The Ringer-Verse - ‘The Book of Boba Fett’ Chapter 3 Deep Dive | House of R
Episode Date: January 15, 2022Mal and Joanna are insulted on our behalf and will beseech you to listen to their latest deep dive of 'The Book of Boba Fett' Chapter 3 (06:24). They discuss the much discussed gang of cyber youths an...d their colorful bikes (38:19). Later, Ben Lindbergh brings us a lore lesson on the infamous Pyke Syndicate (85:28) and Jomi is brought in to answer your mailbag questions. Hosts: Mallory Rubin and Joanna Robinson Producer: Steve Ahlman Guest: Ben Lindbergh Social: Jomi Adeniran Additional Production: Steve Ahlman, TD St. Matthew-Daniel, and Arjuna Ramgopal Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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The Ringers Charles Holmes and co-host Grace Spellman present the most notorious new podcast in the industry, the Ringer Music Show. Every Tuesday, they'll bring you the latest news, the hottest takes, and the deepest reporting about the wild world of music and the chaotic industry that creates it. Check out the Ringer Music Show exclusively on Spotify.
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Beth and Rip are back in a new series, Dutton Ranch.
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No one respects you.
Let them speak.
Ever since, Lord Fortuno was as perished.
the streets have turned to chaos.
Oh, this is the first I'm hearing of it.
No, it's true.
And I am insulted on your behalf
at the disrespect these urchards are showing you,
especially in light of the,
well, you know.
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 down into the rancor pit,
but also to join
us on the ringer's nexus podcast feed for all things fandom joining me today to talk about the book of
boba fete chapter three and eager to learn what's really going on in this murky fin it's my house of our
Archie title
Ghost
and my favorite
Vespa rider
Ringer Senior
Staff writer
Joanna Robinson
I feel
mixed about
being called a Vespa writer
in this episode
the streets of
most Vespa
we'll talk about it
I'm excited to learn
what color you
would pick
over the course
of the episode
I was about to ask
you
what color you
would pick
green is my
favorite color
so I'm tempted
to stay green
but
But, you know, yeah, I would go with green.
My favorite color, ringer, you know, ringer green, lean in.
But I would also be really happy with either orange or purple because of my sports fandom.
You know, I got the orange for the O's and Cuse, purple for the Ravens.
So any of those three would be fine with me.
But I would try for green.
How about you?
Yeah.
Well, Amber is the color of my energy.
But I think that I would, no, I'm just kidding.
I think that I would pick like a minty, sparkly green.
that's a real Vespa color.
Do you know what I mean?
The mint green with a little bit of sparkle to it.
Or like a cream school orange.
These colors were a little too bold for my taste.
I would prefer something more in the pastel family.
You love a pastel.
I do.
You love a pastel.
I love a muted tone.
Oh, boy.
Well, no muted tones here on the Ring ofverse.
And as always, we have a few.
quick programming reminders before we open up the Boktapod to head into today's episode.
The Midnight Boys.
Van and Charles.
Poo-Pewo-Pew!
We'll be back with you earlier than usual because they have a Peacemaker chat coming.
At the top of next week, they will be breaking down the three-episode Peacemaker premiere.
I really liked Peacemaker.
Protect Eagley.
Excited to talk about Peacemaker and keep watching the rest of the season.
Fun show.
Of course, we will be back on Wednesday.
and Friday on the Ring ofverse
to break down the Book of Boba Fett chapter
four in instant reaction and deep dive form.
And then, Joe, you got another programming reminder for people,
a programming notice for people, don't you?
Yeah, it's a little bit of a spin-off.
Let's hear it.
If this is the Mandalorian, then this is Book of Boba-Fet.
Over in the Prestige TV podcast feed,
where Mel and I have done a few shows ourselves.
Seams.
From America.
Squid games from a marriage.
Van Leitham ever heard of him.
Old Man Van himself from the Midnight Boys Pew Pugh will be joining me for three episodes, I believe, to talk about the Netflix series Ozark.
So we had some folks thrilling.
I love Ozark.
We had some folks who like Follow the Prestige TV podcast feed were like, we're a little blind.
We never know.
What are you going to pick?
What should we catch up on?
So I'm just giving you a little advanced warning.
giving you a whole week to get ready for four seasons of television.
But Ozark, you know, we're here, Book of Boba Fett, talking about crime families, crime stories.
Van is a scholar of the crime drama coming off of his wire rewatch, etc.
So we'll be talking about Ozark, that crazy crime family over the Prestige TV podcast feed.
Next week, there will be three episodes dropping on that.
Excited to hear how you all think the characters on Ozark would launder the money
from the Star Wars universe.
You know, what's easier to launder?
Imperial credits, Kalamari Flan.
Kalamari Flan is what I was going to say.
It's the Flon.
Oh, boy.
I genuinely cannot wait to listen to that.
That is very exciting.
Everybody check that out.
Follow the Prestige TV pod.
If you are not following it yet, that feed is awesome.
And follow all of it.
Prestige TV, Ringervverse, everything we got cooking here at the Ringer Podcast Network.
By following the pods on Spotify, wherever you get your podcast.
And of course, by following our social feeds,
The Ringer Verses on Twitter, Instagram, Facebook.
Bear in mind, as always,
our friendly neighborhood spoiler warning.
Today's podcast will feature plot details
from the book of Boba Fett chapter three.
The Streets of MosESpa,
directed by Robert Rodriguez, written by John Favreau.
Tight 38, 39-ish minutes.
same length of the premiere.
We're going to also be talking, of course,
about the wider Star Wars canon.
It's all fair game today.
So proceed with more caution
than the Major Domo did
when attempting his escape.
Love that guy. Low bar.
Put bar all the way on the table.
I love that guy.
All right, Joe, yeah.
We got a lot to hit today.
So let's dive right in to the episode.
we are going to run through the present day timeline first.
We will hit the flashbackda later.
And I should say, once again, we had a slightly different structure in terms of how much time we spent in each timeline.
So the bulk of this episode, after the bulk of chapter two took place in the past,
the bulk of chapter three takes place in the present timeline, that 9 ABY timeline were only in the past and that 5ABY timeline.
were only in the past in that 5-A-B-Y timeline for like a handful of minutes.
So we got most of the plot points and deep dive-in to do here in the old Mandalorian
timeline 9 ABY.
And let's start at the palace where the episode begins.
And let's start where the season did not begin, but episode three did begin, which is, in essence,
here's the lay of the land.
Our Guy 88 is providing an R unit,
hollow display aided,
download of the state of affairs in Mos Espa,
the crime family breakdown,
the Trindotians, the Aqualish,
and the Clotunians who are dividing the land since Jaba's fall.
We're going to break down some of the specifics that he shares
and all of the dynamics at play here.
But I broadly to start,
have to ask, what did you think about the fact that this is when we got this information?
Because on the one hand, it's really helpful to finally have it, really helpful.
We've been wondering about this.
On the other hand, it does, I think, exacerbate the effect that exists across this episode
where it feels like we're almost starting over at what is, in essence, kind of the midway mark of the season.
I think the, I mean, glad to have it, of course, is very godfather in its nature,
talking about the families and their territories and all that.
But my question is why both on the show and in Boba's own strategy are we doing this so late?
Why is this not the first thing that Boba?
And the problem for me is that it makes Boba look very bad at his job as he has been this entire season looking pretty bad at this job.
And this is just basics.
Like, this is basics.
Like, reading people incorrectly or trusting the wrong people or whatever, that's, you know,
that comes down to the person.
But I think anyone, if you walk into a job and you've got a droid there from the previous
administration, you're like, hey, what's the haps?
What do I need to know about what's going on?
You got stored up there in that old neural harness.
And it makes even lessons to me just as a strategy when, like, the Trandotion leader and,
I think the Aqualach leader, both were there giving their tribute in the first episode.
So, you know, why wouldn't this have been information that they talked about before the presentations of the tributes?
I don't understand any of that.
Glad to know it.
Glad to know this.
Delighted to know it.
I would like Boba Fett, who I am, deeply rooting for, my heart and my soul, to start being better at this job.
That's what I would like.
And listen, like, I understand the idea of putting someone on the back foot in order to show their growth in a role.
So we're going to show if we're going to show Boba getting better at his job.
But I think you need to start from a place of more competence than we're starting with Boba Fett here.
If you think about even with like if you think about the Godfather comp or the Wire comp, like if there are crime lawyers we're rooting for, there's something about them where you're like, yes, they seem suited for this job.
And I'm excited to see them try to do this.
And even when they're kind of bad at the job like Sonny is and the godfather before Michael's,
replaces him. He still has some flashes of brilliance that you're like, okay, like maybe he'll get it
together. Boba, I'm waiting, Boba. I am waiting for you to shine. I would like you to shine.
Yeah. Yeah, I agree. It's, it's, there's the element of this for us as viewers where we say, oh,
okay, we're getting this information that we've been wondering about for a couple episodes and it's
coming at this point in the season. But it is, it's difficult to shake the fact that Boba Fannick,
seems to be the one who is often questioning Boba's decisions, pushing him to a certain line of
inquiry, wouldn't have asked for all of the intel that could have possibly been provided.
8D8 says, Bibb Fortuna assembled job as mantle, assumed job as mantle. Under Master Bibbs,
watchfuli, Mosaspo was divided amongst three families. So Trindotians took the city center,
the Aqualish, the Workers District. We will be returning to the Workers District soon in this episode.
and the Clotunians, the Starport and Upper Sprawl.
We also have a little starport action.
Master Bib did not have the power of Jabba,
so he relied on uneasy alliances to preserve his tribute and title.
So in addition to wondering why Boba wouldn't have been asking for all of this sooner
or trying to piece this all together,
especially in the wake of the, you know, you haven't heard kind of moments that he's had to this point
where people are constantly noting
how little awareness and graspy has
of the state of affairs.
A couple of things stood asking me
about the actual download,
the actual information that we get here.
