners couldn't hear, but I'm just like, I don't know that I can hang with a placetter.
I can hang with a placetter episode or two.
I don't know if I can hang with a place that are season of television.
But.
Well, and then that gets back to not that we always want to revisit this,
but it does get back to the like,
would it have felt that way if chapters five and six of Boba Fett had been in this season.
Like, the answer is no.
Yeah.
But here we are.
Here we are.
And we do have a fun episode and an interesting episode to talk about.
So let's do it.
Let's dive in and bathe in the living waters of chat.
Chapter 20.
All right, Joe, it's back to the Turtle, the Dino Cove.
And it's P.E. time for the Mandalorian Covert.
We get this interesting glimpse into the daily routine of this rebuilding sect.
And as you noted, we're on Bo's point of view initially.
Bo's walking around, taking it all in, watching with interest.
My read is not just acclimating, but scouting, looking and seeing.
seeing, hey, are these going to be the warriors who can help me if I win them as my followers?
Retake Mandelor, can they become my clan?
Great question.
Great questions to ask.
I have a lot of questions for the covert in this episode.
So let's just start with my first one, which is what kind of training are we achieving by just shooting at the water?
Like, what is just shooting at the open water achieving for us?
How do we know that we are, is this target practice?
How do we know if it's just going into the water?
Yeah. Is it a deterrent for another aquatic attack? Like if you just keep firing your blasters?
That leaves us, that makes us leapfrog much further into a more important note, which is like, why are you here at this cave?
And it's the worst possible location it seems. Again, many, many notes for the covert, some questions of their armor.
But the training montage when I was watching it, or like, it wasn't a montage, but like watching the train, I'm like, some of this looks cool.
And some of this, I'm like, did they literally just say stand at the shore and shoot the water?
Like, what is happening?
One of my questions that I had for you and that I have for the season to this point is, like,
are we ever going to find out more about where all these folks came from?
Again, in Boba, when Din goes to reunite with the armor and Pazvisla,
it's just the three of them at that point.
And, you know, we understand that they're searching and hoping.
But it feels like a very important detail for the fleshed out fullness of,
of this group, but also the world of this season,
to understand how they have achieved this.
Not that we need to understand every single character's backstory
and where every person was discovered in hiding,
but broadly, like, how have they achieved this?
How have they gone from three people in Book of Boba Fett, Chapter 5,
to amassing strength and family?
And how are they continuing to build from there?
Like, I really, I feel the absence of that kind of insight
about this community.
We would really benefit from some of that.
And I know that one theory of people had was that like some of them were Bo's old followers,
but like that's not the case because Bo shows up and there's no recognition, right?
So like, yeah, I would love to watch Paz and the armor proselytizing across the universe
to gather their flock.
That sounds fun to me.
Or was a mention.
Like we didn't, we didn't trips all around the outer rim to wind up getting eaten by Dino,
turtles, why are we camping out here?
Exactly.
Yeah.
When you pulled me out of my super peaceful
non-existence where I was not constantly
under threat of being eaten and attacked by air or sea,
you told me, like just a couple lines like that.
That would help.
But we quickly leave the realm of questions
into the realm of perfection
because we next see sweet baby gumdrop grogo
sitting alone away from the other
Mandalorians, surrounded by what we initially think is a bunch of rocks that he is moving with
the force and then come to realize are a bunch of crabs. It's just classic 10 out of 10-0 notes stuff
for me, Joe. He shares our passion for Ocean Vistas, which I thought was an important thing for us
to discuss for a minute. You know, he loves to look out at the water and reflect. Do you think he would
enjoy a crab boil? Like, I'm pretty sure he's just eating those things raw and wriggling.
Yeah, he's happy to crunch down as is, I think.
I mean, you would need to add some old bay, right?
Like, that's your, that's your East Coast thing.
Some steamed crabs, some old bay.
Yeah.
I would need them to go into like a Chapino or something like that.
That's the San Francisco version of it.
But either way, we're not, we're not eating them with the sand still in.
That's not what we're doing.
Did you think that Grogu wanted a snack as is his want?
Or did you think that he was maybe doing a little animal bonding?
We've talked a lot across the season about his connection.
to other life forms where you sense in some of that.
So my response is why not both?
You know what I mean?
Like one can bond with an animal just to like make it take a nap or whatever it is that
Groko is on the past.
And one could also bond with an animal to lure it into your greedy little ma.
No.
Brogo was constantly snacking.
What are you talking about?
Yeah, but he was not going to snack.
He's just like, I'm going to pick up this frog and eat it.
He's not like, I'm going to lure you into my web of deception.
That was before he knew the.
the full, you know,
width of his powers.
This is the path to the dark side.
What you're saying right now.
You're sitting,
you have a bunch of yellow and green around you,
but I just see some red coming in.
This is a real Sith energy here.
I'm just saying.
He's animal bonding and he's just chomping on everything in sight.
Yeah.
As always, I would love for those around him
to provide him with more sustenance.
You know, growing boy needs his calories.
Speaking of dad, didn't want over.
But also, he's just sitting.
He's just sitting by this shoreline where Donald Turtle could come snap him up.
Like that and like I, and you know, we'll chat about this as he goes into the challenge sequence here.
But it is striking to see all of the Mandalrians, all of the foundlings, all of the members of the covert together engaged in this training exercise.
And he is separate and apart.
And you really feel the evolution inside of the episode of him, him embracing, but also the community embracing him.
You feel that isolation at first.
It's just heartbreaking.
I fucking love him.
I couldn't love him more.
Joe, I get such a kick out of Dinn going into like Little League dad mode when he comes over and says, put down the rocks kid.
Tells him it's time to train.
He says, it's time that you learn with the other foundlings.
And there's that same idea.
It made me happy and sad all at once because I was feeling happy that Grogu, if we think back to sanctuary, one of the episodes, one of our really, our shared loves, chapter four.
Yes.
joy, the palpable joy that was emanating off of Grogu on Sorgon when he got to hang out
with the other kids and frolic with them in the yard and just be a baby and hang with his peers.
And the idea of him on the path to making friends with other foundlings maybe is like really
exciting and wonderful and being welcomed into the community and folded into the community more
fully. But then it makes me sad because like he doesn't have that right here yet. And also again,
it's that tricky tug of war.
I want to see Grogo interact with more of these characters.
I don't want him and Din to be a part for 80% of every episode.
I also don't want them to like strap a little weapon to him.
Like I just, I, he's just a baby.
Like, I hate this.
A little baby.
Playtime forever.
I need you to focus.
I think that the kids in the sanctuary episode were just like
cool little, you know,
Marsh farmer kids, whereas, like, these are weird
Helmuters, fundy, you know, kids.
Cold warriors, yeah.
It's a little harder, right?
Yeah.
So, Dinscoops him up and presents him as the next challenger.
And Joanna, when I tell you that I actually screamed out loud in my living room at my
television, horrified at the prospect of seeing Grogu enter like a fighting pit,
but also just delighted that we were clearly going to get a Grogu-centric stretch here.
This is a lot.
A lot of emotional turmoil.
And his face here.
Amazing facial expressions.
Amazing Grogu work from everybody involved.
But everybody who's a part of Team Grogu just talked to your stuff in this episode.
Yeah.
He has this look on his face at first.
He's like, Dad, I don't want to go into the Octagon.
Why are you making me do this?
I'm just a baby.
Yeah.
He's like, I'm just hanging out with my crabs looking at the ocean.
By the way, my beach book.
I'm so sorry.
But back on crab.
I just want to say, like, to my point, as soon as he walks away, they scurry back into
the ocean.
They do.
They were afraid.
Without question.
Holding him holding them there.
You know what I mean?
Like, for what purpose?
It's, I can't dispute that point.
I can't dispute that point.
The way that he's watching, when Dinne brings him over, he's watching Ragnar and the,
the challenger that Ragnar is initially engaging with with great interests.
And I was like, wondering, is he a lot of?
because he's sitting alone with the crabs first
because he actually didn't want to fight
because he didn't want to partake in this
or just because he hadn't been invited.
I don't know.
I want to know everything about Grogoy's experience so far.
But then we get Bo asking
if this is a good idea.
And Din says,
if he is ever to rise
from foundling to apprenticed,
he must learn.
So there are two things here.
One, obviously, the use of the word apprentice.
Very deliberate language.
language choice here.
Gros was on being,
yes,
yes,
Gros passed on being
Luke's apprentice,
passed on being a member
of Luke's school,
but he can be
another type of apprentice
still.
It doesn't always have to be
a complete rejection
of an idea.
And Grogu continues
to be this character
through which the show
explores the idea
of embracing your own path
to something.
What does being an apprentice
look like for Grogu?
I think that's the biggest,
biggest, biggest element
of this episode.
is this question we've been asking all season,
what does it mean to be a Mandalorian and forging her own path?
This idea that like, sorry, what's your second point
so that I can angrily refute it?
No, let's sit this first,
and then I'm going to clear out for some ISO ball for you
for the second part.
Okay.
I think it's really interesting to watch the armor,
watched Dinn become, because like when we met Dinn,
he was part of the covert,
but he was not hanging out with a covert.
He was lone wolfing, right?
He was out doing his bounty hunting.
And when he would come back, like when he walked down in the sewers, Navarro, whatever,
they all gave him really like suspicious looks.
Our guy, Pazvisla, the warmest cuddliest guy that ever was.
You know, like none of them.
Like the armor is the only one who's friendly to him.
And it's because did never like, at least from what we knew when we met him, like was not treating
this as his family or as this community, even though he was raised by them.
He is like gratified.
He saves Besscar for the foundlings, as it should be.
Like, he understands the way.
He understands all the creed and all that.
But he's not emotionally connected to this community in any way that we could see in
those first season of the Mandalorian.
Now that he has created his own family, his clan of two, he's so much more interested in
integrating into the covert, right?
And so the armor is watching him go from the lone wolf to, you know, to a joiner.
real Tommy from The Last of Us Energy.
He's a joiner now, right?
And again, I think there's this constant push and pull
between individuality and community in this episode
and what room there is for either or both of those things
in this particular sect of Mandalorianism.
Right, right.
The idea of community is relevant to the next question I wanted to ask.
you, which is Bo Dyn, are you shipping it? Because when Bo comes over to ask if this is all a good
idea, there is just undeniable mom, dad energy coming off of the pair of them with Grogo.
You are the founder and president of the Dan and Cobb belong together club. I ship it as well.
Many do. How are you feeling?
We've received many emails about the DIMBO ship.
And I just want to say to all of you, how dare you lose the faiths?
That being said, it has been 408 days since we last saw a Cobb fan.
Disney, you were on notice.
Wow.
Wow.
Something else is true is that, yeah, I'm counting.
Something else is true, though, is that, you know, as much as I might ship Cobb and Den,
and they have great energy.
Disney historically is not very eager to engage in a, you know, lean into the queer shipping community.
So I wouldn't be surprised if we go in a Bow and Din direction.
I'll be disappointed, but I'll not be surprised.
As long as I get to see Cobb Vant again, that's the key.
That's the most important part.
I mean, we're running out of time.
You know, like you know it.
We got to get back to Navarro.
We've got to.
I know and I'm getting fucking nervous.
I promised you.
You promised me.
We made the Unbreakable veil.
We got four episodes left.
They got to get to Navarro.
I assume we're going back to Mandelor.
We've got to see Gideon at some point.
Do we have time to go to Tatween?
Maybe Cobvance will come from Tattoine to meet our crew somewhere else.
That would be ideal, frankly.
But no, I don't know.
It would be fun to go back to see Pelly again as well.
So all sorts of possibilities.
All sorts of possibilities.
Like until the like last credits roll on the finale and even dare I say into post-credit
because that's the last time we saw Cobb fan, I will keep the home fires burning.
Yeah.
Maybe he'll be in the Stinger again still just.
Maybe Tim was too busy.
Maybe Tim was too busy making justified and he couldn't like like maintain the Cobb hair
because he needed to bring back the rail and Givens hair.
You know what I mean?
the Cobb facial hair.
It's a look, so I don't know.
Boy, okay.
It's a lot to contemplate.
As is this training dart sequence,
because when Din calls over the judge,
the judge says Grogu is too small.
Din does not give a shit.
Wants his son to go up to the plate
and dunk on everyone else out on the diamond.
I am his ward for seed.
The judge asks,
and I quote,
what weapon.
And when I tell you, my heart clenched and stopped
and the idea of Grogu being around weaponry,
this was deeply distressing.
The challenger, Ragnar,
who of course is the found link, Paz's son,
as we will learn in this episode,
from the season three premiere baptism sequence,
the one who did not complete the creed
before the Dino Turtle attack,
is the challenged.
And he picks darts.
But before we see,
see the darts.
Ragnar has a question for the group.
Steve, can we please hear this?
Why doesn't he
wear a helmet? He is too young
to speak the creed, and so too young
to wear a helmet.
Then he's too young to fight.
Okay, you're mad at Ragnar
because he dared to
suggest that... Don't put these ideas into the universe.
Okay.
I'm pro-Ragnar in this moment because I agree
he's too young to fight. He is just
a baby. I know he's 50 years old, but he is babbling and cooing and there's a part.
There's a part.
There's a part later on the episode.
There's a part later in the episode where he is like trailing after the armor and he's like
panting with exertion.
I know.
Because he can like barely keep up.
It's just a baby.
Fun fact for, you know, connected to the ringer.com.
What a great website.
Friend of the Ringer.
Jimmy Kimmel.
This is Jimmy Kimmel's nephew.
Wesley Kimmel plays.
Ragnar, which I think is really fun.
And then also,
I guess we, you know,
I think you called out
Sigil watch when we first
watched Ragnar in the first episode,
but you go back and watch
the sigil of House Vizla is like
one of the banners that they're carrying walking towards
him. So like we probably should have known
that he was in House Vizla.
Pathclaims is a son.
I don't know how much you want to get into this right now
or later, but like
certainly not by.
biological son, right? Unless...
We could do this here. We could do it here. Yeah. Well, I think that there are two possibilities, right?
One is that he is a foundling that he's his adopted son as Grogu is for Dins. And that would be beautiful and wonderful.
He could be his biological son. There are plenty of...
If so.
Not the only candidate for...
But we saw that it was just the two of them, at least for a while.
But this kid is like 14.
I know. So, like, where was that kid at the time?
Like, if he is Paz's son, is he a strange son from a divorce, like, that came before, you know?
They're, like, 15 fucking days into their campfires and naps before they actually go to rescue him up in the nest.
And he mentions that he's his son.
So it wouldn't shock me if this moron, Paz Vizlo, was like, yeah, my kid is maybe somewhere in the galaxy.
I don't know.
I'm assuming that he is.
I need more sense of urgency from Pazzlo.
around this mission, I got to say. We have a lot of notes for Paz. I do think that even the prospect of Ragnar being his biological son does, I can't believe we're doing this inside a section about how cute Grogo is, but hey, it's how Savar, you know, this is the, this is the brew that people come for. It does, once again, give us the opportunity to talk about how the members of the children with the watch.
The privilege. Obviously, fuck with their helmets on because they are such strict followers of the creed. And so I had a couple questions for you about this.
Can you imagine the noise of like
Of this clanging?
A lot of clanging.
I mean,
you probably are factoring that into some of the positions you're choosing.
I have to imagine.
It's got to be a variable.
Like,
let's just be practical about this, right?
Do you think that instead of saying, like,
do you want to bang?
They say,
do you want to clang?
Like, do you think the bed's what children are going to watch?
Bad baby.
So you don't know what the person you're fucking looks like.
And in a way,
I think there's something beautiful about that, right?
It's like the Netflix,
of his blind reality universe has melded with the Mandalorian here. Wonderful. You know,
you follow your heart. Doesn't matter what somebody looks like. But if you then have kids,
are you looking at your child's face and saying, well, this kid doesn't look like me? I guess
I have a sense now of what you look like. It feels like a little bit of a loophole and the don't
take off your helmet thing. But I really, and I'm sorry and I want to apologize, but I just have to ask
you, given that we know they refuse to take their helmets off, what do you think this means?
are the Mandalorians not engaging in oral sex?
Or are they doing the, you know, we have seen Din do a little like a, I'm sorry to use this phrasing in this context,
the context of this conversation, but he'll slurp some soup.
You know, he'll lift his helmet a bit.
We'll see some chin and some mouth.
So is that the technique that they're using?
Or is this just not a part of their sexual experience?
Bad baby.
I just think that they're.
there is a wide gulf between a, like, a tentative slurp and, like, what you need.
I feel like they have a sort of DJ Khalid approach to oral sex, which is, like, it's off the table.
They don't do it.
And that's why part of why they're so tightly wound, honestly.
Not that we needed any more evidence that the creed and the way are just a debacle.
Bad idea.
He needs to move beyond, but we have further proof here.
Okay.
If I were shipping Bowen, which I'm not, but if I were, like, imagine she gets to introduce him to, like, helmetless sex and or oral sex.
Great.
Oh, my goodness.
Season three finale?
I mean, this goes back to our, I mean, I don't think you and I have had this debate, but I'm sure you've had this debate in covering Mando, maybe with Jay, and I've had this debate, which is like, is Danjar and a virgin, right?
No, definitely not.
No, no, no, you think he's had sex with, like, Tonks, right?
Like, we talked about that.
Absolutely.
I think he might be a virgin.
I consider that canon, honestly.
I think, no, we have had this debate.
I remember now.
I think he's a virgin.
I do.
No. No.
And I think someone should fix that soon.
Definitely fuck Tongues.
And I think, Din, as you noted, a bounty hunter, you know, making his way across the galaxy.
I also think they just all smell terribly.
They smell terribly.
They're in that armor all the time.
Have you ever dated a hockey player I have?
When they take off the padding and the gloves, it reeks.
It's so bad.
That's what they smell like.
That's true.
Though I do think the din is, I have to hope that he's cleansing and cleaning.
He takes off the helmet on his own.
So doing some exfoliating, getting a little body wash going on, keeping it fresh in any way he can.
But also, I think of this sometimes when there's a showmance on the survivor season and it's like, you guys reek,
are you seriously fucking in a hut somewhere?
But people do it.
And, you know.
I guess if everyone smells bad at a certain point.
Yeah, exactly.
It's just like whatever.
But I just think if like Dynjarn is traveling the galaxy taking whores baths at best.
Like, see how hot Pedro Pescal is.
Like, I just, um, anyway, this is a children's show, right?
Okay.
Well, it's just a, even by our standards, a remarkable transition from that right back into Grogo.
Because that's what's happening, because that's the scene we're still on.
And I just, here we are.
Thank you for listening to our podcast.
The one thing I'll say about Ragnar.
And the helmet thing is I do want to thank him for giving us the peace of mind that the Grogo helmet is not in our immediate future.
Because if he's too young to wear a helmet, he's going to be this size for a while.
I feel like we're a couple centuries away from this being a worry.
And hopefully they will have abolish this aspect of the creed by then.
So thank you, Ragnar also.
Fuck you.
This is why I'm voting Beau.
Vote, Bo, keep Grogu helmet free.
We should make, like, pins, like buttons and bumper stickers.
If this is Bo's, like, number one campaign promise, if you vote for me...
It's a strong platform.
There will never be a helmet on Grogu.
Easy.
Landslide victory.
I love it.
I love it.
We get a little bit more insight into the creed here, actually, because there's this one does not speak unless one knows.
Is that not the creed exchange?
between Din and Ragnar.
This is just classic
the creed is a disaster and blows
and is terrible. Like, don't ask questions.
Kind of thing that we are programmed
to rebel against inside of our stories.
Give me the willies.
Didn't love it.
Didn't love hearing fighters arm yourselves either,
but this is when we get the little dart wrist banjo
strapped on to Grogu.
Bo puts it on, which was darling.
It reminded me of like rapping
a bit of pastry dough around a tiny little hot dog to make a pig in a blanket.
Like that was what we were looking at here.
It's just I could barely contain my response to this.
He's so tiny.
He's so small.
Did you like, did you rollerblade when you were little or did you ever like put pads on like a little,
like a little tiny kid and you put the wrist guards on them to rollerblade?
That's what it reminds you of.
Oh, boy.
Maybe Groger will get it.
imagine
it soon.
Imagine Grogu
rollerblading.
Okay.
It might help.
It might help him
keep up with the armor.
What Boe says to him, though,
is she's putting on this wrist
launcher show is,
don't worry, my dad was the same way.
He's just proud of you.
More Bo family history,
which I know you're tracking.
More insights into how Bo sees Din,
but also, crucially,
more Bo-Grogu bonding.
This has been a central part of the season.
What do you think this is priming us?
for the clan of two becoming the clan of three or a grogou response if there is a rupture and he is
very attached to the person on the other side well i think grogoo like if if we need grogou to help with
the mythosaur grogou like really likes beau bow like his prime to that also this is a big episode for
bow gaining i don't think she's doing in a calculated way but gaining important allies right
clan vizla is now on bow's side the armorer is on
both side. You know what I mean? Like, this is a huge...
I have some questions about that. Yeah, I know you do. But like,
this is a huge, this is a huge win for Bo. So I think she's just like making friends and
winning friends and influencing people, the old Carnegie way, you know? And so
that's how you get votes.
I think it's fascinating that not only are we getting like Bo family
history here, but it's specifically another mention of her father.
Like, I am, my spidey senses are tingling at like a double meant.
It's like, you know, if we return to a location of
number of times or something like that, like, mentioned specifically of her father.
Like, she's not talking about her sister.
We know about her sister.
She's not talking about her sister.
What is her dad going to have to do with this season or maybe future season?
It's a great question.
I hope we find out.
I suppose, you know, we did hear like 15 times in this episode that they can't use their jet
packs or their guns when they go to fight the raptor.
So it could just be another one of the season three reps.
But hopefully it's a more significant setup as you were as you were.
as you are indicating.
When the challenge begins, Joe,
Grogu looks so unsure.
He looks afraid as he's gazing down
at his dart thrower.
His eyes, his frown,
it is heart melting.
He looks back up at his dad for guys.
This is seriously like one of my favorite stretches
in the history of the show.
I just thought this was so sweet.
It was heart melting.
And these are the little moments.
Like, who would he look to other than Din
for not only encouragement, but counsel?
This is like the heart.
When we see that relationship
and Dinn does want to provide it to him.
You know, there's a fun little bow in her load, too,
where she says he doesn't know how to fire darts,
which I thought was rude.
But you see the proud dad, he's got this, trust me.
And we bill toward him saying after Ragnar shoots Grogu
twice, and I do regret to inform everyone listening
that Ragnar has to die now.
I don't make the rules, but those are the rules.
He shot Grogu in the chest with Mandalorian Bainballs,
and now he must pay.
I guess he does pay, kind of very.
imminently, but he must pay more severely.
Hanging out inside the intestines of a bird dragon thing for, what, four days?
Like, we don't know how long.
Certainly overnight.
Overnight.
Let's get a disease and we'll go look at the morning.
I feel like that's, you know, punishment enough.
That was enough.
All right.
Agree to disagree.
Agree to disagree.
When Grogu looks, he looks so crestfallen that he has taken these blows.
And when he looks up at dad, dad calls a timeout, Joe, gets out the whiteboard, diagrams the winning play.
Grogu, I've seen what you can do.
It's okay.
Show them.
I mean, this huge moment, right?
Like, for Grogu who is hidden, what he can do.
This is a huge moment.
But I love that you keep pitching Den as like a Little League tag because to me he's reading as like a dance mom or a toddler since Tiarra's mom.
And the kid is like, I don't want to do this.
Pageant life is not for me.
And Dean is like, keep crying.
to make like what link back i love that too i think i think i'm so locked on to the little egg comp because of
the way they use the rock and then the razor crest bobble in the jedi episode the asoka episode for
training and it was just like having a catch with dad but yeah like this is not only is it fun to see
grogo do the the double force flip and embarrass mortify ragnar but it is like a really significant
thing not only that he did feel comfortable showing his his force prowess in front of all these
after we have heard that he was in hiding for so long.
He's done it.
His use of the force has evolved consistently episode to episode.
There were times where he only did it out of absolute necessity to protect himself,
to protect din, et cetera.
Then he starts like, I'm hungry.
I need a macaroon.
It's been building.
It's been a progression.
But like to be at center stage like this and let this many people know what you can do
is the exact kind of thing he had spent the half of his life avoiding.
And I think it's cool that it's not just that he felt comfortable.
It's that Dinn helped him feel that it was okay.
By saying it's okay, show them, it just reinforces the trust that he has in Dinn, the trust that he puts in Dinn.
Great job, kid, Dyn says.
Just lovely.
And again, you know, they're about to be parted for the rest of the episode, and we feel so keenly in this moment, like the power of them together,
the power of watching this tutelage, watching this trust continue to build.
And I just hope we get a lot more of that in the second half of the season.
lovely to see din have this sweet emotional connection with grogo um i this is now where i enter some notes
for the covert about yes foundling safety in general right because ragnar gets scooped up right
basically immediately no time for a debrief what are we calling this creature what what do you want
go with?
Oh.
I don't know.
Dino bird?
Sure.
Has Wukipedia not named it?
I just think if we're going with like Dino Turtle, maybe we just go with Dino Bird.
We build a consistent vernacular for this still unnamed location unknown planet that I would
really like to know what it's called and where it is.
We got to get some redfin or Zillow links to the armor.
Like what is your, honestly, what is your in-universe?
in-story explanation for this?
Is it that they...
That they pick somewhere so dangerous
that no one would ever go looking for them there?
Yes.
That's the only explanation you come up with.