Yeah, yeah.
So as you noted, we saw the tributes
from the Trandotions and the Aqualus in the first chapter,
of course the wookie pelt from our guy,
Doc Strassie.
But then we think back to the looks
that we were talking about from chapter two,
the Trondotions, when passing by,
in the center of the city.
It's fascinating to think about
what might be on their minds.
Boba is a threat, right?
Could be part of an alliance,
but could be a threat.
Why are the huts not involved
in this breakdown?
Now, we're going to talk more
about the twins
who make a once again,
very incestuous appearance
in this episode.
I mean, just a lot of,
a lot of tail touching
and rubbing and groping.
It's, it's,
It's concerning.
You never go tail to tail is how I feel about this.
But also, I do want to say really quickly about the twins.
I want to retract our Lannister unless there's another level going on, which they're very well could be.
But like, if they're all incest, no ambition, then that's not, that's not Jamie and Cersie, right?
Yeah.
I don't buy.
I don't buy their lack of ambition.
No, I don't buy it at all.
I don't buy it at all.
But it's a good point.
It's a good point.
saying it's a trap. It's a trap. It's a drop. Notably, in addition to, okay, well, where are the huts?
Not only a piece of that, but any direct involvement, what was the arrangement that the twins had,
or did they have any sort of arrangement or understanding with Bibb in those five years between
Jabba's death and this current timeline? What about the Pikes, though? You know, the Pikes are going
to be a big part of our discussion today. They're present in Keyways in both timelines in this episode,
and there's no mention of the Pikes here
when citing the families
who are central to the power dynamic in Mos Espa.
Does that mean that they're not actually
power players on the ground
and this arrival via Starport at the end
signifies a change?
Or does it mean that they're operating
in the shadows in a different sort of capacity?
Most Isley is, of course,
the place where the flashback sequence
occurs, not MosESpa.
Maybe they're operating in a different part of Tatouin
and are just now going to be moving to most
ESPA, but I think that's kind of fascinating, too,
in terms of tracking all of these syndicates
across the episodes.
We always like to talk about trailers.
While there aren't a ton of clotunian clues in there,
we do see in that table gathering where Boba is, you know,
presumably making his appeal to forge some sort of alliance.
Do you see a clotinian there.
So even though we didn't get the tribute in Chapter 1, that's coming.
The other thing that 88 says is all of this while lining the pockets of the mayor.
So did the mayor, who has no appointments on his calendar for at least 20 days, Joanna?
I mean, this guy not setting any focus time holds on his Google calendar.
I mean, he is booked, okay?
And by that, I mean, he is telling Boa, he is booked.
Did he, after Bibbs' death assassination, I'll say it, even if our guy Stephen Root won't?
It won't.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Did he immediately look elsewhere for that pocket lining the second Bibb was out of the picture?
Or was he working with the Pikes or other factions as well across this timeline?
Like, when did all of these changes take effect?
How much of this actually did happen?
How much of this chaos that the watermonger mentions actually pop up just in the wake of Bibbs' death
and Boba's attempt to take over as daimyo,
and how much of this was cooking in some sort of capacity?
We don't know the answer to those questions,
but I'm looking forward to finding out
because there are a lot of different,
we have a simultaneous occurrence here,
where we have a lot of different factions
who are threats or maybe threats,
but also this mounting question of weight,
who is the big bad actually going to be?
And on the one hand, we're only three episodes in,
and two of the three have been pretty short.
On the other hand, the season's only seven episodes.
So we've only got four,
left to really solidify some of that. And I'm curious, before we dive into a little more of what
we got in this throne room sequence in the rest of the episode, do you have a read or a guess
early for how much of this will almost track along like a Marvel Disney Plus show timeline, where
some of the big bad reveals are coming really late? And how much of this do you think will
start to crystallize for us in this mid-season realm? So, like, you're comparing it to,
let's say, our most recent thing, or Loki and Hawkeye being, we get spoilers, I suppose,
for Loki and Hawkeye.
We get the Kang reveal and the finale of Loki, and we get Kingpin in the penultimate
episode of Hawkeye.
I think if we're talking about a bigger, like, Crimson Don Quira reveal, that does feel
like something that could come if, again, we don't know, but if that's coming, that feels
like something that could come in the penultimate episode.
I think a lot of people, including The Midnight Boys, were sort of coming out of this
episode, feeling like the Pikes for the Big Bad, but I have such a fun, and I first was
very resistant to that, but I have such a fun theory that was floated to me by a listener,
friend of mine, right before we started recording, that makes me interested again in the
possibility of the Pikes. Do you want to do it now or do you want to save it for Theory Corner?
Totally up to you.
I'm like my mind's a buzz with this, so I just kind of want to talk about it now. Is that okay?
Yeah. I'm excited. I have no idea what you're going to say. This is a real-time surprise.
We both noticed that they've mentioned a couple times, this idea that Tatooine used to be a water planet, right?
And it's something that keeps coming up and we're like, why are they mentioning a couple times?
So here's my friend Ben, who actually messaged me about the Pikes last week. And last week, and we're going to have our very own Ben on to talk about the Pikes.
So, you know, Benlingberg will be here to talk about the pike.
Stay tuned.
But my friend Ben messaged me last week saying, last week he said, is this the first time we've seen the faces of the pikes on screen?
I feel like they've always been masked in previous shows.
And I love finally seeing what they look like or am I missing something.
And for some reason, I've always imagined them to be snake people underneath, but fish people will do.
That's what he said.
I think this is that correct or have we seen them enmassed in animated before?
We have seen them enmassed in animated form.
But they do look a little bit.
different. And I think that's one of the things
Lindberg's going to talk about. Right. And so then this is what he
says. He says, I was chatting with my friend Clinton and he
has a hunch that Tuskins might be
aquatic people underneath two.
Given all the tidbits dropped about
Tatween being an ocean before and them telling
the water craving pikes, you can cross
the desert just fine. Tatouine
being ocean, being
once an ocean seems like yet another grab from
Dune, since if I recall, Iraqis
was also a wet planet once, something disclosed
in book six, I think. So
this idea that the Tuskins
might also be fishy underneath the mask.
And not only that, are the Pikes and the Tuskans the same species?
And were headed towards some sort of war around that.
The Pikes coming to reclaim maybe a planet that they abandoned once it became a desert planet or something like that.
There's plenty I don't know about the Pikes.
Ben is going to come on and educate us and maybe there's something he knows that completely discounts this.
But this idea of we don't know what the Tuscan Raiders look like underneath.
their masks and their bandages and all that sort of stuff like that.
And if they are indigenous to this planet that used to be an ocean planet, are they aquatic
and nature?
And is that something that deeper that might be running through this show?
Wow.
My mind is racing and running.
My mind is racing in real time.
This could be nothing.
We all know that, you know, theories are theories and that sort of stuff.
But it has been needling at me.
Why do they keep mentioning the water,
planet history. Yes, I have a lot of questions about why they keep in shape. You know, and I, like,
yeah, feels like we're building toward a reveal. Yeah, what theory people had was that they were
going to show how it happened and maybe, but how is that satisfying and weaving into the story?
And this idea that maybe the Tuskins are aquatic, maybe they and the pikes look exactly the same
underneath their masks. I think that could be really fun and interesting. I don't know.
One sect chose to stay. One chose to leave, and they're coming back for their planet.
I don't know.
So there's, I'm trying to recall everything that I know about
there, about the Pikes home planet, as far as we know, in canon, which is Obadiah.
We hear it mentioned in this episode.
We see it.
We go there in Clone Wars.
That's a fascinating Clone Wars episode.
Also just, I know it's Obadiah, but.
Obadiah Stain, right?
It makes me think of Obadiah Stain.
Tony.
Built this in again.
Oh, God.
It makes, the theory that you are presenting
makes me think of
the
the Moncala Quarren war
on their planet.
These are different species, both aquatic.
And there's also actually,
there's a great clone wars,
an entire arc actually centered on that conflict.
So I think there would definitely be, there's more than one example, but like pretty direct precedent for something like that, actually.
I wonder if it was almost be too much direct precedent.
Too close.
Yeah, because of that.
And I guess I think that the most compelling part of this is tying in what we keep hearing about Tatooine's history as an oceanic world.
I agree with you that that has to end up connecting, whatever reveal we get, to,
some faction that is playing a pretty direct and relevant role in the story that we're getting this
season. I think that it could maybe be one more way of sort of consistently reinforcing for us
that there's just a lot we don't know about Tatooine and that it's part of the mission of
this show to broaden our understanding of Tatooine, the place, the people, etc. But when you get a
moment like our watermonger literally saying, well, Tatween was once completely covered with water.
It's fascinating, actually. And then he's cut off and we're left like, wait, no, keep talking.
Yeah. You know, and that's not even the only mention that we get. We get another one from Bob elsewhere in this episode. But like, that is so, that is there to draw our attention to the intrigue and to that sense of wonder. So I, I'll have to keep chewing over that theory. We should, you should, you should float that to Ben and see what he thinks when he comes on later. But I think broadly the idea of some sort of connection. I do.
still, I just personally can't shake the idea because I think of the of the Pikes with the five
syndicate history, Crimson Dawn.
I just can't still shake some sort of Kira, Kira, no, no.
And connection ultimately and think that's probably where we're heading.
But I don't think that like one, I don't think that one rules out the other.
Right.
Yeah, they're not mutually exclusive at all.
But I just think that the Pikes as like masked fish people, even if they are like one layer below,
Crimson Don and Kira are such a boring sort of big, bad idea.
You know, even with someone as talented as Phil Lamar voicing one of them, you know.
And so I think giving them a more concrete connection to whatever is the story of Tatween
and whatever is the story of the Sam people, quote unquote, the Tuscan Raiders, I think
would be really interesting.
I don't know.
I want to think about it.
I want to hear Ben Lindberg, I don't know, shoot it out of the sky.
I
to that last point
I've been thinking about that
I just think about
Kylo Ren I just
anyway sorry go ahead
I'm all I always
personally have Kylo
on the mind so I'm with you
never need never need to apologize
for thinking about
her mentioning Kylo
on this podcast
or any other
to that point about
whether the Pikes
would be like
interesting or compelling
enough if they are in fact
the big bad
I've been I've been chewing
in this for the last
couple days given
their prevalence in this episode
across both timelines
and I've yet to make up my mind.
I'm going to keep an open mind over the next couple episodes,
but I have been coming back to,
while it may not feel right now like that would be satisfying,
and while I do ultimately think another reveal is still to come,
I think I'm open to and actually kind of into the idea of working to it,
just establish why new characters in the Pikes are not new.
You know, we've seen them in solo,
we've seen them in Clone Wars, we've seen them in Bad Batch,
but why other groups should be menacing and should be worthy of our interest in engagement and attention
because I think in some ways it connects to a lot of what we talked about in our first episode
like widening the set of central players in Star Wars is like exciting ultimately
whether they can do that effectively we'll see but I don't know I'm not tried I'd hate it if they
tried so I'm on the fence about it but maybe
The villain will end up being Stephen Rube.
You know, Lortha Peele.
Maybe he'll end up being the big bad.
I mean, I don't actually think that, but that would be hysterical.
I would love it.
Let me ask you.
He's very pissed about not getting his full cut, Joe.
It didn't come in for vengeance.
Again, this did not seem like a smart move from Boba.
Okay.
So, like, the smart move, I do think, is bringing these teens on without really giving them a job interview, as you mentioned.
Like, just they're on.
But, like, this is what.
this is what creative crime lords do all the time, right?
They're like, hey, you, come work for me, okay?
Sherlock Holmes had his, like, Baker Street regulars,
like Boa Fed has his Mosares regulars.
But to piss off Stephen Root like that
seems just like diplomacy is not on his mind in all of this.
And I'm like, you don't have a strong enough position
to play fast and loose with diplomacy.
in this way.
You know,
what's particularly
interesting about
that, though,
is what is his stated
creed?
What is the one
of the only things
we actually do know
about how he thinks
about leadership?
Yes.
Job ruled with fear.
I intend to rule with respect.
Now, I think there's
certainly the case
easily to be made
that telling this guy
who is price gouging
for water
to fuck off
is good
and something that
he should do
and that the
respect then comes in how he's thinking more broadly about the foul act that Lorth
Appeal is committing here. But there's, we don't have too many examples so far of thinking,
of seeing how Boba is thinking one move beyond whatever is right in front of him and what the
consequences might be. You know, when we talk about everything that happens in the flashback,
whether that was actually the work of the striders, whether that was the work of the striders, whether that was the work
of the Pikes and they used the tag as a misdirect, whether they were in cahoots because they are
working together paying protection already, right?
In some way directly stemmed from Boba's actions and decisions, right?
And there are many smaller examples already in the present timeline.
And that's one of the reasons that Fennick keeps saying, whether it's bringing on the Gammorian
guards or letting or letting Chrysantan go, hey, are you sure that this was a good idea?
Yeah, and I'm split about it because, you know, we're not going in chronological order.
No, we're all over the place.
But, like, I think Boba's, yeah, like the death of the Tuscan Raiders, and I have a big problem with that, with that whole flashback, honestly.
But, like, this stems directly from a similar move from Boba in last week's episode where, like, I was excited by the train heist and all that.
But at the end, it seemed like a rash thing to just, like, you know, swing his dick around the way that he did, you know.
And I'm like you just don't have this position.
You don't want to swing your dick around out under the binary suns.
Yeah.
Not in the desert.
Risky.
Sand gets everywhere, my friend.
I don't like sand.
It's rough.
It gets everywhere.
But like if you have a rag tag group of Tuscan Raiders and that is your entire team,
what gives you the kohones to like, you know, throw, like everything in the face of an entire crime syndicate?
That seems like a bad move.
And then the immediate repercussions is maybe the entire, if not maybe save two people who might have gotten out, Tuscan Village is wiped out.
And that is directly from this thing that Boba did.
And to do something so similar again, like, isn't the point of a show with flashbacks in present date to show us lessons learned from the past?
So for Boba to do the exact same thing again, even though he is on the right side of justice in both of those instances, I'm like, what's going to happen?
you know, Lourth Appeal, you don't hire someone like Stephen Rue, I mean, you might in Star Wars because they do hire these great comedians to just like come and go.
But I don't think this is the last we've seen of Lourth Appeal, and it just doesn't seem like a good move from Boba.
Can I ask you a quick Stephen Rout aside?
Sure.
I asked Stephen Jomey this before we started recording.
What is the role you most identify with prolific character actor, Stephen Rute?
I mean, I think the answer has to be office space.
Like, Milton is going to be the first thing I think of.
But I will say that I could easily give you 15 different answers.
And most recently, the work of Monroe Fuchs on Barry is a personal favorite, very special to me.
I love that show.
And he is just sensational on it.
What about you?
Jimmy brought up Barry.
And we were also talking about O Brother Where Art Thou, a great.
work on a brother. For me, it is iconic business leader Jimmy James on news radio. And I just
would not ever want to mess with Jimmy James, which is why I'm scared of Boba trying to mess with
Lord of Appeal here. He who controls the water controls the world. And I'm a little,
I'm a little worried about it. So I think, Joe, we have to say, Steve's going to, Steve's going to
kill us, tangents within tangents here. But Stephen Ruer was on justified and there was some justified news
today.
You know what else
I'm justified?
Timothy Olivant,
aka Cobbant himself.
Yeah.
What a day.
What a day.
We're talking about
Cobbant and a bit.
Justified fans.
My goodness.
Well,
we're obviously going to talk
more about everything
that we saw with the,
with the Tuskins
later in today's pod.
But with worth appeal.
And with this larger
question of Boba's
style and approach
and tax.
tactics and strategy. I do want to actually talk about the intro sequence with Lortha appeal a little bit more,
but I want to note that in this opening stretch of the throne room, one of the things that 8D8 actually
says is everyone is waiting to see what kind of leader you are. So I do like the fact that the
show is also asking this question and drawing attention to the fact that this is on people's minds.
It would not work at all. I don't think if that wasn't happening, it is a necessary thing to
acknowledge because it is so, it is, it is, it is so present through the timelines and the decisions
that Boba is making. The audience is waiting to see what kind of leader Boba is. I think that one of
the questions that we're going to have to continue to ask you, I mean, you've been asking this
since the very first episode in terms of looking ahead and theorizing, speculating about whether a
fenik heel turn could come. I'm starting to get increasingly interested in whether Fenwick is asking that
question or how consciously she is assessing that question about what kind of leader Boba is.
Because our guy has no idea what's going on, none. And I say this would love and respect for my dude
who has no idea what's happening in the city that he claims to lead and also got absolutely
annihilated in his wet underwear in front of his new hires. Very tough stretch for our guy Boba Fett.
Incredibly rough stuff for our guy Boba Fett. Not in the wet underwear.
True, Darth Vader, enough for our guy Boba Fett.
Boba fan right there.
But not in the wet boxer, please.
Just like a few of the other things that we could run down in terms of people trying to
like manipulate or play Boba.
And there are a lot of them we can just keep kind of jumping across timelines here.
And I think we must talk for a moment about the I'm insulted on your behalf tactic.
Which is instantly iconic, I think.
But when Finnic and Boba have these differing views, which again, we saw initially in that
rule with respect.
with fear, that dichotomy, right, in the first chapter.
There are a couple more moments in this episode.
When they're having the feast, she says, have some food.
And he says, I have to send a message.
You already did.
Just their inherent approach and view on this is a little bit out of sync.
Now, that can be a good thing, right?
You don't just want group think on your counsel.
Like, you need people pushing you and challenging you.
That's great.
But again, when he lets Cresanton go and she says,
you sure that was a good idea?
It's like echoing exactly that Gimori in exchange.
She's not, it's not just that she doesn't agree with the calls that she's making.
She's happy to voice that to him, right?
So when Lord Appeal says, ever since Lord Fortuna was perished, the streets have turned to chaos,
Boba replies in what I think is fair to call mortifying fashion, well, this is the first
I'm hearing of it.
First of all, that should not be true.
Second of all,
you definitely shouldn't say that
in front of fucking Lord the Beal
a person you don't know or trust.
Like, don't keep arming your maybe enemies
with ammo.
Yeah.
Now, this idea of chaos
is Lothos' perspective.
And as we see quite clearly
and quite quickly,
he is motivated by his own
kind of noxious goals and ends.
This is a bad person doing bad things.
We shouldn't necessarily trust his read, right?
But it's another reminder
that A, nobody tells Boba anything. And B, Boba hasn't adjusted and started to find ways to ask, right?
So even then when Boba makes his way to the workers district to see our gal Sophie shouts to yellow jackets,
I can't wait to watch the finale this weekend. I'm all caught up through nine. Tangent within a
tangent within a tangent within a tangent. You're welcome, Steve. Drash and Boba have this exchange.
You live in the workers district. You all should be working.
And what does she say?
There is no work, Mighty Dimeo.
Look around you.
Like, they all think he's out of touch and kind of an idiot.
Except.
Except Sophie goes, there is no work, Chim Chim Chiru
and a completely baffling English accent on an American actress.
Oh, my God.
I have accent notes.
Oh, my God.
I have no notes on the accent that you just.
unleashed on us. That was delightful. Can you do the rest of the pod in that voice?
Yeah. That would be wonderful. My friend who's an actual real life living, breathing cockney,
um, once told me that when people try to do a British accent, it always sounds like Dick Van Dyke going,
oh, Merry Poppins, Jim, Chim, Chiru. So I just like to tack Tim, Jim Chiru on the end of any bad British accent I ever do.
I love it. But yeah, I mean, nobody, nobody respects you. That's a true state.
Well, and they're trying to play him.