You have dropped
Harry Potter reference in the form of Unbreakable Vow
so it is my turn to drop a Buffy Vampire Slayer reference
and say there was a joke of Buffy
in the later seasons,
Buffy's younger sister, Don.
And it was like, Dawn's in trouble
must be a Tuesday, right?
And this is how I feel about Ragnar's in trouble,
in trouble must be a Tuesday.
Like, we've seen this kid get attacked multiple times.
Paz not paying enough attention, I think, first and foremost.
Secondly, again, general foundling security is lacking the covert.
It's terrible.
I guess, like, in addition to the, yes, it's a danger to us, but maybe that means it's such
a supreme danger that no one else will come find this element.
Maybe it positions them to be more willing to be.
go to Mandelor.
When Dan and Bo are going to keep saying, presumably,
actually you've been lied to, it's fine there.
You can go into the mines.
The living waters are there.
The air is not poison.
You can breathe it.
Maybe if they've spent every fucking afternoon having their fowndlings
and taken to nest where their empty Besscar now remains,
they'll be more willing to say, you know what?
Not sure I totally buy what you're saying.
But let's go find out if the air is.
poisoned because these creatures keep eating our kids.
Again, maybe this is another campaign promise that Bo can mate, right?
Your child might be taken by like a weird Yeti creature or like we've encountered a few
creatures that might eat your child, but it's not going to be a dino turtle or a dino bird.
So come with me to Mandelaar.
We have to make a Bo campaign video now.
I think it's a requirement.
Katie, if you're listening,
call us.
Yeah, no kidding.
Joe, this initial pursuit,
Paz saying no blasters,
it'll kill the child,
we'll hear multiple recurrences
of this throughout the episode.
Paz and Dinn,
Paz runs out of jet fuel, okay?
So, Bo outsmarts all of the bros
by getting in a shit.
Yeah, I got so upset, though,
when he's like, this happens every time.
I'm like, then make a new plan.
Then do something different.
You fucking dolt.
Yes.
What are you doing?
But did you think this was like
Chekhov's limited fuel reminder
that this is going to come into play
in a key moment?
Probably if you've seen
the fine film The Rocketeer,
you will know that like
there's a bullet hole at his pack
that gasoline that fuel leaks out of.
You got to carry chewing gum with you.
Listen,
yes.
But I also do want to shout out
on the visuals front.
I do love this shot of Bo's ship and the dino bird both, you know, against the sun here.
I've seen a lot of people compare it to this really cool shot from Apocalypse Now.
But I was looking up like any interview where Carl Weathers talked about enjoying Apocalypse Now,
and he's never said anything about that, which doesn't mean this isn't an homage to that.
But what I did find is that the director of Predator was like, I love Apocalypse Now,
so I put a bunch of helicopter shots in my movie.
The predator, I was inspired by Apocalypse Now.
Carl Weathers star Predator.
So perhaps it is a predator homage more than an Apocalypse Now homage.
But anyway, I think it looks really cool.
And I like the idea that it's like, again, throughout this episode,
we're going to get a lot of, like, organic versus Baskar kind of binary moments.
So I love that it's like it's a beast and a ship up against the sun like that.
I love that.
And on that front, too, the, we're getting close to discussing the armorer's history lesson for Grogu about the importance and centrality of forging armor and the allegory of that armor.
And so the idea of the Mandalorian's not being able to rely on typical means, the signifiers of their strength, their guns, their jet packs needing to, like, hinge their.
their tactics on a different kind of pursuit
in an episode where we're already thinking
about things like that does speak to this ability
to adapt and change that we are
so hoping will be more
fully embraced by these characters.
When Boca Tan,
who as he says,
clowns all these bros,
comes back and says... I found the layer I mapped it.
Yeah.
When she's looking at...
When she's talking about the peaks
and she says there are no higher
than the peaks of Kermont,
I did not pronounce that well,
I used to climb them in basic training.
Did that give you,
I used to Bullseye Wamp rats in my T-16 back home.
They're not much bigger than two meters.
It gave me a mix of that and Braun saying,
you know,
give me 10 men and I'll impregnate the bitch.
Real like, let's scale the side of the eerie vibes.
Braun, always top of mind for me.
I did like the Shriekawk call out here, Joe,
the Death Watch signet.
I mean, so the armor says take the Shri-Kock.
Hoc contingent, whatever she says, with you.
And the Shriekhock is the sigil of Death Watch.
Let us never forget that the children of the watcher, an offshoot of Death Watch, a terrorist
group that Boatat was a part of.
Thank you, Chapter 20 for our reminder.
Did Bo feel like more at home?
She's like, ah, the sigil of my terror group.
I don't know.
Sinking into a warm terrorist back.
Thanks for the welcome.
I have the Living Waters, but now I really feel.
Love a terrorism badge.
Okay, can I do a brief mythology slash
Please.
Westerns Corner?
Oh my God, of course.
So, Westerns have always been really important to, like, the Star Wars in
general, I mean, samurai films, Western films, Star Wars in general, the Mandalorian,
specifically the Mandalorian is like sort of this lone gun slinger coming, moving town to town,
all that sort of stuff.
this idea of
Bo as the gunslinger who shows up to the town
and there is a constant recurring threat
that is specifically hurting the children
is like a classic Western trope, right?
The gunslinger comes to town,
there is like a bad cattle rancher
or someone is like taking the children
and like the gunslinger is going to change everything
and protect the town.
And I love that idea because
Like there's a direct, this is partially the plot of Shane,
movie that you either have seen or have seen parts of in the film Logan.
But there's a direct line from Shane in season one episode two, The Mandalorian.
Thank you for bringing peace to my valley.
Cool says to Mando, right?
That's a Shane line.
So this idea of like, and then also I was thinking about Book of Boba,
because the way that Boba, like, ingratius himself is by saving the chieftain's
child, right?
Like, we love a Boba reference here on the podcast, right?
Always.
Yeah.
And then I was thinking about High Noon, a Western that I really love, and the story of
High Noon has, you know, a gunslinger-ish character played by Gary Cooper and he's going
to get married and his wife, fiancé is like a devout Quaker and she's like no violence.
And he's like, yeah, but just one.
more job. I got to shoot this one guy. And she's like, no violence ever, no violence ever.
And then that's her creed. And then she abandons it, spoilers for high news, abandons it at the end
of high noon to shoot someone to protect her husband because choosing the one you love over a rigid
creed that you adhere to is like something that is, I think, very interesting and at the forefront
for taking off your helmet to let your child paw your face, whatever.
Rub your jaw line.
This darling little claws.
I was reading
I'm rereading some of the empire interviews
that Favro Filoni and Rick
gave and Rick said,
Rick who was directing again the last two episodes of the season,
says,
the purity of Grugu brings out the best
and the people around him.
This next season continues to attach to that idea.
Din Jarn is having to face the decision
to take off his helmet because of this child.
How he can put himself right with his own beliefs,
and how to then look forward is a lot of what this season is about.
So I don't think we've seen as much grappling with that as we thought we would
because he seems like pretty cozily ensconced with the covert.
But I'm hopeful that that push and pull,
which is something that we find really interesting,
is going to be something, you know, again,
Rick is directing the final two episodes of the season,
is something we'll get towards the end.
And to bring us out of Western Corner,
though I do have one more Western reference later in the episode,
brings us out of Western Corner through Mythology Corner.
I'll just say that one of my favorite comps
that people are making for this episode is Beowulf.
Beowulf is like one of our foundational stories
and it has to do with a mythical beast
that is like continuously constantly
killing and ravaging a clan.
And our hero who finally puts a stop to it
then becomes chieftain, etc., etc.
So if, like, Bo is in the Beowulf pole position, like, that's a good place for her to be.
If you've never read Beowulf, I just want to make a book recommendation and say Maria Devana Headley and
2020 put out this really cool translation of Beowulf that has, like, bro in it.
Like, it sounds gimmicky, but it's actually, like, very good.
So I really suggest it.
So that has been Western and Mythology Corner with House of Ar.
Beautiful.
Incredible.
This is a rich text.
I love that Rick quote
and Grogu brings out the best in us,
certainly, Joe,
and he is going to get an opportunity
to bring out the best in the armor
because Din has left him behind.
Season 1 of the Mandalorian,
I adored.
I could not have loved it more,
but every single episode,
it drove me crazy
that Din would leave Grogu
and go off on his adventure
or his quest.
I couldn't believe it.
It happened every single week.
And so I felt myself
sinking uncomfortably back
into that Din,
And like why?
And I guess it's nice.
He trusts these people.
That's lovely.
They feel at home and safe.
But take him with you.
And when the armorer says that he's too young.
Yeah.
I just like, he looked up and cooed.
I wanted him to be like scoreboard lady.
Like, let me run through the list of my achievements while you guys have been sitting here getting eaten by wild animals.
How dare you be?
How dare you?
It's a very capable baby.
Do you remember season one when Dinn just like left him in the show?
ship, just like locked him in a closet in the ship.
Multiple times.
He's in the ship when he wanders out and ends up bonding with Pelly.
He's in the ship when the droid nearly fucking murders him during the prison heist
episode.
The list is long and distressing.
And I don't want Dinn falling back into that happen.
I hope he reserves this for the times like this when he's around people he trusts.
Anyway, Dyn Rant over.
Like we said, we were going to have a lot of notes for the characters in this episode.
Uh-huh.
this did, this separation of Din and Grogu,
it did give us an opportunity
for a pretty fascinating armor Grogu sequence.
She summons him into her workshop
with the Come Grogu if you wish to become a Mandalorian,
there's much work to attend to.
And this is the moment you alluded to previously
where he's panting and he's running,
he's really hustling, you know,
he's like working his way around the track.
He's just checking his time.
It needs a Gatorade.
What's the Fitbit saying?
How many steps?
taken? Where's this floating egg? It's so cute. I can barely contain myself. It was so darling.
But what does the running show us? What does the panting show us? That he does? This is what he wants.
This is the choice that he is actively making. Do you want to be a Mandalorian? Yes. Let me run in and
show you how much I want that. This was like so meaningful and sweet. He pulls up at the forge.
This is one of my favorite Grogo movements, as you know, when he pulls up his chair at a table.
There's like a low little like footstool bench
That he's like that is like perfect Grogu leaning size
One more to me Grogo is a cat thing
Because like I don't know if you do this with Bogjo
But we any if we know Halo wants to get to a certain high surface
We'll just yeah
Completely set up a room to ensure that he has the easiest path possible
To whatever he needs whether that's a high surface
A sunbeam so he'll have you just move lots of little like boxes
For him to jump on to make his path of something easier
It reminded me so much of that.
This is when we get the clip that opened our episode today.
The armorer talking about the forge, the heart of Mandalorian culture, shaping Mandalorian steel.
Just as they do that, we shape ourselves.
We all begin as raw.
Or we refine ourselves through trials and adversity.
This made me think powerfully of Rebel Season 4 and a stretch with Sabine and her father,
another Mandalorian family insight stretch, Joe.
in terms of the clan crease tracking that we're doing.
We get some Clan Ren.
Ezra asks, this is in the sequence where the duches,
this Bescar targeting machine is something that they are trying to eliminate.
And Ezra says, why not make your armor out of something different?
Which from Ezra's perspective is a reasonable question.
And Sabine says, Ezra, the armor I wear is 500 years old.
I reforged it to my liking, but the battles, the history, the blood all lives within it.
And the same goes for every Mandalorian.
And then Sabine's father says, this armor is part of our identity.
It makes us Mandalorians who we are.
Interestingly, Boca's hand then replies, and now it's going to make us dead.
But when Sabine get to a better place by the end of the episode, that's when the Dark Sabre handoff occurs.
So how did this strike you not only that call back to Sabine, but this idea of the armor as, again, an allegory for identity and evolution and life?
This is the constant, interesting push and pull of the Mandalorian culture because this idea, we've now seen twice the sound of the forge bringing a main character to a flashback.
Friend of the pod, my friend John suggested smashbacks should be what we call them.
Wow.
Flashback does.
Smashbacks, yeah.
I like it.
This idea, yeah, something that we've talked about a lot.
We talked about this a lot with Andor and with Lord of the Rings,
this idea of like individual communities and identities and celebrating what makes us different.
What are our particularly local rituals, all this sort of stuff like that.
So I want to, I mean, on the one hand, I want to respect the very distinctive culture of the Mandalorian.
But on the other hand, there is this thing about putting a helmet on something that sort of empire-like, you know, we talked about this with the comp with the Storm Trooper, like homogenizes, flattens something.
This is why we are desperate to not have a helmet on Little Gros' head because, like, it just, so there, it's this push and pull of the Mandalorian culture of, like, giving you a place to belong, giving you a community, giving you a family.
We are pro all of that.
But when it robs you of some of your own identity, some of your individuality, that's where I at least start to rebel when it means you can't take off your helmet when you can't smooge someone when you can't have adult sexual intercourse.
You know, like it's a problem.
So I feel like what I'm hoping we're moving towards is Bo Catan is this like almost Martin Luther.
reformer proclamations on the door figure of this Mandalorian sect of like, follow me,
leave your helmet on if you want to, but also you get to take it off if you want to.
Like this is what I want for the future of Mandalorians is like, if you want to leave your
helmet on, cool, but you're not a Mandalorian, not a Mandalorian if you take your helmet off, right?
Yeah.
Well, I think that's also why I enjoyed that this moment, because the Armour's poster character,
for the opposite of that, right, for that strict adherence.
And so I liked the fact that this were called Sabine specifically,
because she is, I think, most emblematic
of all the Mandalorian characters we've spent any time with
of interrogating the idea of what it means to be a Mandalorian,
what it means if the people who are Mandalorians
and consider themselves Mandalians cast you out,
don't want to welcome you back in,
and finding a way, ultimately,
to embrace your culture and your traditions,
and also your individuality.
And part of that is that Sabine takes her helmet off,
but part of it is she paints her armor
and not just in the way that every character
has a new color way that's dropping soon on sneakers,
but her specific flare and artistic impression is so impressive.
You could not mistake Sabine's armor
for a single other characters ever.
It would be impossible,
and that's so cool and so wonderful.
And I liked watching Grogu's face
because we're about to head into the flashback
that he's pulled into.
but it does feel like before that,
before the hammering before the smashback.
Love smashback.
He is thinking about what she's saying,
what the armorer is saying.
And I like this idea of
forging your armor,
your identity, your path,
and making sure it is yours
inside of a family
that you want to embrace.
And like, how can Grogo again
is the symbol of an embrace
of multiple different facets?
And like, you can map this
pretty closely to, as we've talked about a lot,
Jedi Creed and where that is limiting
and where there is room within it to work
or where you need a character like Asoka to say,
this is not for me, but that's not going to stop me
from wielding my lightsabers and helping people.
Exactly.
So that's like, you don't,
the idea of the armorer is saying,
not just this is essential to who we are,
but you don't have to be the same forever.
I really want a character like the armorer
and the covert more widely to like pay attention
to the things they are,
actually saying and where the power can be inside of that.
And all it's going to take for them to change their point of view is one hot 50-year-old
to ride on top of mythological beasts.
Listen, I mean, we're probably only three or four a sense away, you know?
I can't wait.
I can't wait.
I will say when the armor is working on what we learn is the Rondulfer Grogu, if we had
not gotten the Ragnar helmet question, we would have been so afraid, so afraid.
So afraid. I was still afraid for a second. Yeah, I was still afraid for a second. Oh, Joe. You mentioned the parallels to the Dinn flashback. You know, when we, when Grogo was pulled in as he hears the hammering of the Ford, she's pulled into his Order 66 flashback, which we will talk about in a second here. The first glimpse that we had gotten of Grogo's Order 66 history was from Luke during Boba Fett, Chapter 6, the training. And Luke asking him, do you remember back home? Would you be?
like to remember, let me help you remember and placing his hand on his head. And Grogo looked
very afraid, very trepidacious. And so to see this memory sparked in a different fashion, once again,
you have the Jedi part of Grogo's experience, you have the Mandalorian part of Grogu's experience.
And it gives us a fuller sense of who Grogu is with both of those aspects of his life.
I love that. And with the din mirroring that you mentioned, because we get those flashbacks in
season one at the Forge, like it maps on again really closely. The Clone Wars,
death pursuit of an army coming to get you when you are just a child, your family,
Dyn's parents, the Jedi Order, being slaughtered around you, this timely rescue.
Like, they have, their traumas are specific to them in the context.
It's their own.
But they have this deeply entwined, shared experience.
And it's just one more rich aspect of their bond.
Daddy Dinn.
Should we talk about Order 66 a little bit more?
Should we talk about what Gros saw?
I'm always thinking about R. 66 and I can't want to talk about it.
You love it. Let's bring on Ben.
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We must, of course,
speak at length about what we got here
in this Grogu flashback,
this Order 66, Who Saved Grogu?
Reveal. There is so much to discuss
and that means it is time to go from a clan of two
to a clan of three.
Benjamin.
Dance man.
That clip pumps me up every time.
I love it.
It's great.
It's great.
And so was learning at last
who saved Grogu from the Jedi Temple.
We have a lot to discuss today.
This is our Order 66 flashback,
Limburg Lore Corner featuring Keller and Beck.
The 5001st slicing through the Jedi Temple Dorsbin.
Before we get into everything that we actually learned here,
let's do a little quick recounting of what some of the popular fan theories were on this front
because we had a lot of time to speculate and wonder.
Did either of you have a pet theory?
Did you have somebody you wanted to see or somebody that you were expecting to see?
I totally called Kellorin Beck.
I just, I didn't mention it on the podcast, but privately.
In any of your recordings or writings, you failed to mention, but you held that close.
I did want a spoiler for anyone.
Yeah, I saw that cork board in your.
house, right?
And it was just like, it was like Ahmed's face at the middle and then like all the other
kids smaller around him.
Yeah.
I was particularly fond of the like Mace Window isn't actually dead theory because I love a
bring back Mace Windu movement.
So yeah.
Just about any Jedi affiliated character who is known to have survived Order 66 or at least
not totally confirmed to have died, not to have been seen dismembered.
was mentioned as a possible candidate.
So I kind of liked the idea of maybe having an Obi-Wan Kenobi tie-in and having one of the
other Inquisitors show up before they turned potentially.
But really, it was just like, you name it.
I mean, I'm sure there was someone somewhere, someone on Reddit who said, how about
Kelarind Beck?
But that was definitely not a leading candidate.
I mean, you heard people mention Obi-Wan and Yoda.
Maybe when they went to the temple after the attack, they could have found Groku Hyatt.
riding there.
Jocasta knew our favorite librarian or Beres Afi or...
Yeah, there were a lot of Barris heads out there.
Yeah, Luminar.
Unduly.
Barris was a really popular theory.
Very.
Artu would have made some sense, I think, because it seemed like he recognized Grogu potentially
when Luke shows up in season two, although he could have just been recognizing
Grogu's species.
And, you know, maybe Plokoon is always a popular choice just because Dave Filoni
he loves Plokun and used him as a spoiler-free stand-in for Luke in the script for the season
two finale.
And I kind of like the idea of Anakin or Palpi, just kind of carving out an exception to Order 66,
knowing that they needed Grogu and his high M-count for some future purpose.
But really, like, you name it, any character, Quinlan Voss came up, the bad batch were mentioned
at one point.
So really just any character we knew.
could have been a candidate. And I am after all that set up and buildup and speculation,
I am satisfied. I am fulfilled. I am very happy with how they handled this.
Yeah. I mean, this was really a treat and a fun surprise. I think the fact that this,
this felt like a real twist after so much speculation was a cool thing and an increasingly
difficult thing, actually, to pull off inside of Star Wars where we all have so much time to discuss
every possibility. I think Ben to the Obi-1-Kinobie Pathpoint, like, we'll chat about that a little
bit more in a couple minutes because the path connection still feels very much in play here.
We see little Grogu, even tinier, even babyer than he is in our present timeline.
And my dear companions, our beloved Bubba looks so afraid.
And it is just heart melting.
And we get our answer quickly because we hear multiple Jedi invoke Kelerin's name.
We hear get him to Kellerman.
We hear another Jedi shout, the elevator, get the youngling to Kellerman, go.
And so it seems at least like Kelloran didn't just happen to be there, happened to scoop Grogo up when the elevator doors open.
He is tasked with saving Grogo.
He is chosen to save Grogo.
And so was your read on this that, okay, similar efforts were made with all younglings once shit went down, there's a communication going out to get people in a position to help?
Or was Grogu given extra protection and care because of that extra special M count that you're alluding to, Ben?
How did you read that?
Yeah, it's interesting because we see younglings in groups in the prequels typically, right?
And Grogu's all alone.
So is that because he's been shunted off somewhere?
Is it because he's the sole survivor?
Is it because he is special in some way?
It's hard to say.
I mean, I think if we go a little bit into what we know about Kellorne Beck and his back
story, that it would make sense for him to be the person that other Jedi would be saying,
let's get this Padawan to Keloran.
But it certainly could be a sign of Grogu being special and set apart in some way.
I mean, I hate to think that they were like, let's leave the other less special Padawans
with lower M counts to be massacred.
Sorry, Riva.
Let's get Grogu to safety.
Everyone else fend for yourself.
So that's kind of dark.
I'd prefer to think maybe that he just happened to perhaps.
he was training with those particular Jedi at that particular time because the alternative,
if it's like a triage, like let's prioritize Grogu over everyone else. I mean, of course,
Grogu's foremost in our minds and hearts too, but I'd like to think that the Jedi would
not play favorites in that way. As always, we have some notes for the entire Jedi order.
I have so many notes today. I have so many notes today.
When the elevator door does open, we see Keller and Beck.
Before you tell us a little bit more about who Beck is, Ben, we have to talk about Ahmed best.
Yeah, this is great because there's this moment.
Grogu's going up in the turbo lift and we're waiting for the reveal, right?
We sense at that time, okay, we're finally going to get the answer here.
It's like when Luke was taking the turbolift up to Gideon's flagship's bridge in season two
and you're waiting for him to pull the hood down.
And now we're seeing the same thing, the ticking up of as the floor.
go up and we're thinking, who's it going to be? And it's Keller Beck. And now, I don't know what
percentage of the audience at that time is thinking, oh, of course, Keller and Beck, or even
Ahmed Best, because he is not in his Gungan guys here, right? And that's why I think this is,
it's a generous choice in a sense. I think it's a fitting decision, but they passed up
potentially a bigger pop, right? Like if it had been Mace, if it had been somewhere in better known,
that you wouldn't have to look up who is Kellerman Beck.
Oh, that's Ahmed Best, right, okay, he played Jar Jar.
A lot of people watching that are not knowing who this is, at least in that moment.
And I think, as you said, they're so good at keeping secrets on this series.
There's so much attention.
There's so many people trying to dig.
And yet they have surprised this time after time, whether it's with Grogu or Luke or any of the other canon characters who have crossed over.
And I was totally surprised by this, even as someone who has speculated about.
who could come back.
I was not expecting this character, Ahmed Best,
to play this prominent role in this show.
So, of course, he has a decades-long history
with this franchise.
He played Jarjar.
He voiced Jarjar.
He was inside the mocap suit for Jarjar.
And because of the way that Jar Jar was received,
he's had a difficult experience in the Star Wars franchise.
And you have to feel for him
and everything he went through at that time.
Yeah, I think that this is so,
so genuinely just wonderful and cool to see I'm my best get the chance to return to Star Wars in a widely celebrated way.
Like it's, you know, Ben, you wrote about this in your piece, but it's difficult to think of many things at the level of saving one of the most beloved and adored characters of all time to put you in the spotlight and let you shine.
And that's just a wonderful thing.
and I'm so glad that he's getting this moment
because the vitriol that he had,
that was directed his way during the prequels was horrific.
And charge our feelings aside,
what I'm at best had to go through is like appalling.
And to see him return to the franchise
in a way that is meaningful to him
and that is leading to this like shared celebration
is just a wonderful thing.
I'm like so happy.
He's talked about it.
I mean, he was 25 when he played Jar Jar, and he was a huge Star Wars fan.
It was his favorite franchise, and he was part of the Star Wars fan community.
And so there was no way to hide for him from the Jar Jar backlash.
And, of course, there was a tremendous backlash.
And he got death threats, which is ridiculous, of course.
But we've seen that pattern repeat itself.
And there were people who were accusing Jar Jar of being sort of a racist stereotype.
and he found that particularly cruel and hurtful,
and he just couldn't avoid feeling like this is my first major film role.
And now I'm just tarred with the Jar Jar Reputation for the rest of my life.
And he has talked about it.
I mean, he contemplated suicide because of this,
because of how he felt, because of the abuse that was hurled his way.
So for him to come back to the franchise,
and as we will discuss, this is not his first return to the franchise,
but it's a far more prominent and meaningful one, I think.
And it really does, you know, not that there's any reason to hold anything against Ahmed best,
even if you don't care for Jar Jar as a character.
But even if you don't care for Jar Jar as a character, now he's also the guy who saved Groku.
So that really kind of wipes out any sort of sins that you might have thought he committed before,
which, you know, really you can't hold it against him anyway.
I think it's so interesting.
Like we talk a lot about the animated series as a sort of rehab,
for certain characters.
And Jar Jar has gotten that treatment in the Fallonios.
Yeah, I was going to say that.
Yeah, yeah.
Jar Jar and Anakin, et cetera, et cetera.
But the meta rehab for some of these actors,
like I got really emotional 2017 Star Wars Celebration
when Hayden Christensen came out and got a huge, huge response from the audience.