Like, it's not just, it's not just passive.
It's active, right?
So whether it's what the twins are doing, what they did last episode, the possibility
of a long con they might be running here, whether it was that like quiet but savage, you
haven't heard from our gal car's a flip in chapter two, everything that's happened with the
major dome and the mayor, the pike boss in the flashback or the watermonger here, this, this is,
This is the I am insulted on your behalf bit, which was hysterical, but is clearly like a manipulation tactic, right?
And also a way to actively dunk on Boba as he is making his petition.
He's constantly pointing out that nobody takes Boba seriously.
A streak of insolent youth has been stealing my inventory.
Now, this never happened under the other Dimeos.
And I am insulted on your behalf.
You're bad at your job.
And I am insulted on your behalf.
No one takes you seriously.
And I am insulted on your behalf.
Does Boba see the fact that Lourtha is trying to manipulate him by using his pride and trying to wield it as a weapon, as a tactic?
Does he see this?
Does he recognize that this is what's happening?
I mean, like he quickly go, he quickly is on the side of the street kids, right, when he meets them.
Yes.
And we like that about him, right?
Absolutely.
Yes.
One note, Joe, shut it down.
Don't just say charge less.
Shut it down.
The question is like if Boba was sort of on edge or suspicious of North Appeal from the start
rather than I'll go take care of this thing that you've asked me.
I'll go clean up this mess that you've asked me and clean up.
I didn't get it from Thames performance.
If that's what he was going for, I didn't get that.
And all of it just seemed like really, I don't know, one thing after the other.
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Look, old man.
My name is Boboffet.
We know who you are.
Go back to your palace.
your tongue. I'm the
dime you're a
dear me of this district and I
will bring order.
You're a crime boss.
Just like the rest of them.
Are we going to talk about these street kids right now?
Is that what we're going to do?
Let's head to the workers district. Let's do it.
Take us there. Okay. So, we meet these
kids. Obviously, much has been said about
this. As you
pointed out to me, Pre-Pod, I think
there are some extreme takes
on these kids.
But, you know, they look a little
80s punk
60s mods a lot of people have pointed out
if you've seen the film Quadrophenia
which you should
because a young sting is in it
and that's all I need to say
I think to sell any move me
but Quadrafeity is a great film
and it's like this idea of the mods versus the rockers
the mods being these 60s
biker gang that dressed sharply
had brightly colored bikes
maybe that's why Sophie's doing an accent
maybe that's why their clothes look nice and their bikes look nice
even though they are like, you know, can't afford water.
That was maybe that was true of the mods in the 60s in the UK
that like they might not have money,
but any money they had went into their bikes.
Okay.
Does it look incorrect to my eyeballs?
It does.
Many people, many people said that they,
these speeders wouldn't be out of place on like Corrassant or something like that.
But in a dusty, an intentionally dusty, messy place like tattooing,
And I think especially because Favre and Faloni, when they brought us the Mandalorian, and this exists in the same world as the Mandalorian, right?
All of Star Wars exists in the same world, but this more so than any other property is, like, closely connected.
Their promise was sort of, we're not going to give you that sort of shiny, prequally look.
We're going to give you original trilogy Star Wars.
Things are going to look old and dusty and crusty, and that's what you like.
about Star Wars, and that's what we're going to give you.
So to give us this feels like betrayal is too strong of a word,
but just sort of a massive contradiction of what they were so proud of in the Mandalorian
in capturing that original trilogy aesthetic.
What do you think about this?
I have a few different thoughts.
First of all, I want to shout out everybody who tweeted us mailbag questions
using the term most Vespas,
which is wonderful and I love
and I will be using moving forward.
Thank you, Susie, thank you Jacob.
Thank you everyone.
The Spy Kids reference, Power Rangers reference,
Jomi's got his Power Rangers takes out there.
A lot of different references and nods,
as you already mentioned.
I was catching powerful HP vibes
from the one kid wearing the gray robe lined with what appeared to be orange,
so not quite a corollary to a house color, but then the yellow, the yellow Vespa.
So I got like an overall kind of Hufflepuff vibe.
I did think right away about American graffiti, and I think maybe that's one of the more
charitable and positive reference points that we could note because, of course,
this George Lucas film, it's not just like literally the, the, the,
the colorful cars, but this like, you know, seminal coming of age tale with this like hard rock,
the hot rod kind of sensibility and that George Lucas tie. Here's my feeling broadly. I did not
like, we'll talk about the chase later. I did not like the chase sequence. It did not work for me.
I told you this already. I literally wondered if my, if something was wrong with either my internet
while I was streaming the episode or my television
because it's like looked so slow and glitchy
that I thought it was actually wrong
like with my technology as I was watching
which really took me out of it.
So I did not think that the chase sequence
at the end of the episode was successful.
In terms of the actual look and vibe
of the most VESPA crew,
have a couple different thoughts on it.
not my favorite
aesthetic that I've ever seen.
I'm not, like, offended by its presence.
And I think in general,
the...
I think having strong, passionate opinions about this stuff
is obviously, like, fine.
And actually one of the fun things about
talking about it and breaking it down.
So many things with Star Wars lately
feel like they end up very, very, very quickly
boiling down to, like,
a debate over the soul of Star Wars.
Star Wars. And I find that kind of dismaying. I'll be very honest about that. I agree.
I agree with you. It, to me, more than one thing can be true at once. And we could say,
this isn't like a thing that we're totally loving. This is our favorite thing that we've
ever seen. And it doesn't have to be like an indictment of the entire project or one thing
I do feel strongly about is like more broadly, I'm okay with trying new things. And I like the
ambition and intention of trying new things,
I don't think this new thing worked.
But that doesn't mean I don't want new things
in Star Wars in general.
And I don't want everything to always just feel
like it's rooted so firmly in the original trilogy
because as much as I love the original trilogy,
I want to broaden and widen the galaxy.
So I have a little bit of dissonance
and conflicting feelings on it.
TLDR?
Yeah.
Didn't think this was like a home run?
Not offended by it on like a
a soul deep level. That's my feeling on it. I completely agree. I think, and a lot of people are
pinning this directly on Robert Rodriguez, and I don't think that's fair, even though he directed the
first episode and this episode. I don't, like, so many people make so many decisions on this show.
So it's not like Robert's like, can we have brightly colored shiny vespas? And John Favro was
like napping that day. He didn't slip one. Yeah, he did make spy kids, though. Yeah, he did make
by kids. Actually, the aesthetic
reminds me a lot of Alita Battle Angel, which is
a movie that I didn't really care for, but something
that Robert Rodriguez worked on recently.
But I think between the Vespa Gang and the
and the Nicto game, like the
rockers and the mods,
like that's what we're going for here.
I think
what Pings for me is feeling wrong
is that it feels too close
to something we recognize from our world.
I don't mind different things in the Star Wars.
world, but I feel like it should feel different and alien versus like, oh, there's a biker gang
when we saw the nickname.
We were like, oh, there's Hell's Angels, but come to Tatween.
You know what I mean?
For you, it's like the visual corollary of Han shouting, I'll see you in hell.
Yeah, exactly.
And I want to talk about the characters because I want to care about these characters, love Sophie Thatcher, like on Yellow Jackets.
She's so good on that show.
I was so excited.
She was like the one person we knew was in this show other than the two leads because she was in the trailer.
So we've been excited for her to show up.
We had a lot of theories about it.
This is not, you know, wasn't top of our list, but like excited to see her.
But I just don't feel like I know who these kids are at all in this episode.
And that's okay because it's their introduction.
But like I just, I compare this to chapter six of Mando, which is the prisoner, the prison break.
episode. And I feel that's the one where we first meet Bill Burr's character along with a bunch,
you know, a bunch of other characters. And I feel like I know who all those people are.
All those characters feel distinct and interesting to me in that episode. And if we're going to
introduce this gang of kids and if they're going to be important going forward, I would like to
know them. I feel like I spent more time getting to know a rancor in this episode than I got,
you know, spent with these kids. That part was great. We're going to talk about the rancor. I'm so excited
for you on your behalf.
Thank you.
Obviously.
I love you and I care about you
and I'm so excited for that.
But I'm like, I want to know
these kids.
I want to know her.
The character's name is D rash.
Yes.
We know two of the names.
D rash and Skad.
Great.
Great names, honestly.
I'm, I'm into it.
But I would like to know.
The cybernetic eye is Skad.
I would like to know who they are.
Skad.
D rash and scad.
I would like to know them.
I'd definitely agree with that.
Yes.
I, I, it seems like
they're going to be a big part of the show, given that they're so instantly in the fold that
they're sleeping over. I mean, you know, Boba's sleeping lightly, as he was warned to. And they're
on the scene when BK attacks because they're just hanging around. And also, right, he has no one
else. I mean, when he heads into the workers district in the first place, you know, it's him,
it's Fenwick, and it's the two Gimori and guards. I mean, this is the, this is the contingent.
This is the group. And so he's adding right away pretty key number.
here. And so I think it's reasonable to assume we will learn more about them soon.
Not the most effective intro. I'm intrigued and excited to learn more. I'm holding on to like if we
think back to, now, I want to be clear. I am not saying that these characters are going to turn
into Asoka. That is not what I think, nor what I want to imply. However, I just want to cite a moment
from Star Wars viewing past, which was like the initial response to young Snips, didn't go over well.
right away, right?
And then we need some patience and some time
and we can learn to love characters
and a lot of that is about
how they're deployed inside of the
movie or episode that we're watching, of course.
So I'm curious to see more.
Really excited for Juliette Lewis to play
an older dash in a future
live action.
Let's do it. Let's bring cocaine
to Star Wars.
Spice.
Just spice. Everyone. Yeah, exactly.
Right.
The Spice Fis
snorting spice from the fibers of a carpet.
No problems. No problems.
Genuinely, one of my favorite, like, sequences in recent TV history.
That was incredible.
Can I ask you a cybernetic question?