I, like, wept watching that because, like, it was,
whatever happened was not Hayden's fault.
you know what I mean? And then Hayden looked so, like, overwhelmed to be, like, received that way.
And then Ahmed Best had a similar treatment in 2019. I cried when I watched that one, too, because, like, again, it's not, you know, it's not, it's not Hayden's fault. It's not Jake Lloyd's fault. You know, and so, like, as prequel fans grow up, become, you know, the people who go to Star Wars Celebration, as, you know, we have some time and perspective away from this sort of thing.
you know, it was never right what happened to any of those people,
but the fact that they are able to be seen and received by the fandom,
first and foremost,
and then for Hayden to get to come back and play Anakin again,
however I feel about the Obi-1 series,
like that was a really cool thing to have happened.
And yeah, to give, as you say,
to give Ahmed best this gift of, like, you know,
in screenwriting there's the trope of Save the Cat.
Like, how do you make a character sympathetic have him literally save a cat
that's like, there's a great screenwriting book called Save the Cat.
Save the Grogu.
For the proof that Grogu is a cat, Joe.
But Save the Grogu is Save the Cat times a thousand.
Like, what a gift to give.
And I thought he was great in this.
Yeah, I thought I got really emotional about it.
So, yeah.
Yeah, and he's also played a big part in the creation of this character, which I guess we can talk about.
Yeah, tell us.
Tell us a little bit more about who Keller and Beck is.
Yeah, so Keller and Beck,
was sort of the star slash host of a game show that aired in 2020 just on YouTube.
It's kind of a web show and on the Star Wars Kids channel.
And it's kind of Star Wars meets Legends of the Hidden Temple, which was enough of a pitch for
me to watch some of it at the time.
And contestants play Padawans, basically.
So you have like a three-round show and there are obstacle courses where you're retrieving
lightsaber parts.
and there's quiz about Star Wars knowledge,
and then there's another obstacle course
where you're getting khyber crystals.
And so it's sort of themed in that way.
And Kelrin Beck, played by Best,
is the host.
He's sort of presiding.
He's the master of ceremonies.
And he's in character as Kelrin Beck,
who's this Jedi master,
whose job is sort of a supervisor of paddouans.
And in an interview that he did with Star Wars.com this week,
Best said,
I see Caleran as this journeyman Jedi who becomes a professor who wants to be a teacher, not a
reluctant teacher, not someone who's thrown into teaching, who wants to influence, who wants to show
Padawans how to become a greater version of themselves. So he's very much a mentor, which is why it
would make sense for him to be someone that other Jedi would say, let's get these Padawans to
Caloran. Let's get this one Padawan.
Yeah. One important Padawans that we care about.
We're watching you. Jedi Order.
Everyone else
Just leave them for Anakin to mow down
But let's get Grosur out of there
Maybe if everyone else had their own
Like self-propelling hovercraft
They too could have made it out
Joe, it's a great point
That the shine
On the perfectly maintained
Little egg that he's in at this point
Oh
But he's not just a teacher
He's also a fighter
And he has a great nickname
The Sabred Hand
Yeah
Which is wonderful
And Ben, Joanna has formally requested that we begin referring to her thusly.
Yes.
But only while I'm podcasting.
Like not, yeah, the sabered mic.
Love it.
We're all in the takes.
On the show, he has a purple lightsaber, which was partly a tribute to Mace.
And I would imagine that they switched it up to green here because they probably didn't
want anyone to be confused and think that this was.
was Mace and maybe the part had been recast.
And that probably would have led to even more confusion about who this was potentially.
Can I just say that when the door opened, we see the saber before we see him and the door
started to slide and I was like, oh, so not Mace.
Right.
It was green and I was like, oh.
So I was immediately like, oh, not Mace.
And I was like, oh.
So, yeah.
Yeah.
So this is a fairly low profile.
I mean, this show is not even on Disney Plus, right?
So for him to make the leap from this game show for kids to the flagship series where he's saving Grogu, that's quite a glowup, I would say.
And he had a big hand in just designing this character and his backstory and his name and what motivates him.
So he really had a role in creating this character.
And I don't know exactly when and how it came about that it occurred to everyone.
Hey, let's get Kelran Beck in the Mentorian.
But wow, just what a decision.
And I think it's really special, not just because of what this means for Ahmed Best and his place in the franchise,
but also potentially what it means for Jar Jar Binks, which we can get into also.
There might be almost a double layer of rehabilitation going on here, not just for the actor, but the character.
Let's hit that really quickly because when the chase ensues and we get ultimately to the Nubian,
and yacht and we're thinking of Joanna's favorite movie, Attack of the Clones.
How could we not be?
You doing this to me on the same day that behind the scenes, I'll just say, Bill Simmons hit me
twice with that you refuse to watch the Sopranos take on a succession podcast record this morning.
So like the slander continues.
Anyway, yeah, attack of the clones, my favorite movie.
Yeah.
your favorite movie that you routinely refer to as a cinematic classic.
A masterpiece.
I think it's a masterpiece.
Yeah.
We have to wonder, you know, the with some friends of mine lines seeing this ship that is a Nibu spacecraft that we associate with Padmei.
And how can we not think of another senator from Nibu and wonder if Jar Jar sent that ship?
What do you guys think?
Yeah, there was only three.
I'm not 100, but I'm pretty close to 100.
Joe's at 100.
The Sabred Mike is at 100.
You heard in your books for Jarjar.
Ahmed Best saved Grogu and Jar Jar Jar saved Grogu?
Yeah, the symmetry of that is pretty undeniable.
I mean, there are only three prominent Naboo-related characters on Corrissant that we know about.
There's Padme, there's Jar Jar, there's Palpi.
I guess you can't put it past Palpi.
to lay a trap that would steer escape Jedi straight into his clutches, but I can't imagine that
they brought back on it best to play another character who gets manipulated by Darth Sidious.
I don't think they would do that.
So it could be Padme, because we know she saw the temple burning.
She could have sent help.
And there is also, I suppose, a pleasing symmetry in Padmae saving younglings while Anakin
kills them.
And it would also tie Groku into the Skywalker saga in a wendom.
way, right? For better or worse, he would have been saved from Vader by Padma, just like Luke and
Leah, where it kind of connects him to his Jedi mentor in Bukubo, Luke, right? So that wouldn't be
bad either. I wouldn't mind that outcome. But I think if you bring back on it best, and we're
thinking about Jar Jar Jar, you're dropping hints here pretty strongly that this has to be Jar Jar
related. And what I like is that, first of all, Jar Jar was manipulated into giving the green
light to the Grand Army of the Republic, right? But it played a pretty central role in the
ascendance of the empire. We all make mistakes. Yeah, you know, tough. He was new on the job.
And Palpatine's a master of manipulation. He's, you know, he's fooled others. So we can give him a
past perhaps. But I think it's appropriate that because he was the one who played a crucial role
in just the creation of this army, that he would also play some role in helping Grogu escape
this army when it turns on the Jedi. And there's a long history of Jar Jar as a secret
Sith theorizing, right? The idea that he was not Hoodwink, that he was actually playing a part
in this, right? So people have been trying to rehabilitate Jar Jar Jar or...
Darth Jarjar is...
Yeah, Darth Jar Jar, exactly.
One of the best fan theories of all times.
I mean, it's bullshit.
It's also just delightful.
Yeah.
Just delightful.
And what I love about this is, like, they can invoke Jar Jar here with the ship without...
I don't really need to see Jar Jar with love and respect to everyone involved in the Mandalorian, but to have him invoked is wonderful.
This is a nice little wink to us.
It's nice for Amette best that, you know, all...
Jar Jar is an important part of his past, but we bring him back.
We don't have to typecast him as Jar Jar.
He doesn't have to be Jar Jar, but we're thinking about Jar Jar because he's here and
because we infer that this could very well be Jar Jar's ship because we know it's not Padme
ship, or at least it's not the ship that she takes to Mustafa, which is occupied around this time.
So it makes sense.
You know, this is like a royal yacht, basically.
So I guess you could say that that might make it more likely to be.
Padma's, or maybe it's a loner, who knows, but I think it makes sense, right?
Because this is the Royal Nabu Security Forces, but that's not like the Imperial Guard.
It's not like the Royal Canadian Mounted Police, I guess.
It's not like a, it's not just as a bodyguard for the Queen or the King or whatever.
That's just what the security force is called.
So it makes sense for the senator from Nabu.
Remember when Ahmed Best and Space Mounties saved Groga?
So I think it makes sense that Jar Jar would play this part.
And it's also nice because, as you said,
there have been in the Floniverse in the Clone Wars,
some attempts to show Jar Jar being a bit more heroic during the Clone Wars
than he's shown to be in the prequels.
But the last time we see him, really.
He's got a romance.
He's got some fascinating arcs in the animated verse.
I loved it.
Which, yeah, it very much fits in with Faloni's mission of, you know, sort of saving the prequels from themselves, tying all these trilogies together, adding depth that the movies didn't have time for, didn't have a screenwriter for.
And we've seen before, you know, Jarj Ardent attends Padme's funeral, right? That's the last time we sort of see him on screen.
But there's a book called Empire's End Aftermath by Chuck Windeg that takes place after the Battle of Endor.
And at that point, Jarjar is back on Nabu, but it's sort of sad and tragic.
He's like a street performer who's shunned by everyone because of his role in the
ascendance of the empire.
People have not forgotten about that.
But he's beloved by children.
He's like an entertainer of refugee children on the planet, even as the humans and the
Nibu de Gungans shun him, which sort of mirrors the real life reception to the character
where a lot of kids enjoyed Char Char.
Charger was four kids while the adults, in many cases, hated him.
So I think it's nice because that's sort of a fitting but sad and tragic ending for the character.
It's nice to know or at least to strongly suspect that he played a part in getting Grog's out of there.
And if that is, in fact, what happened, then maybe we will get that clarity in the future
because one of the really lovely things about this is that we have this huge download of new information,
huge question answered.
but we have so many questions left.
Like, okay, who saved Grogu next?
And how about after that?
I mean, this is like half of his life from here
that he isn't hiding.
And if we think back to all those insights that we get
like in the Jedi episode in season two
when Asoka is sharing with Dyn or later in Boba
when Luke and Asoka are speaking about Grogu's past
and of course that's when we get the first glimpse
of his Order 66 history,
like the idea that he had to hide his abilities
which is also very much top of mind for us in this episode
as he showcases his abilities in front of so many observers.
So will Grogu be a part of the path from Obi-1 Canobi?
Will he be moved by this network and protected by this network?
Any theories on who is going to...
I mean, presumably we'll keep getting in this backstory and parcels,
you know, every maybe just a couple per season,
every couple episodes, who knows what the pacing will be,
you know?
They want to make Mando forever, guys.
So who knows how long it'll take to learn everything.
But at some point we will, any theories for who we might see helping to protect Grogo
next or when that protection might be interrupted or what we might learn.
Yeah, I guess almost every theory that was in play before about who could save you.
It's still in play, right?
So it's just multiple saviors.
So if you thought that it was Quinlan Voss before, let's say, it could very well be
Quinnlin Voss now because he's mentioned.
into Obi-Wan Kenobi in connection with the path.
So I guess the question is, did Jarjar or Padme or whoever is responsible for leaving
this ship and getting them off planet, are they also playing a part?
Are we going to further burnish Jarger's reputation here because he set up the path, it turns
out, and he's saving a bunch of Jedi and force-sensitive people?
He could be a true hero, or it could be someone else.
Maybe it's someone involved with the formation of the rebellion.
Maybe it's Bail or Padma or Man Mothma, who knows people who are involved with the creation of the rebellion.
So any of these people that we've thought of, and it would be nice, I think, to have just more ties between this series, between Andor, between Obi-Wan Kenobi, even if it's largely, I mean, that's Follone's mission, as we talked about last week, to try to unite all of these trilogies and stories and plot threads together.
So I'm sure he's at least motivated by the idea of trying to.
intertwine things.
This was like one of the great things, you know, in addition to everything else,
we've already discussed about why the back choice is so, so exciting and so cool.
Like, like you're saying, Ben, because any of those other theories can eventually still be true,
like, I really got a kick out of the Luke stuff in the season two finale, but I was really
this team, this will be Ezra before it wound up being Luke.
And I remember like the conversation at the time where a lot of people were like,
okay, this would be amazing, right?
if you're a rebel's head, you thought it would be amazing.
And a lot of other people, like, I don't know who that is.
Wouldn't it be weird if I didn't know who rescued Grogu?
And why?
Why would it be weird?
Like, it's an exciting opportunity to expand our character set and the moments where it is a luke.
Or I was never, part of the Mace Window is still alive, hive.
But with, you know, with love and respect for everyone who is, like, it doesn't always have to be.
There are dozens of us, Mallory.
It doesn't.
Yeah.
And I'm thrilled.
for all of you.
We saw him go out the window and then what?
You know what I mean?
Yeah.
We saw his,
the electrocuted skeleton go out the window.