Oh, please.
Of course.
I lashed so hard.
I aggravated one of my many muscle pulls.
Okay.
Yeah.
So Lortha says,
well, they're half man, half machine.
They modify their body.
with droid parts to make themselves even more deadly.
I beseech you, Lord Fett.
Rid the streets of Mosestpa of the Scourge.
And I will double my tribute to you.
Is Stephen Root here?
Like uncanny.
Uncanny Mallory.
All right.
What's your question?
All right.
So here's my question.
Yeah.
He's saying that to Boba and to Fennick.
Yeah.
Who, of course.
Yes.
Yes.
Exactly.
Pistons in her tummy has the cybernetic enhancement that resulted from the Toro abdomen shot.
And then we see the reveal when she joins the story again in Mando season two.
The innards, we get a little glimpse.
Boba, of course, is directly connected to that plot line.
So I'm curious just like, do you think that matters in terms of what Phoenix read on this guy might be and what dynamic this might be setting up?
And also, is there any chance that Fenwick and the street gang could have any sort of shared tie that will emerge because of these augmentations, which all presumably occurred on Tatouine?
From the same anatomy tinkerer.
Again, that's very elite of battle angel, by the way, all this like modification adding stuff.
And of course, like cybernetics are not new to Star Wars, right?
We have like the kind of standard cybernetic prosthetic and the wake of injury.
Luke's Han, Anna, exactly.
Or like a more extreme version, like a full-on cyborg, a character like General Grievous,
who is augmenting, augmenting, augmenting, right?
That's not what we got with these kids.
General Canooby.
Yeah, no, but like, but I think that maybe the distinction is a life-saving enhancement, right?
The tummy pistons exist so that Fennick-Shank can live versus, like, I just want to float
with a spike on it, which maybe is what's going on with these kids.
So, like, I don't, I think there might be a distinction there, but what is Fennick, how is Fennick taking this?
Yeah, like, what was her read on that kind of?
That is not a critique, but a wish that I have for the show, which is, I just need more.
To be able to know that answer.
Yeah.
And more, like, Mignan is an incredible actress.
We know this from a million things that she's done.
I like the stoicism of Fenwick Shan in general.
I still think we could get more.
And we're going to talk about this a little bit more in theory corner
about when we might and how and stuff like that.
But I would like to see it is my point.
But let's go to the attack that happens when Fenwick and the Gimorians are all snoozing, I guess.
Sleep lightly indeed.
Boba pulled out cruelly from his.
Oh, I guess it wasn't really a piece.
peaceful slumber.
I mean, those were shitty,
shuddy, dark memories.
Yeah.
Cresantin.
Formitable foe.
Boba.
Is this what we wanted, though?
When we met him last week,
well, here's what I'll say.
Yeah.
This is a bigger,
it goes back to what you're saying about,
like, all the wrong moves that Boba's making
and how Fenwick thinks that him letting
Black Cresantin go is a wrong move.
I'm going to pull out a text you might,
have heard of. It's called
the Lord of the Rings.
I'm familiar. And Gannal
says about
Gollum, pity
stayed Bilbo's hand. The pity
of Bilbo may rule the fate of many
yours is not the least. And I think about that
all the time whenever a character like let's
someone go.
You know, so like this idea that
Black Cassington. Do you know what other line I always think of? I always
think of that. This is a great, this is a beautiful
hive mind moment. I always think of that and I always think
of the madness of mercy.
Ned. Yes. Yeah. So, like, I think that BK coming back into the fold because of this act of mercy.
Now, it could be he trotted off into the desert never to return. I think there's a chance
that this is ultimately setting up a partnership. That's what I think. Like, pity stayed bill.
Like, he let BK go because like, oh, well, I'd come back and work for Boba. And so, like, all these
ways in which Boba is showing mercy or kindness or respect to. Yes. To.
To the teens, to BK.
We'll prove to be to his benefit.
To Danny Trejo.
We hope so, right?
Like, we hope that this is all building to a coalition of kindness under the banner of Boba Fed.
It's interesting, too, to think about, like, we keep seeing that flashback of Boba alone on Camino, looking out through the rain-soaked glass at Django, at his father as he's flying away.
and I'm wondering, like, a lot of things about that.
Is that a specific key moment that Django exit,
where he might be heading, what might happen next?
Is it more about the thematic resonance and reminders of these different planes of existence for Boba,
the different parts and times in his life, the ocean world, the desert planet?
But also, I keep thinking, we talked about this a bit last week,
but I just keep thinking about Boba's life as this unaltered clone who is a part of,
of this clone world, but never felt like he was a part of it, and actually actively
rebelled against being a part of it. And how for so many of those clones, us coming to understand
the way that they forge those relationships and friendships with each other was such a meaningful
part of the Clone Wars story. And Boba works to find and build that family in other ways,
you know, whether it's with ORA or Basque or the bounty hunter contingents that he forges.
And those are fraught, fraught ties that often.
often lead him to question the decisions he's made, right? We see some of that earlier in his
clone war's arc in particular. So I like the idea of decisions that other people don't understand
or agree with, whether it's Fennick or anybody else, that stem from his desire to ultimately
forge a connection with somebody else or give somebody a chance that maybe someone else wouldn't
have given them. I love what you're saying. I love the idea of that bearing fruit in a meaningful way.
I wonder how many things it will cost him on the road to that, though.
But I do think that that's part of why I still...
So far an entire Tuscan Village.
Well, hopefully, I don't think it was the entire one.
We'll get into that.
Hopefully not the entire one.
But I think that that's why, even though, like, this was not my favorite episode of the Boba season so far, I think that's why I'm still so intrigued ultimately by what the show might be about.
Because I think that could be a really thematically rich journey.
My theory for why we keep seeing that Camino, I mean, we might get that scene, given all that they can do with de-aging,
etc.
We might get Tem playing a younger Django Fet.
You know, there might be a big moment there using Daniel Logan's face, etc.
The reason that I feel like they keep returning to it is I feel like we're going to get a
flashback of Fenwick and Boba grabbing the ship.
Like we need to know what that ship means to him because we see that he has in a Mandalorian.
He doesn't have it yet.
It's at Jabba's Palace.
And so we're going to presumably get a flashback of.
Phenic and Boba grabbing the ship would be my guess, right? So yes, we're seeing the ship for a
reason, clearly. I'm trying to remember everything we know about the ship's canon. So
in the Clone Wars, we see the ship crash. Asoka slices off a wing or a sing. Piece of work.
Let me tell you something. Piece of fucking work crashes. Okay. Now, this ultimately means
nothing because we know that later in the timeline, much like the Django helmet, the ship is back,
as you noted. But Hondo, one of my favorite, truly one of my favorite Star Wars characters,
Hondo, takes the ship for a bit. Eventually it gets back to Boba. Obviously, Boba has it during the OG
trilogy. So where is it across this part of the timeline post-return of the Jedi? When exactly will he get
it back? Because as you said, we know he has it in Mando. How much of what we see in ensuing flashbacks
will be centered around him pursuing the armor,
leading us perhaps to our guy,
Timmy, Cobb Vant, and tracking the armor there.
How quickly will we get back to the ship?
Will he do with it?
If he has it on Tatween,
will we start heading off world at some point?
I mean, I think that's like,
will we start heading off world?
Will we start going to places other than Tatooine
in either timeline?
You're right.
This is going to be something
that we need to learn probably soon.
Yeah.
I mean, four more episodes to go.
And I think, you know,
a reason to go off world
might be to continue to build the coalition of kindness if he has other allies around that he can draw on.
Like, you know, would we see Mando?
I don't know.
But like there might be other people that he or Phenic could grab to help them in all of this.
But in terms of like all the forces that he's up against, you know, we have questions about the twins.
We have questions about everyone.
Everyone could be lying to him.
And I mentioned this last week that the big part of the godfather is this shell game of who is actually behind everything.
And it's up to Vito or Michael or Sunny Corleone to figure out who is pulling the strings behind all of this.
And everyone is constantly lying and misdirecting and taking credit for things.
And that is exactly what we're seeing play out here is like the twins saying one thing,
saying the territory was promised to another syndicate, we presume the Pikes.
Do we believe this?
I don't know.
You know, I think it's fair to be suspicious of what.
everyone says all the time.
Another suspicion that a bunch of people have, and we want to talk about, is this idea is
like the, you know, why are they giving, why would the twins give Boba anything at all,
let alone a rancor, let alone cherished Robert Rodriguez's character actor Danny Trejo?
I mean, it's a precious gift.
Yes.
It's not given lightly.
So why is he there?
Is he a plant?
Is there a spy in the house of Boba?
Like, we don't know.
But I don't believe anything that there.
the twins are saying.
Yeah.
And I think there are many clues and signs that we shouldn't.
And of course, we should note, Boba doesn't believe what they're saying, right?
Like, he and Phenic have an exchange about how there's no reason to accept at face value
what information they have provided.
So when they say, we are going back to Hutto, we don't want war, that's the brother
and the sister says, bad for business, they said,
basically exactly that in chapter two.
In chapter two, they said bloodshed is bad for business.
This can be dealt with later.
Sleep lightly bounty hunter.
And then after that, bloodshed is bad for business.
We don't want a part of this.
Sent Grasantin to kill Boba.
So we only need to look back one episode ago to see where this exact statement does not
actually mean they're abandoning the quest, right?
And then when they say, here's your prisoner.
I offer him back if you renounce all claims to job his legacy on Tatuina.
they very specifically do not concede to that point. They do not agree to that. They say,
we are leaving and suggests you do the same. That is not agreeing to the term that Boba just said.
Are they playing this long game? I think so. I mean, regrouping, plotting their next move.
Is the rancor, my darling rancor, a long con? It did seem like the rancor imprinted on Boba.
That part seemed genuine. But could this be some sort of trick where they are waiting for
Boa, but to think that he has gained some sort of edge and trust in a meaningful relationship
and then have that, have that fall apart on him.
I'll just say, I thought the rancor sequence was an absolute, absolute delight.
Just a wonderful, wonderful moment in Star Wars history.
I let you know, and it's nice that it informs, you know, molecule in like everything that we
know about what happened to the rancor.
That's right.
happened to the rancor and return of the Jedi. I like to, you know, I have, I do not have your same
like incredible, like incredible passion for all critters great and small in the Star Wars universe,
but this is, this is a great sequence. It was so nice. And it was just like, it was heartbreaking
when Boba asks, you know, why does it just lie there? And Danny Shreyo says, it's depressed.
This beast can feel such things. Rancor are emotionally complex creatures. I really love learning more
about this. And I loved seeing Boba in this element. Like, we get some Easter eggs in this
exchange, which we'll talk about later in the Easter egg section that were fun. But he's like
petting him and the rancourt's purring and he's like talking to him in a baby voice.
It's like, oh, do you like that? Oh. It's a real John Snow pets a dragon moment. Well, and of course
we get the intention to ride, which yeah, of course makes us think of dragon riding. We get some
again, very fun. Death of Mary and Easter eggs.
and connections here and some holiday special ones too.
But I don't trust anything that the twins are up to.
And nor should Boba.
And this will be a test of his instinct, but also hopefully of his ingenuity.
Because finding a way to make sure that that Rancor bond is real and a thing that does
ultimately work for him while also sussing out whatever the twins are trying to work,
that would be the right next step for our guy Boba Fett.
I hope that's what happens.
And I think that Chris Antonin will return and he's, you know, he saved his life.
Boba didn't have to let him go. He did. And teaming up. You know, these twins were like,
sell him back. Sell him back to the former gladiator life, right? He doesn't owe them any loyalty.
He doesn't have any sort of affection for them. So the Trondotion, Wookie history is worth
keeping in mind because if Boba does end up in this three family dynamic, having to go to
war with the
transdotions,
that could be one of the ways
where BK and Boba
form an alliance
because as a wookie,
BK hates the
transdotions.
A lot of questions.
Oh my God.
We already talked
about the street race,
so that was what ended
the episode.
Should we go to the flashback?
Yeah,
I think the less said
about the street race,
the better.
One comment I saw on Reddit
was like,
no more chase scenes in the volume.
And that might be part of it.
You know,
they film a lot of Boba Fed
in what's called the volume, which is
the big innovation of the Mandalorian,
this very pretty small space.
And so if they film this in the volume,
I can understand why it felt maybe a little like
herky jerky.
Why would the train scene, the train heist last week,
have been so, like, crackling and thrilling?
And this has not.
That makes it feel more of like a creative,
deliberate distinction and decision.
Very possible.
We do have to shout out,
I mean, many people have already.
but I just want to say that the BIF reference at the end of the race where the Major Domo gets fruit piled on him as opposed to manure's was a fantastic moment.
But yeah, let's let's let's.
Harrah's favorite fruit.
Shouts to the Rebels hive.
I love it.
Love this.
More pikes show up, but let's go.
Yeah, let's go to the flesh back to let's talk.
Okay.
I need to talk to you about Bantas for a second.
Oh, okay.
Sure.
Yeah.
Let's do it.
Here's a key Star Wars.
bit of information that I didn't know that most people probably know, but I didn't know
just in case other people listening don't know, that in the original trilogy, the way that they
created the Banthas is they put the costume on elephants and had them walk backwards.
And that's what a Bantha is in the original trilogy.
I know.
Doesn't feel super humane.
I love that.
That's something that they did.
The bantas are originally elephants walking backwards with like rugs on them.
I found out that in this show, they built one massive Bantha puppet, and then the rest are like
CG Bantha.
So they've got no elephants are involved in this.
But I thought that was a really interesting bit of trivia that a friend of mine let me know about.
I have a lot of questions, comments, and concerns about the flashback, but I do want to shout out
what I think is one of the most beautiful shots we've ever gotten in a Star Wars show, which is Boba on the Bantha with the binary sunset behind him.
That was gorgeous.
That really was gorgeous.
I thought you were going to say the shot of Boba's big toe sticking straight up into the air during the fight with Equally gorgeous.
Which I know is Steve. Steve, that's your favorite shot in Star Wars history, right? Boba's big toe.
Yeah, that was, we've seen a few screenshots from Steve of the toe.
Of the toe. Steve is hung up on the toe. Steve is really, it was disturbed and distressed by the toe. It was a lot. The toe was a lot. We should say, though,
what you should say.
It is notable in the Boba
Cresanth and Dool
that he's trying to reach for his gadgets
can't get him on,
can't do it in time.
What does he grab?
He grabs the gaffy stick.
And that's what he's able
to finally make a mark with.
So if the kids don't show up,
it's a wrap on Boba.
I mean, he's about to have his spine broken.
Yeah.
I can't remember, yeah, a real Bain moment, right?
I can't remember.
I can't remember where I rest.
This probably read it, but I really liked this idea.
Someone was asking why he has to go in the back to tank so often when we don't, he doesn't need it as much in the flashback, even though he's more freshly out of the Sarlac in the flashback in the flashback.
So why is he constantly in the back to tank?
Is it just a flashback trigger, etc?
Someone said something really interesting about this idea that like he's being poisoned, not literally, but sort of like mentally by trying to put the armor back on.
like putting the armor back on his dad's armor and trying to be this thing that he was before
is like poisoning him and like that he just needs to embrace this like Tuscan identity,
this different person he is with the Tuscan ropes.
Like that's who he really is.
There's no like clear evidence for this.
This is just like a big brain theory of someone's.
But I kind of like that idea that like in trying to be his father, in trying to be, you know, this other thing,
that that's not his identity.
And this whole question of like,
what weapon does he reach for in this moment,
I think maybe underlines that.
But it's important to him to get his father's armor back.
But is that ultimately going to be what he's wearing going forward?
I like, now I'm concerned about the chemical content
of the fresh coat of paints he put on the armor
after taking it back.
Jeez.
But I like the idea ultimately of him wearing the blend.
Him wearing the blend.
Exactly.
And embracing all of these different facets of his identity and all of the different phases of his life.
Okay.
So we've talked about the most of Espa kids as what most people identify as the part of the episode that they didn't like.
Here's the part that I don't like, which is we've praised the show and Mando for spending so much time giving us like this rich, richer look at the Tuscan Raiders and their culture.
and we want to see them as fully formed humans
or fully formed creatures
and all this sort of thing.
I mentioned last week it was a little concerning
that we haven't learned any names
of any of these characters
if we're trying to humanize them
to have them wiped out.
No, definitely.
You and I are on the same page
as are a number of people
that we haven't seen the Tuscan Warriors corpse.
We don't know for sure
that the kid went on the pirate
even though we saw a small.
small stick, but we don't...
I don't think we definitively see the kid's corpse.
He piles up a handful of bodies to burn.
We've seen like 15 or so in other shots.
We can kind of...
Maybe some have escaped.
Maybe they're being held captive.
Like, we don't know.
Yes, I think that those characters will return
and that this definitely is not the end of this tribe.
But that's also really what I hope,
because that would be really awful
if that's what ended up happening.
The decimated events,
village sequence is
classic of like Conan the
Barbarian, it's a classic of Beast Master.
Like this is a thing you come home.
Your village is destroyed.
Luke finding
Owen and Brew.
Absolutely.
This is a staple.
But if our whole drive
is to better understand the Tuskans
to wipe them out just to motivate
Boba is awful.
Terrible.
So there better be.
There better be.
I know that there are other Tuscan drives.
So there better be other
numbers of this tribe out there somewhere.
And I still don't like it, even if, even if there aren't, I'm just not a fan of it.
And it all happened like really quickly.
We have the, and again, it all feels like Boba's fault.
We have the misdirect or the possible direct of the graffiti.
This would work for me because, I mean, when we first saw the NICDO gang in the first episode,
and they stopped in their, like, crime to tag the building.
That felt very awkward to me.
I'm like, why are we pausing for graffiti?
This is very strange.
Joanna.
And so, yeah, what?
Because we paused.
Yeah.
And because of the camera then in Chapter 2 lingers on the symbol on the bikes,
let me tell you what we did not need.
A flashback inside of the flashback to the tags.
We remember.
We remember.
They got it.
Who do you think really did this?
Do you think it was the Nicto Striders on their own to get?
at backup oba for attacking them, taking the bikes?
Do you think it was the Pikes using the NICDOS as cover
because they want revenge from the train heist?
Do you think it was the Pikes and the NICDOS
who, again, have this alliance already,
this working relationship already
because of, I shouldn't say alliance,
but a working relationship already
because of the protection money
teaming up to take him out.
Does the answer to that question matter, though,
if this is just such a dissatisfying storytelling move?
I think it's the Pikes doing a let them fight sort of move.
You know, me pitting,
that's very godfather.
Pit two families, pit two entities against each other.
Much like the twins and the huts might be doing in the present timeline, right?
Well, we're going to step back and let you all take each other out.
Then we'll come back.
See how it's going.
Something we really, like, I don't want to speak for you.
Something I really loved in episode two was how much time we got in the flashback.
And something I think Tom Hora Morrison is so good at is a lot of this wordless acting.
I think he's very good at it.
And something that I thought was really interesting as I read an interview this week
where he wanted Boba to have fewer lines.
And in fact, he tried to get one of the story editors on set to cut his lines.
And John Favro kept interceding and saying,
no, we're going to keep the lines I wrote for you in the script.
But that he wanted Bobo to be a more laconic character,
as he's been in the original trilogy, et cetera.
And I do think that the performance is better.
And I'm not saying it's a bad performance when he has more dialogue in the present.
but I think the performance is better in the flashbacks
and that doesn't make him not a great actor.
I just think he excels at this other thing
in a way that not every actor could.
So I'm kind of on his team
that I think Boba should have fewer lines.