Yeah.
But it's like a one for us,
one for them.
Yeah.
Like, let's build out the world
and the universe.
That's part of the point.
Toss a bone to the Foloni fans
and then also work in Luke
for everyone else, right?
You can please everyone,
hopefully,
or at least that's what they're trying to do.
You could get yourself in trouble
when you try to please everyone
at the same time,
But I think they have managed it, at least for most of this series.
Well, to go kind of in the other direction from, hey, show us people and things and ideas we haven't seen before and get us energized anew.
Can we talk about Coruscant for a second?
Because this is the second Mandalorian episode in a row that was prominently featuring Corrassant during a key stretch of the episode.
Corrason has also been very central to Bad Batch this season.
And these two shows are airing in tandem.
It is completely possible, even though they're operating in different timelines,
though maybe not if we're in flashbacks in Mando,
that we will get some sort of overlapping reveal.
What is your leading theory right now for why we're spending so much time on Corrassant?
Is this just all about building toward the Palpi cloning connection?
I mean, we go to the Monument Plaza.
We see Umate again.
Like, we're seeing identical visuals from last week.
What do you think the show is guiding us toward on the Corrasson front?
Yeah, I think just showing the same plaza and mountain was probably just a nod back to last week just to remind us that Perch was part of the same show that we are watching here.
Can't let us forget last week's episode.
No.
Yeah.
Let's make sure that that's cap of mine for everyone.
And Ben's bizarre nickname for Pershing, which is Pershing.
But we also saw Corrissette this week in the trailer for Jedi Survivor, which comes out next month.
Calcastis looks to be visiting Corrason as well.
well. The nice thing is you don't have to stretch as hard to find a reason to be on
Corrason as you do say Tatouin, right? You know, when people are sort of sick of how much
tattooing we get, well, that's because, as Luke says, if there is a bright center of the universe,
Tatweens the planet is farthest from. So you have to keep coming up with confluded reasons for
everyone to be at the farthest place from the bright center of the universe. This is the
bright center of the universe. So it would make sense for our characters to be here, right? And I don't
know whether this is just sort of set up for potentially Asoka, right? If part of the Asoka
storyline is how did the New Republic fail? How did we get the resistance? How did we get the
First Order, which the Mandalorian has already been touching on? Maybe Monmouthma shows up in that
show or even this show, having been such a prominent part of Andor, perhaps we could see her
crossover and sort of unite these series because she's obviously around. So I think just by showing
Corrason, I mean, right now you have at the peak of the empire in the flashbacks or in the bad
batch at least, then it's sort of the center of operations. So it would make sense that you get to
see, okay, here's how the empire is consolidating control. If you want to attack the empire in some
way, then you have to strike at the heart. So I think any groundwork that's being laid just for
the political developments of the next few decades, setting up the sequel trilogy, as we discussed
last week would make sense to visit Khorasan.
And of course, you have Palpi there, so you can talk about Zulu.
Okay, so you're not expecting a Zillow beast to erupt out of the center of Mania Flaza.
We got one on the bad batch.
I know.
This theory, or maybe it's a rumor, I don't know how quite how to categorize it,
that Genevieve O'Reilly as Mamathma is going to become like a figure who shows up again and again
across these various properties is something that really excites me.
because, like, you know, first of all, she's incredible in Andor.
This is, you know, I can't record about Star Wars.
I'll talk about Andor, I guess.
I'm legally obliged.
But, like, you know, she's, she, they don't have to, like, deage her, right?
She's 46.
She can, like, stretch in and around these timeframes and timelines and stuff like that.
And, like, as a figure, as a figure who is part of the rebellion and then part of the flawed, you know,
know, Republic, I'm so interested in the role that she played and all of that.
So a lot of the themes we were talking about last week.
But I can think of no figure better to sort of connect the dots and all of that than
Mama Fah.
Yeah.
What's pairing up to?
That's what we're all wondering.
Just have to keep the and or fit game.
Yes.
Intact.
What's your creepy fundamentalist daughter up to?
You know what I mean?
I hope that arranged marriage is working out well to.
Yeah.
Hopster's son.
Yeah.
I guess the only danger is there is that as we've been discussing, like the Mandalorian excels when it fires on a different cylinder than Indoor does usually, right?
These shows have different strengths.
And if one crosses over into the other's wheelhouse, then potentially it exposes that one show does certain things better than the other.
So having been spoiled by Tony Gilroy's Monmouthma, will we be as excited by John Favro's Monmouthma?
you know, no shots obviously at the portrayal, which will be wonderful either way. But will the
dialogue that will be fed to Mon Mothma be as scintillating and as subtle and as nuanced in the
mandolary and as it was in indoor. I agree with you. And I think Genevieve O'Reilly is, like,
for me on the level of E. McGregor, where, like, can always rise above whatever the material is.
You know what you mean? And just sort of like infuse that, hmm,
sort of nervy yet ethereal quality that Mamma has, her creation of Mamathma has. So, yeah.
Last question, before we go, before we leave Order 66 Corner, is Grogu going to share
this incredibly central part of his life with Din? How will Din start to learn these things
about Grogo? This is like really top of mind for me because this is such an essential thing in
Grogu's arc, and Din doesn't understand it. And Asoka and Luke have been able to
access
Gros' past
through the force,
but obviously that's not
an offer for DIN
unless Joe has a new entry
in Secret Force user
today, we'll find out later.
So I'm wondering,
I'm wondering if that's
something that you two
are thinking about
or think matters
or if you think we will
see DIN learning
about Grogu's history
at any point in the near future
or if this will just be something
that we are learning
through Gros' memories.
I guess his vocabulary
could explain.
spend very rapidly.
Maybe.
No, because when he starts talking, they're going to slap a helmet on him.
So no.
I know.
My desires are in conflict here because I want him to be able to tell Dinn everything,
but I obviously just want him to keep cooing and babbling for literally the rest of my life.
So, I mean, the first person we ever saw Force Heel, right, was Grogu.
Right?
We saw that before we saw Ray do it.
So, like, who is to say that Grogu will not, you know, given the massive M-Cheel?
count, like, won't be able to share visions with Den.
Because, like, I would love a sequence where they can, like, back and forth, like,
his traumatic childhood and Grogu's, you know, rescue.
If they can both watch the armor forge something at the same time, then they can both
have simultaneous traumatic flashbacks.
Hey, we're having parallel PTSD here.
Let's talk about it.
Let's hash it out.
But I do, I love that, Joe.
And I, what I really want is for Grogu to want to share that with.
in, you know, to get to, for us to get to see him say, dad, or say through the force, this is a
huge part of who I am. I need you to know this. Like, wouldn't that just be one of the most
special things we ever got to watch? And I feel like there's, there's a lot of moments where
Grogu is like giving me sort of almost a version of Yoda's like, huh? Like I was just sort of like,
I'm not going to say what I think here, because he's not saying anything. But like there are moments
saying it all with his eyes.
Yeah, Grogu looks like troubled.
Rogu disagrees.
Has, like, leveled up in terms of facial expressions?
Like, has the puppet?
Like, is it the pained expressions that we saw during the vision this week?
Yeah.
It's not, I don't think it's puppetry.
I think they're using a lot more digital effects on Grogu's face than before.
Yeah.
He's definitely gotten more expressive, which is great because every other character is
wearing a helmet at all times.
So to be able to see a facial expression is great.
But I guess it's also.
possible that what with Asoka coming up soon, that we might see Asoka stroll in again before
the end of the season. And she could serve as the intermediary again, as she did in the past,
informing Din what Krogu's name was and what his history was. And just catching up on the visions,
the memories that have been unlocked here and sharing those with Din. I love it. Okay. Anything else?
About Order 66 or Kellerman Beck or Coruscant's Monument Plaza or any of it?
I've said this before, but Order 66 never gets old for me.
I agree.
The number of times we've seen it across different media.
Do you think the-
Do you sickos also love visiting Crime Alley to watch the Wains die?
Like, is this your thing?
It's just every time we see a different person's experience of that event,
I think it tells us something so meaningful about this seismic moment in time.
Cal or Canaan or Grogu or whoever it is, I could watch.
shredded me.
I was, that was a mess.
That was really good.
I'm always thinking, like, you can't keep going back to this well because it's such a special
agonizing moment.
And yet every time, yeah, sure, take me back there again.
Should we say that Tim Morrison voiced all the clones in this sequence?
Yes, he did.
Yeah, it was nice to hear that.
I mean, nothing against Dee Bradley Baker and his incredible voice work, as many,
many, many, many, many clones, but to hear Tem do it again was special.
Very cool.
Okay.
Ben.
Thanks, Ben.
The hammers are pulling you back into another timeline.
Thank you for joining us here in the past.
Thank you for having me.
Joe, little baby grogues in the past is in the hyperspace lane.
The hammering pulls him back into the present.
We see his darling little face again and the armor gives him his next piece of armor.
It is made of the best gar scraps donated for the foundling.
we saw Dan make the similar donations, as you noted,
from the Imperial Baskar, from the client in season one.
Clan Mudhorn.
The Clan Mudhorn signet on this rondel
that she puts on top of the Mithril,
on top of the Baskar shirts,
the shirt, you got the shirt,
and says, Mandelorian Steel
shall keep you safe as you grow stronger.
You will grow into this rondel
as you grow into your station,
foundling grogo.
Now, the score here, the music,
downright reverential, Joanna.
On the one hand,
precious, meaningful, beautiful.
Grogu being more fully embraced into the culture.
Grogu looks touched.
He looks proud.
On the other hand,
can my guy even waddle
with all of this Baskar weighing him down?
And how worried are we about Chekhov's chestplate?
What was the mythril for?
Was that not to protect him?
Like, why would we need an extra little, like,
dinner plate here and
like the hubcap
okay
also like stop putting
armor on this baby
like I just like
don't like it at all
the mithril okay
it's under the robe
like it looks fine
but the hubcap
I
okay so this is where we're going to
just very briefly detour back
to Western Corner
because you're asking about
checkoffs
yeah
someone's gonna shoot
Grogo in this
in this new Buse
of armor. And that character will also have to die, like Ragnar.
My first thought when I thought about, like, Chekhov's chestplate was Michael Keaton and Batman
puts like this silver, like, dish down his shirt and that's how he like does not get shot.
We've seen this again and again and again. But then I was like, oh, Western Corner.
This happens with grief in the Mandalorian, right, Joe? In season one, he's got the best scar brick,
and that's how he survives. Yeah. Yeah, in Chapter 3.
Clint Eastwood, man with no name, fistful of dollars, puts a steel chestplate underneath his poncho to survive a shooting.
That is then, of course, referenced perfectly and Back to the Future, too, with Marty McFly does the same thing.
He learned it from Clint.
And so, but I don't understand how Groga could walk with that thing on.
It looks so heavy.
Yeah.
Get the armor off that baby.
Less aerodynamic now for his force flips too, you know?
Raptor rescue.
Yeah.
It's difficult to leave this perfect Grogu stretch
to now go talk about fighting another monster in the volume,
but we must.
We must.
This is where before they climb,
they make the time to camp and to sleep,
and I'm just like, are you worried about this kid dying or not?
I don't understand it,
but it does lead us to a campfire meal sequence
where Bo asks Dinn how they eat when other people are around.
Did you read this as Bo is genuinely interested and warming to the way?
Or Bo is trying to just, you know, fake it till she Mythosaur makes it.
I think it's a fake it till you mythosur make it moment for her.
Here's my follow question.
Uh-huh.
Has she not eaten until now?
Oh, boy.
She's been with a covert for a while.
Why is this the first time she's asking this question?
Maybe she was able to snack in private, and this is the first.
She's just been slurping?
Just slurping.
Slurping in the shadows?
Slurping in the shadows?
Okay.
Okay, so of course, we get to see Katie Sackoff's beautiful face.
Love that for us.
I was so happy for everyone.
We see you as the leader of Wigwatch Corner.
This was big for you.
It was huge for me, but I mean, that is one resilient, flat iron bob.
No trait.
of helmet hair on Bo Catan, and she's been, like, starving under that helmet for, like,
a week now, or however long she's been with the covert, right? But, and I like this whole
what we learn about, you know, you're the leader of the war party, of the honor staying by
the fire. This is the way. Again, this is like two new pieces of creed we got in this episode,
right? This and the speak moment. However, like, and the Midnight boys talked about this so
eloquently, this question of, like, what you give up when this is your way of life, like,
something we talked about in a previous episode of Ringerverse
as there's this moment from the Star Trek films
where the characters are eating beans around a fire
and Kevin Feige always talks about it
as this like important moment of bonding
of character
like there's so much rich territory to mind
when characters are simply sitting
and sharing a meal together.
This is such a human thing to do.
Shwarma.
If you can't take your helmets off.
Yeah.
peanut butter sandwich with Nat and Steve, like all this sort of stuff.