It was like,
I think we're on the same page
about feeling kind of shocked
and really dismayed that this happened to the Tuskins
at all, let alone that kind of suddenly
it was something just really jarring about it.
but it was, I will say, like quite sad, of course, and affecting to watch Boba walk through
this scene and the look on the look on his face as the fires glinting in his eyes.
And you can see the emotion in his eyes.
I mean, that was, that was really sad to watch.
I will, we'll hit the mailbag later.
But Jomey, do you want to, you want to hop on for a second and read our actually our first
mailbag question?
Because this is very contextual relevant to what we're talking about.
Maybe we should just hit this here.
Love getting called in.
Off the bench, you know.
I was sitting there, you know, you know, when you're a bench warmer, you know, when you're a bench warmer, you know, and you don't expect to get called on.
Coach is like, hey, hey, we need you.
Like, it's huge.
We called you up to the big show.
Is that sports lingo now?
Did I do it?
That was it.
That was it.
Nailed it.
All right.
Oh, my God.
Incredible.
Special bailbag question from Tinder.
The fate of the Tuskins.
was something we saw coming, but hoped it wasn't.
Does this extermination seem as necessary to you as it does for me?
He's got his dad dying.
He's got the Sarlack Pit rebirth.
Did we need to see this third layer of trauma?
These Tuskans can't catch a break.
Yeah, I think so unnecessary, I think is sort of what Tinda is saying here,
that this, like, we didn't need this, we didn't need this trauma motivator for Boba.
I agree.
Mostly I just don't like that the Tuscan's are gone.
And hopefully they're not.
Yes.
But I think this is a, this is a really good question because I feel strongly that we will see members of this Tuscan tribe again.
I don't think, though, that if that's the case and even if it's the case as soon as next episode, that it diminishes this point.
Right.
because still, ultimately, this will be something
that is fueling Boba.
And for two reasons, one,
the kind of storytelling compulsion,
this is not specific to the show,
so it's not specific to Star Wars,
is something we talk about all the time
across the stories that we cover.
This compulsion to constantly have these characters
overcome some sort of trauma
is, of course, on the one hand,
in some ways innate to the storytelling tradition.
And in other hands,
we do hit these moments
It's like, do we need more of this to continue this character's journey?
Aren't we at a different phase of the character's journey now?
And I think even more germainly, one of the things that was so compelling about this show to this point was that we were learning so much more about the Tuskins and really fleshing out their characters, their traditions, their culture, their way of life.
And so to go from that to this would really be a bummer.
I hope we learn quickly.
I think I would,
I would,
I still feel sad
that this happened at all,
but I hope we learn quickly
that Boba is back
with the other members
of this tribe
who have become quickly
this found family.
This is,
this is really a bummer.
And on that cheerful note,
Easter eggs?
Go ahead.
Yeah.
Okay, let me say a phrase to you.
Witches of Dathamere.
Joe, I jumped,
I jumped off my couch.
As,
as,
as said by Danny Trejo,
talking about
and I love that we're just calling him
Danny Trejo
you know, what else?
Rancourt trainer.
It's Danny Trejo.
It's Danny freaking Trejo.
It's Machete himself.
But like,
um,
he was talking about the Witches of Dathamere writing
rancors and like we're probably going to see
Boba write a record.
That feels like something we probably
probably won't accept anything other than that now that it's
been introduced as a possibility.
So we fucking better.
I'm going to shout this out.
A friend of the pot,
Eric Voss.
his big theory is that we're going to see the Witches of Dathimir and the Acolyte series
is coming up. And I love that as like that feels very like a seed planted to be paid off later,
not in this series necessarily, but in the future. I love that. The, that's a, that's a great call
from Eric. The Witches of Dathimir shout out was so energizing. I can't like barely convey why,
even though literally the job is to convey why things are interesting here on this very podcast.
Can't really do it. But the 30 second.
exempt is, I mean, first of all, which is the Dathmere, that specific language choice and phrasing.
Right.
That calls back to like Legends canon, right?
Right.
Inside of current canon, I mean, I'm sorry, there aren't too many things you can say to get me more excited than making me think of the Knight Sisters or the Knight Brothers.
All of the Dathamere canon, particularly in Clomor's.
This podcast is almost called the Night Sisters.
As we did.
Maybe we should consider it again.
Who knows?
But working title.
Clone Wars.
There's some fascinating comics canon around the magic wielders.
Mother, Talzin, Mall's mother.
A fascinating character.
Of course, thinking of the Night Series,
the Nice Sisters thinking of Dathir makes us think of Argyll, Assange, Ventris.
I mean, we're all over the timeline with this stuff,
but this was just an absolute delight.
And it was not the only Easter egg we got in that.
that Rancor training sequence
because we got the line
about how Boba's
ridden larger creatures.
Holiday special, Joe.
I love a holiday special joke.
Even I got that one.
Because I watched
Under the Helmet documentary
on Disney Plus.
I'm like, I get this.
I understood that reference.
Leo pointing at the screen GIF.
There were a lot of good Easterings
on this episode.
Another favorite of mine
is
the sail barge disaster.
language. I think that's fantastic. The history is written by the victors, but sometimes the losers
as well. It's called the sailbar's disaster rather than, you know, the heroic rescue of Luke and
Han and Leah. So part of what was so rich about that, though, not only is 88 speaking from the
perspective of, you know, someone inside of Joppa's Palace, as you're noting, he's saying this to
Boba. Like, that's where Boa is. Hey, guys, remember when you flew into a,
with this sail barge and that just fell into the sarlac.
Pretty seminal moment in our Guy Boba Fett's life here.
So this was a member.
This was a big one.
I also loved, God, there were, oh, there were so many.
We see the Storm Trooper helmets on the spikes, which is, of course, that same bundle
of Stormtrooper helmet collections that we see five years later in the Mandalorian.
And behind those helmets, we see Pelly and the pitroids walking by.
So another Mando connection there in that moment, that was really, really fun.
The way that that happened, they didn't even need to get Amy Sideris.
They could have just had like a, you know, a production assistant in the wig and the costume
walk by.
But I like to think that Amy Sideris was filming Mando season three.
And they're like, can you just do one shot where you're walking quickly?
We're pasted into the background of this other show.
I hope so.
That's incredible.
How about some of the droid Easter eggs?
I mean, there were so many.
Obviously, like, spider droid is the best one.
Brains and jars.
Uh, maybe.
I didn't, I, okay, I just have a question about this.
Like, we sit at the window, the wind in the face that she keeps in a jaw by the door.
Wow.
Who is it for?
When you, I forget what you said, like, intention to ride is what you said earlier.
And I almost started singing ticket to ride.
So just so you know we're on the same brain in a jar level, this, this episode.
But I think that, um, the spider droid, the way it was shot.
an intentional, like, stop motion, herky jerky kind of thing.
I loved it.
Very freaky.
Which reminds me of, like, the monster in the first episode, and it feels like this intent
of, like, let's give Robert Rodriguez credit here since he's the director of both
those episodes to give us a sort of like old-timey effects thing.
For me, it seems a little weird to blend that with, like, effects that are meant to look
more current like the huts or something like that.
Yeah, that, like, that, like, blend of, like, sometimes we're going to be.
going to do herky jerky old school effects and sometimes we're going to do new effects.
Then I'm like, why does a spider look like this?
That being said, brain a jar spider is very creepy.
I think maybe it didn't throw me off the distinction.
That's, it's an astute thing to know.
Maybe it didn't throw me off because it felt so isolated and almost like this contained
Easter egg in a vacuum.
Like if it had been kind of a more direct adjacency with something else, maybe I would have
felt that more.
But it is a good point.
Can we just say like the, the more amongst, this is like one of the freakiest things
in Star Wars canon.
This religious sect, this order
that is so intent
on separating
from physical sensation
and really just it's all about the mind, Joe.
It's all about the mind
to the point where we're going to take out
our brains and put them in jars
and let spider droids carry them around.
Honestly,
John's Palace for a monastery.
Is that where this pandemic is heading?
We're all just going to be brains in a jar eventually.
This is really grim.
Let's, a lot of droid cameoes in this episode.
So many droids in the chase.
We passed so many different.
I always love to see a mouse droid.
Always love to see a mouse droid.
The like rickshaw droid.
All of that stuff.
So that guy was like the RIC.
It's like I'm going to just scoot forward so that you hit my passengers and I'm safe.
I'm fine.
Really, it's just self-preservation at the forefront there.
A lot of food Easter eggs.
We see a nuna and Spachka at the feast.
When Boba says to what his instruction for feeding, the beautiful
little Bubba, the Rancourt, is a Ronto carcass from the larder.
Ronto, the creature famously added to the edited version of Newhouse.
Not my fave.
It looks like a, looks like a Bronto.
The, uh, all the fruit, all the fruit, piling up on the major domo, the miller rooms.
I mean, this back of what we were saying last week about how, like, they obviously watched
every scrap of footage of Tatumina and we're like, can we fit every single creature we've
ever seen in the corner of a frame into the.
And they're about in a thousand so far.
So I challenge listeners if you want to rewatch Return of the Jedi or a New Hope.
And like shout out some other critters that we haven't seen yet.
Who might we see in a future episode of Bovas?
A return of the wart this week.
And a return sadly of the sweat rag.
It's a question wrapped inside an enigma.
I would like to see it resolved.
Speaking of questions and enigmas, should we bring on our expert to talk to us about the
concept of an Easter egg?
This is your favorite one.
Is it? Ralph McCory?
Yeah.
They run us through it.
Oh, so the, you know how in old-timey street races, there would always be two people with like a paint of glass walking across that someone would crash through.
That was like an old-timey looney tunes-esque thing.
Instead of we get two guys with a portrait of Jabba in his palace.
And this is repurposed Ralph McCuary art again.
We got a Ralph McCuery art reference last week.
hyper-colorized version of his concept art of Jabba's Palace.
They removed Luke.
They erased Luke Skywalker.