And so like to miss out on this because you have to go scuttle off into the darkness to slurp your soup or whatever it is, like it's, that doesn't seem like a very good way to a very good foundation to build your community on.
Added to the platform.
Family style dining.
Shared plates.
I mean like do they even eat Chinese food?
Like what do they do?
I don't.
I don't understand.
understand it. The leader of the war party part that you mentioned, I thought it was particularly
notable that it came from Paz because he was, you know, Mr. I'm standing at the gate telling
you that you two are not welcome. Who are you even just an episode ago? And to see how quickly
characters in this covert can go from questioning, doubting, judging to embracing somebody
in a new leadership role, it's that call-a-sar idea, again, you know, a cow who cannot ride is no
cow, but they respect and follow strength.
We see that here.
It's just the, the distance to following Bo, if she claims the mythosaur, is shrinking
minute by minute.
And I think, like, Bo must be tracking that, too.
Oh, look how this character's behavior toward me has changed because I was able to find
the layer.
I was able to map the layer.
I was able to lead us.
They will follow me if I'm strong.
And I like for Bo that that's been a source of resentment
that not having the Dark Sabre
has robbed her of people seeing her that way
even though she's always been the same character.
And so now for her to feel like she's able to get that again
and I don't want her to think she needs the Mythosora
or the Dark Saber, we see she doesn't.
She's just a badass.
But to find her way back to that confidence,
I am a person people will follow.
It's going to be a...
It's a very healing breaking of a cycle, right?
Yes.
for her. Because I mean, like, in terms of leading, like, she's had all these, like, trial and
failure moments of leadership in the Mandalorian culture. And so she's like, when we see her
broken down on that throne, just sort of like leaning with her elbows on her knees just, like,
at her lowest, she's building some of her confidence back. And she's doing it by helping
foundlings all over the place, helping Grogu, saving din, like, helping stupid Ragnar. You know,
like it's it's uh again gunslinger 101 let's very briefly talk about the actual saving of ragnar and
then of paz this is where they use the grappling hooks to scale the side of the mountain i could
not tell if this was supposed to look cool or if they were all supposed to look like lame
laborer like they were laboring very heavily to make it up was it supposed to look cool or lame i
couldn't tell i was so confused because i was like maybe the point is that like beau because
she's had this experience like is much better at it than everyone else but i didn't really
see that come through. And then I also, I mean, like, we all love Pazzvizla's, like, crazy
torch weapon thing, but like, maybe take it off when stealth is involved and you got to
climb a side of a cliff. Yeah. Notes, I have them. Yeah, wouldn't it be easier to climb if
stealth aside just for your own sake? It looks so heavy. I was like, sir, you are a large man.
So it is like, you are working with enough here, like, leave the pack behind. Wild stuff. Fazz just a
completely dufous.
He's not the only one who makes some strange,
some strange decisions.
Dan, bless him,
thinks that the heat signature he spots is Ragnar.
It is, in fact, three baby dino birds,
you know, who among us has not made this mistake.
It's in the foreground.
We're seeing the empty Besscar helmets
of the dead foundlings.
It is upsetting.
But we get the baby birds and then the mama bird.
This is where Ragnar is deposited from the innards
to outside of this beast's mouth.
And it is,
On the one hand, you know, we know we've been with Boba.
We know how handy Baskar is if you've been ingested inside of a beast,
Sarlac Pit in some cases, Dino Bird and others.
Why does Ragnar not have any, like, goo or saliva on him at all?
As a bone.
Dry as a bone, he comes out of that creature.
I did not understand this.
Very strange.
And then we get Joe another creature fight sequence as we did in episode one.
Did you, can we go to volume visual corner here for a second?
Not just necessarily for this sequence, but just like the episode in general.
Does something look strange to you with the jetpack flight images in particular?
Or like when they land from the, when they land from flight onto a rock face, something just looks a little uncanny.
I'm not a jetpack scientist, but it doesn't look right to me.
Yeah.
Yeah.
also think, and the guys talked about this on Wednesday's episode, and we've chatted about this
in prior pods as well, but you really did feel it in this episode. Like, the Mandalorians
are not infallible characters, and they're not characters who we ever go along without
seeing them air. But typically when we see them make mistakes, it's because of the things we've
heard, you know, Bo mentioned, right? The infighting, the lack of trust, leaving themselves
vulnerable to outside influence because of the fractures within. It's not usually because they keep
getting absolutely fucking shredded and obliterated by wild game in their own backyard.
Like, they're just making...
The season is clowning the Mandalorians a bit, given we're supposed to consider them
these, like, really fierce, capable warriors.
Let's go back to our listener email from last week where they were, like,
Mandalorians, too dumb to live?
Question mark?
I can't say that this episode disputed that anyway.
To zoom back really quickly to Ragnar coming out of...
the creature dry as a bone.
Do you know what a wet bump is?
Okay.
You're like, is this a trap?
I learned about this when I was covering Lost.
Remember how I podcasted about Lost for all of the pandemic,
and you joined me that one time.
And on Lost, the actors are quite often, like, soaking in the rain
or they've fallen into the water or whatever.
A wet bump is an actor gets paid more if they have to act.
wet. It is a pay bump. It is called the wet bump. So, like, maybe they didn't want to pay Jimmy Kimmel's
nephew a wet bump, and they're like, you're going to come out dry kid. We don't make the rules.
I'm sorry, I just like, wet bump is my favorite energy term I ever learned, and I just want to,
any excuse. So, yeah, you want to go back to our horny helmet, the hotspot and talk about the wet
bump a bit? Or no, should we?
They're dryly clanging. And that's it. They're dryly clanging. And that's...
It's just like, oh boy, oh boy.
Pass, because he's an idiot as established,
immediately is scooped up by the same creature.
Din has to rescue him and his kid.
Pass has got to fucking hate this.
He and Din hate each other.
Din doesn't really hate him.
Din is in real Don Draper.
Like, I don't think of you at all territory with Paz,
and Paz is obsessed.
He did help Din and come to his aid.
It passes what takes his helmet off,
and it's like a Gensmer.
underneath.
I mean, who knows?
Maybe one day.
He's like three times the size of Ginsburg,
but I would still be into it.
Yeah, he's been like pumping iron, you know?
Who knows?
Paz in Chapter 3 helps out,
but it's been a lot of tension and resentment
outside of that, and this is just
the way that he had to say thank you.
You know it killed him. You know it killed him.
Just like the other creature
killed the Dino Bird Mama because there's
always a bigger fish in Star Wars.
And that means when the gauntlet returns to
the covert cove.
And the armor says,
come Grogu,
which I thought was cute.
She's really taken care of him.
I still don't, I'm not,
I'm always on my guard
with the armorer,
but I did think that was sweet.
Three new foundlings,
Joe, are brought in here
in the form of the baby birds.
Yes.
I wanted to see Din
address the new armor on Grogu.
I thought he should have been there
for the ceremony.
I wanted to see what he thought about it.
We didn't get that here.
Maybe we'll get it next week,
but he did just scoop him up right away
and hold them, which was nice.
It was real
Po-Damarin greeting BB8, you know?
Like, it was really solid.
Okay, but we have to go back to the three new foundlings for a second
because they are being, like, guided.
Led by some mystery meat.
Do you think that's their mom?
I have concerns and questions.
I know that we're watching Yellow Jackets right now
and I have these things on my mind,
but where else did they get of like Flintstone-sized surloid?
if not off the mama
dino bird.
So like the aquatic creature
eats, the new dino turtle
eats the dino bird
and a chunk is floating
maybe and they scoop it up
and say, yes, babies,
we are responsible
for another creature in Star Wars dying
for no reason. We have slain
your mother.
Please follow this
thigh meat into our ship that
definitely isn't big enough for all of you
so that we can lead you to our cove where you will be eaten
by the same creature that just killed your mother
because they attack us all the time.
Also, three new foundlings.
I love this idea that maybe three people,
let's say, Ragnar and two of his weird friends,
are going to be riding the dino bird when it grows up?
Or are they putting Besscar on these dino birds?
Why not both?
Put some armor on and then take flight.
So many foundlings in this episode.
The episode's called the fowling.
Obviously, that's about Brogu.
It's also about Ragnar.
It's about these three baby birds,
and it's about Bo,
which takes us into the last stretch of the episode.
Perfect.
The armorer tells Bo,
you have done the highest honor of the creed,
saving a foundling.
And Bo responds,
this is the way.
I remain,
we have a fascinating exchange
between them to parse in a second here.
I remain a little stuck on this dynamic in particular
because it's two characters
who are canonically established to,
it's not like there's a personal resentment toward each other,
but think that the other person represents something wrong and dangerous.
And that is just not present in episodes three and four of this season
when they are with each other.
And I find that strange.
Like, because it would be so cool and rewarding and rich from a storytelling perspective.
To work past that.
Yes, if they interrogated it and grappled with their own prejudice.
and then worked beyond it.
It would be rich for them as individual characters.
It would be rich for them embracing this idea.
You know, everyone's talking about the failures in the past,
de-infighting, the inner turmoil,
the ruptures that have torn them apart and left them vulnerable.
You two can pave a better path.
There's well-positioned as any characters to do that,
given the things we've heard from them in the past,
but we need that to be, like, active text in the season a little bit.
You know, the armor has said that Bo is, like,
responsible for the fall of Mandelor because of what happened with the Dark Saper.
And Bo has said that the children of the watch are a cult of religious zealots and blamed them
for not helping with the purge.
It just feels like this should come up.
Well, and the way that Bo, like, and that's why people, there's a couple things.
Like, we got an email from Matt, like, I'm just recapping it, but basically he's like,
does the armor have a hidden agenda?
And, like, we've definitely got emails or we've questioned ourselves, like, just Bo have a hidden
agenda. And like, I think that the, the inspiration behind us being, like, how devious is Bo being
is how relaxed she is around this, like, cult that she has expressed, like, revulsion for.
Doesn't make a ton of sense. I want to read this other email we got from Anthony, mostly because
there's a lot of sports stuff in it, and I mostly understood it, but I just found it very
charming. So Anthony wrote, Bocahant has, and three episodes gone from cut from her old
team, the Mandalorians left with their fleet, to being the absolute star player and carrying
her new team.
She's improved their offense and defense and is possibly recruiting more stars and role players
to the team.
She made big plays to save Dinn twice, and without her playbook and execution, they don't
save Paz's son at all.
Not to mention she's the only five-tool Star Wars player on the Children of the Watch team,
pilots, leads, thinks, fights, and fights with a saber.
This is like the vet player who's been hanging around the locker room presence for a while
and had some good seasons way back,
finally breaking out
and leading their team
to a title.
Love this.
Sometimes you just need
a change of scenery.
You need a new locker room.
You need to be in a new ballpark.
It's like crash.
Different dimensions
in the outfield,
you know?
Is it a hitter's park?
Is it a pitcher's park?
I'm into this.
This is great.
Love it.
Love it.
Thanks, Anthony.
The Armourer Joe is also thinking
in sports terms,
looking at the equipment kit
that Bose rock in and says
you've got some
missing paltron activity here.
I can replace what's missing, but not with its modern refinements.
This is clearly not just about the armor.
This is about the old ways and the different life and path that Bo has led.
But what's so weird is that the piece of armor that she makes for Grogu looks like it had like circuitry in it.
Oh, yeah.
I don't know how to understand that.
And Dyn's chess plate before, too, yeah.
Right.
I mean, the armor is high-level tech.
There are some modern refinements going on there, you know.
I feel like she's basically saying to Bo, are you in or not?
You know?
Yeah.
Are you adopting our way of life?
And it feels particularly notable given that Bo then chooses to share with the armorer
something that she did not share with Din.
When she asks the armor, when the armor asks if she wants the night owl signet on this new paltjourn,
Bo asks instead, staring as she has been at the mythosaur skull on the wall, for the
mythosaur. Is that okay? Can she have both? There's that idea once again. Night owl on one arm,
mythosur on the other. You don't have to choose, embrace the different aspects of who you are.
Lovely, great. The armor says, of course, the mythosur belongs to all Mandalrians. It is
acceptable to wear. And then Bo tells the armor what happened in the living waters. Steve,
can we hear this exchange?
What would you say if I told you I saw one?
That you saw what?
A missusorn.
I would say you are very lucky.
It is a noble vision.
No, I mean a real one.
Beneast a Living Waters on Mandelor.
When you choose to walk the way of the Mandalore, you will see many things.
But it was real.
This is the way.
This shocked me.
I want to know how you read this from both characters, Joe.
Why did Bo do this?
What do you see in the Armourer's response?
I feel like she doesn't believe that she saw a real Mithosaur,
but at the same time would not be surprised.
I don't know.
She's so unflappable.
Also, shout out Emily Swallow in the way she, like, delivers all of these lines.
as the armor.
So good.
And then with Bo, like, why did she tell the armor or not Din?
I think, like, there's a little bit of a...
The best explanation I could come up with is that, like, if she...
It's not that she doesn't want Din to know because she doesn't want, like, competition.
It's more like she was so adamant and so sneering about the Mythosaur that it's, like,
almost a little embarrassing to be like, JK, I just saw one.
Like, moments after, like, sneeringly reading this plaque about the Mithaure.
She's like the mythosaur eye roll like blah blah.
And then she's like, um, do I care?
Saw one.
So I think telling the armor feels safer than telling Jen.
I love that.
I love that she just, my best interpretation.
I love the read that she just didn't want to tell the tourists that he was right.
I'm curious if like, Ben and I were chatting about this a bit when we're working on his piece, great piece, read it on the ringer.com.
What a great website.
midweek, like, is an armor session
like a confessional in some way?
Like, is Bo expecting confidentiality
inside of this exchange?
Does she realize as soon as she says this out loud
that this is about to spread,
that Din will find out
that she thinks she saw this and didn't tell her,
what will that mean for their relationship?
Is she testing what kind of buy-in
she can maybe expect from the armor?
What hurdles she'll have to clear?
not in nefarious way, just maybe, maybe even subconsciously, but also maybe organically.
Like, hey, what would you say if I told you this thing? What would you think of this?
It just feels like Katie isn't playing it that way at all, but like maybe there's a room for like not devious but still poking at something at the same time.
And I do think like maybe, maybe a confessional space, but what is true is that the armor is the closest thing to a spiritual leader that this covert has.
know, she's the one constantly professing what is the way, making judgments, casting people out,
stuff like that. So, like, I can see that. It's like going to, you know, the shaman or something
like that. Yeah. Yeah. I'm also not reading any, like, active manipulation in TV's performance,
but I think that the character is at war with herself and there can be, like, the elements of
examination, even if your overall intention is still to find peace with these people. And I think
actually, like we've talked about before, it's most interesting if Bo is able to say,
let's do this together, but also here's what you're wrong about. You know, that there should
be some challenge in pursuit of that piece. I think from the Armour's perspective, like, you know,
when we heard the Armour's talk about the Mythosaur in Boba, the Songs of the Yom Pass line that we've
mentioned many times, the last line of that is, sadly, it only exists in legends. And I don't
think at the time or now, we have read that in any way.
as equivalent to the state we find Bowen
at the beginning of season three
where we're thinking the Armourer
is a character who has lost faith
or doesn't believe in the magic.
It's almost like it's a lament when she says it.
This has receded from our life.
Would she be excited if she realized
that it was true?
I wonder to this idea of
is the Armourer reluctant
to believe Boe,
or is she afraid of what it might mean
if this is in fact true?
What would it mean for the Armourer
and the Armourer's way of life?
if Bo Catan claimed the Mithosaur and rallied the troops and heralded in this nude prophesied age.
And the armorer is a character who abides by prophecy.
I think there's the one interpretation as just, you know, okay, that's a rival.
Maybe.
I'm interested in whether the armor would be concerned that Bo Katan,
a character she thinks is responsible in a lot of ways for,
the horrors of the past, what would it mean if Bo was in a position of power again?
Like, would that represent a larger threat to her people?
Could she be thinking about that?
I hope that's true.
And what's true about a show where our characters are helmeted is that we can layer a lot of meaning on what they say.
What I'm worried is that the Mandalorian maybe has never been a show that it has had that much on its mind, that it exists in a much more straightforward level.
But I think it would be interesting to see more.
of that conflict.
But what I'm worried about,
and I'm not that worried about it,
I'm having a good time,
but like what I
more suspect,
because we kept waiting
for this kind of depth
in like Book of Boba Fett.
And what happened,
it was just like,
Boba showed up on the rancor
and smashed a bunch of things
and it looked cool.
And so I'm worried that it's just like,
it's going to be a might as right thing,
and she's going to show up on the Mythosaur
and it looks cool.
And everyone's like,
no problem, you're our leader.
Right.
But I do think this idea of, of, we got this cool email from a listener about this idea of the dual prophecy, right?
So what the armor said in, you referenced it, the songs of Yom Pass foretold of the mythosur rising up to herald a new age of Mandalore.
Our listener, Kail, wrote I had a question whether you guys saw or predicted any parallels between the Mandalorian prophecy and the Jedi Chosen One prophecy with the embrace of the prequels and the comparison between the Middalaurean prophecy with the embrace of the prequels and the comparison between the Middalaure.
The DeLoreans and the Jedi, it feels like the show is setting up a comparable arc.
So I think it's just at least worse thinking about the way in which Star Wars thinks about prophecy.
You know what I mean?
Like, again, to go back to like a Potter reference, like we have a clear idea about how that universe treats prophecy, different universes treat prophecy in different ways.
And like the way that the chosen one prophecy is misinterpreted, bungled, revised in, in the
the original trilogy and the prequels and the sequels and stuff like that,
maybe gives us a hint as to how it might be thought of here.
I also like the way, I mean, when you're thinking about a prophecy,
you always have to think about precision of language, right?
What is exactly saying here, right?
Fortold the Miss who are rising up to herald a new age of Mandalore.
Like, Mandelor is the name of the planet,
but it's also the name, it's spelled differently,
but it's also the name of the leader, the Mandalore,
with an apostrophe in the middle of it.
like the Mao did basically um and so like right
Harold a new age of a new a new man a new leader
or a new age for the planet or both you know something like that so
that's that's fascinating the the Jedi cop yeah yeah I really like what you're saying
about misinterpreting and I love the idea again if the armor is a way into
if the armor and bow within the same characters the same people
you're forced to interrogate your relationship to an idea in a new way
way? Because like when the armorer says to, what the armorer says to din in Boba chapter five is
this is about the dark saber, if it is won by creed in battle, it is said one warrior will defeat 20 and
the multitudes will fall before it. If, however, it is not won in combat and falls into the
hands of the undeserving, it will be a curse unto the nation. Mandelor will be laid to waste and its
people scattered to the four winds. Then elsewhere says, only those that walked away escaped the
curse prophesied in the creed.
Though our numbers were scattered to the winds,
our adherence to the way,
has preserved our legacy for the generations
until we may someday return to our homeworld.
So even there, there's like competing impulses,
return to the home world.
Good, but can you do it behind a character
who you think represents this,
the curse that was part of this prophecy?
Like, that's what she thinks Beau did
and wrought upon their people with the saber.
But again, to your point,
I would have more buy-in on that potential drama
if we saw even a drop of that since Bo has...
I know. That's why I'm craving it so desperately.
Yeah.
She thinks that Bo, while everybody else is flocking to her potentially as a sign of strength,
and the armorer says, this character might be our undoing.
That could be fascinating.
Let's start building toward that with a little conversation.
But again, if they find their way to a peaceful alliance, great.
I'd also love Bo to be like, are those mall Super Commando Horns on your helmet?
I led the resistance in opposition to that group.
Can we talk about it?
Can we have a little chat?
I didn't put it in the doc where we got an email from a listener who was asking if, like, maybe the armor was like a death of mirror or something like that.
And that's why, like, why is the armor so invested in pushing this idea of like keep her helmet on at all times?
Because she doesn't want anyone to see her face.
Like, what's going on underneath her helmet?
I don't know.
Like I'm willing to sit on Conspiracy Corner for that.
I just do want to circle back.
As we close out the episode, I do want to circle back to like a couple of quotes we've heard already in the season.
Yeah.
When Dan is talking to Bo about the creed, he says our people are scattered like stars in the galaxy.
What are we?
What do we stand for basically without our creed?
And then also when Dan is talking to Grogo and saying being a Mandalorian, it's not just about learning out of fight.
You also need to know to navigate the galaxy.
that way you'll never be lost.
Again, when we've been talking about this since the start,
this ongoing interrogation of what does it mean to be a Mandalorian?
And what does it mean to unscatter a scattered people?
Absolutely.
Let's find out.
Does it mean just simply riding a mythosaur?
Does it mean figuring out how to have more of fuel-efficient jet packs?
You know?
We'll find out.
Oh, boy.
Okay, we are going to go rapid fire through some of our corners as we conclude today's episode.
First up, Easter eggs.
Joe, we've hit a bunch of the Easter eggs in this episode already.
Yeah.
The Shriecock, the H-type Nubian yacht.
There's always a bigger fish.
Any others that are top of your list as favorites from the episode.
No, I'm just going to circle back to there's always a bigger fish because you dropped it beautifully and eloquently.
as we were discussing it, but just in case people don't have a strong memory of the prequels,
this is a quagong gin line from the Phantom Menace,
and it is specifically a Jar Jar Binks moment.
So, you know, if this episode is full of little Jar Jar Amages,
there's always a bigger fish, which is how they escape underwater, etc.
You know, I thought that was, it's not said, it's just invoked.
I liked it.
Delightful.
That's my pick, too, but I'll toss out the lifting rocks.
fake out.
Always like when we think we're going to get a lifting rocks.
Force training sequence.
Great stuff.
Okay.
From eggs to wigs, it is time for wigwatch.
You have removed your helmet.
Have you won wigs?
We got an email of appreciation for Steve, like for a lot of things, but chiefly that sound
clip.
Again, I mean, maybe I have to revise on.
my thoughts about how bad Mandalorian smell and what's going on under their helmets.
Like maybe they've got a cooling system in there because Bo comes out like, you know, cool as a
kuk.
Like no, no sweat, no sheen, no, no must, no fuss on the hair.
You know, maybe there's something special going on under the Baskar that's just keeping them
nicely air conditioned under there.
I don't know.
But yeah, the wig is bad.
A salon.
Yeah.
A hair salon, yeah.
When you, Mallory, go in for your perm treatments?
I know how you are.
Yeah, I mean, the week is back.
We get to see Katie's face.
I'm still stumping to get to see Pedro's face again.
That would be preferable to me.
Joanna, there's no chance we make it for season without seeing his face.
Right?
We are in episode four, Nari a Cobb, Nora Vance to be seen.
So I need you to stop making me promises.
You can't, you don't know that you can deliver on.
I'm standing, I'm standing firm and standing tall here.
We will see Cobb Van before the end of the season.
We will see Pedro Pascal's face before the end of the season.
I'm at 100% confidence on Pedro's face.
I'm at 95% on cop's face.
And I'm at, you know, 50% on whether we get an oral sex scene before the end of the season.
That's more just hoping.
How are you going to make it up to me if we don't get Cobbvan?
What do I get instead?
I mean, my instinct would be to say I'll send you a cardboard cutout, but you already have one.
It's the most embarrassing thing I've ever done to my life.
Why did I do that?
I think it's COVID.
I think it's wonderful.
I think it's wonderful.
We all lost our minds and COVID.
Oh, my God.
From Whigs to subtitles.
The Netflix Subtitle Award, aka Coo Corner.
Oh.
Obviously.
The panting subtitle is the actual winner from this episode for subtitles we got.
Just remarkable stuff.
But the Netflix thought experiment, you know, if we were over in the Vecnaverse here and the Netflix crew were providing the subtitles for Chapter 20 The Foundling, what do you think we would have seen, Joe?
I'm a great one.
I guess I'll go with like Ragnar Tumbles Dryly.
Yeah.
I think we could just literally go back to the source of this bit, which is flesh distanced wetly for the meat.
You know, flesh lores rancidly.
Yeah.
Just stick with the template for that.
Secret Force user.
Who's your candidate from this episode?
How did Ragnar say dry and alive inside?
I have.
Ragnar, parentheses, dry and alive in the mouth of a beast.
How?
Incredible.
I feel so, I feel so seen a known by you every single time we do this corner.
It's getting to the point, though,
where I actually think it's going to be like a crisis for us
if we don't have the exact same pick one week.
I also think, like, maybe people think we're making it up
that we have the exact same thoughts.
No, this is sincere.
We don't share these because we want to be able to enjoy this moment.
Steve, get on the microphone.
Are you here?
Yes.
Will you just, like, back us up that we do not have this in the document,
that this is true?
No, you do not.
You do not.
That's it.
We did it.
We did it.
We will grow into this podcast as we grow into our stations,
but until then, that's a wrap.
Thank you to the leaders of our 501st podcast Legion.
Steve Allman for producing this episode,
Arjuna Ram Gapal, for his additional production work on this episode,
and Jo Mia Denneron for his work on the social for this episode.
Remember to pop back over to the prestige TV feed
for our Yellow Jackets Season 2 breakdowns,
and then next week, head back to the ringer verse.
House of Who? First Doctor Whood.
Midnight Boys instant reaction to the newest Mando on Wednesday.
House of our deep dive to the newest Mando on Friday.
Until then, playtime's over.
We're going to need you to focus.
Happy music goes here.
I'm going to get that little Grogootoo.
I'm going to just, you know, heighten the Groguku.
My sweet baby.
All right.
I wait until you took a drink.
That caught me harder than any.
Raven Caugh ever has
but like instead
filling me with dread and fear of building with
delight. That was...
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