They erased Luke Skywalker from the art.
Unbelievable.
This is not the Jedi you're looking for.
He's just mind-wiped from there.
So there you go.
Amazing.
I think Boba's still in it, though.
So that's fun.
Anyway, yeah, the art is great.
Incredible. Okay. Yeah, that was a fun Easter egg episode. It really was. All right. Ben time. Ben time.
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The Kenton Striders have already collected protection money for the same territory you lay
claim to. You don't have to pay that speed of bike gang. We far outnumber them.
The sands have belonged to the Tuscan since the oceans dried.
All right.
It's time for all credit to Joe for the name of this week's segment.
Pikes on Bikes with Ben Lindbergh.
We're here to talk about the Pikes.
We're here to talk about the Pikes Syndicate.
We got Pikes in both timelines in this episode.
And so it is time to discuss the Pike canon, the history across Star Wars.
We're going to speculate for a hot second or two about their new.
sigil and theorize about whether we think they're really going to end up being the big
bads of this season. So Ben, as our Pike Syndicate expert, walk us through some of the canon.
Happy to. I feel like last week's lore segment is a pretty tough act to follow here.
Where can you go but down from a giant wookie with brass knuckles? I can't top that.
Well, they electrified those knuckles this week. So we always build.
But I'll do my best here. I will try to make the pikes more compelling than I think
Book of Boba has so far. So I praised Fabro last week for the introduction of Crescent,
and because it was cool for comics fans, but also accessible for everyone else. You didn't
really need to know anything except that this was a scary wookie, whereas the Pikes require more
context. And so far, the series has only just started to supply it. They're not even named
until episode three. And even then, there's not a ton of info, but that's what I'm here for. So
some behind the scenes background about the Pikes, they were originally designed to be part of
Star Wars 1313, which is sort of the one that got away among fans of Star Wars video games.
It was going to be about the underworld. It was supposed to star Boba Fett, but tragically,
LucasArts canceled it. So in a way, Book of Boba is giving us a TV version of what that game
could have looked like, but on Tatween instead of Coruscant. So instead of debuting in 133,
1313, the Pikes first showed up on the fifth season of the Clone Wars.
They have also prominently appeared in books and comics, the bad batch, and of course, Solo, which was their live action debut.
Hashtag make Solo 2 happen.
Please do.
I think that chip has sailed, but you know what?
Maybe Bookaboba is Solo, too.
We will get to that.
Your spiciest take.
Solo's great.
I don't know what people are missing something.
Solo is phenomenal.
Side note.
Anyway, the Pikes appearance.
can be kind of confusing, I think.
Even if you have seen them in other iterations,
you might not have recognized them
because they're a lot taller
and they have smaller and less fishy heads
in the animated series,
which probably would have been tough
to translate to live action.
So I understand that.
And even in live action,
they've had different looks.
In Solo, we only see them wearing breathing masks
because the atmosphere on Kessel is toxic to them.
And even those masks are different
from the ones that they sometimes wear in Bukuboba.
but it's still the same pikes.
So I don't know for a fact that their name is a pun on pikes, as in the species of fish,
but they do look like fish, and George Lucas did develop them.
So I would not put it past them.
Not going to give George the benefit of doubt on name puns in Star Wars.
Yeah, we've got clattos and nictos running around here.
Yeah, that's a whole episode.
So the pike representative on Tatween that Boba goes to see,
is also wearing a different crest than the established one.
Yes.
And it looks a little like a death star, like a fractured death star coming apart in the middle.
I'm not sure why that would be or what it signifies, if anything, because...
I'm going to hit you with my theory in real time, Ben.
You have a theory?
It's not a very good one.
Okay.
Joanna and I have been talking a lot about Kira.
I can't shake it.
And so I'm trying to think of what the tie and what the eventual introduction could be.
Now, of course, we see the fractured Death Star-esque sigil in the flashback, in the post-return of the Jedi timeline, not in the current timeline.
But I wonder if that actually adds some credence to it, because of course, right on the heels of the fall of the empire, what if the Pike syndicate is making a move?
Oh, the Death Star, palpi, fuck that guy.
They're out in the mix.
It's our time.
making our move, okay, and our sigil is a reminder of how somebody else failed and where we can thrive.
What did Kira, what was Kira was like, Palpatine, Vader, I'm going to kill those guys because that's what Moll
wanted me to do, right?
So what if-
Kira wants to take down the empire?
Yes, what if Kira is connected to the plikes in some sort of desire to come in and fill the power vacuum?
Power vacuums and power voids are definitely part of the theme at the center of Boba and Mando alike, right?
And so I think this would actually track pretty cleanly.
What do you think?
Yeah, I can see it.
Yeah, I'm going to get to Kira, but I think you may be onto something there.
I don't know that we've seen them affiliated with Kira in quite that way, but it could be heading there.
Can I ask a follow-up question?
And I want to hear everything you have to say, so I'm not trying to interrupt your flow.
But how did, you know the answer to this.
How did Tatouin become a desert planet?
We don't exactly know.
Global warming, possibly.
I don't know exactly how it happened.
It's something that's been alluded to in the past, in legends, and in some canon sources.
And of course, it's cut up a couple times in Book of Oblo so far.
And each time whoever's saying it kind of gets cut off, Stephen Root was about to tell us how it happened.
But we didn't get the full story.
Is the attack?
That's legends, right?
There's nothing in current canon about an attack changing the topography.
But that is something in legends, right?
Yes.
Can I quickly float a pike theory to you that we have been talking about on this episode
that my friend, another bet, floated to me, which is the idea that like since Tatooine once was an aquatic planet,
were the Pikes ever original residence of Tatouine when it was an aquatic planet?
And or do the Tuskans actually look the same as the Pikes underneath their mask?
And if we don't know what exactly happened in the desert to make this planet a desert planet,
I know it predates the Death Star, the desert planet of Tatween, obviously.
But like, is there sigil somehow representative of like what happened to the planet and why they left?
Because I love this idea of the Pikes and the Tuscans originally being the same and one half stayed and one half left.
This is a wild theory with no hardcore basis in reality.
But it's just something that makes the Pikes a little more interesting to me than they are so far.
Maybe they were just misinformed. We were told this was a watery planet. We show up. It's all desert. We've got some out-of-date info here. I like the idea. I like also Mal's theory about the Death Star and the Kira connection and maybe redesigning the insignia to dance on Palpatine's temporary grace.
Arjuna's not here with us today, but we just have to share on his behalf that he would say here without question, this is just to sell new merch with a new look.
So just to sell more toys.
I have to throw that out there is the theory that'll probably end up being correct.
It's about the merge.
Do you think the pike plushies, are they flying off the shelves, do you think?
Never rolling out.
Maybe the bath toys.
You know what I mean?
So more backgrounds on the pikes here.
They hail from the home world of Obadiah, right?
Obadiah.
Joanne and I are calling it Obadiya stain to connect to marble.
Well, that's the third Beatles reference.
Right.
that we made on this podcast.
I'm all in favor of those.
Obadiah is close to Kessel, and the Pike's main claim to criminal fame is that they largely control the spice trade.
That is their thing.
As we learned in episode two, they are running some spice.
So because they came to control Kessel in its notorious spice mines during the Clone Wars, they kind of have a corner on that market and really did even before that.
And as we all know, he controls the spice controls the universe.
Not quite in this case, but they have been a powerful syndicate.
So the Pikes were way back when were the leaders of the Spice Cartel that supplied Spice to Corrassant,
and they hire smugglers and freighters to purify it and distribute it around the galaxy,
although in episode two, they're evidently taking a more direct role in that trade on Tatouin.
And almost 30 years before the Book of Boba, they allied with Darth Maul, joined his shadow collective of criminal syndicate.
along with Black Sun.
They helped Mal and Black Sun and the Mandalorian Death Watch try to force the huts to join
the Shadow Collective 2.
And when the huts fled to Jabba's Palace.
Don't forget.
Yeah.
Yes.
The huts flee to Jabba's Palace, the future Boba's Palace.
And the Pike successfully attacked them there.
So they are proven performers on Tatween.
They've been there before and they have warred with the huts at times.
Then they staged a fake attack on Mandelor.
That was what allowed the Death Watch to come in and supposedly save the planet and take control.
They've also had some dealing with the Sith and the Jedi.
They killed the Jedi master Sipho Diaz, the one who commissioned the clone army.
They did that for Count Duku, but then they fought with the Jedi against Duku later.
So they have been on all sides of every conflict at some point.
They had some beef with Black Sun, which had wanted to merge with them.
Then both they and Black Sun left and then rejoin the Shadow Collective.
it's a tangled web that they have weaved here.
Real wishy-washy, fishy folk is what you're saying.
Yes.
I am saying exactly that.
So we're asking, you know, who are they aligned with?
It's like it doesn't matter.
They're just going to...
Anyway, the way it was.
Everyone.
Anyway, the current flows.
Yes.
When are you asking about is the answer?
Because they have allied with everyone and ward with everyone at some point,
including Asoka and the Bad Batch, they had some run-ins with them.
In Solo, of course, we see them go up.
up against Han and Chui and Lando and Kira.
And the legend, Tobias Beckett, has Beckett's, the least Star Wars name that has ever been
Star Wars, probably.
But Beckett's gang is trying to steal that starship fuel called Coaxium, which is also mined on
Kessel, to pay their debt to Crimson Dawn.
And as you recall, they have to make that kind of a covert mission because Crimson
Don doesn't want to openly antagonize the Pikes, because at that time, they are loosely allied.
they're part of the five syndicates, right?
So one interesting little tidbit is that in the comics that take place after the Empire Strikes
Back, Kira and Crimson Don steal carbonite frozen Han from Boba Fett and auction him off,
which is kind of cold of Kira.
This is her ex-boyfriend we're talking about.
I love that.
I love it.
She cares about the cause more than Han at that point.
The Pikes bid on Carbonite Han, but Jabba bids more.
and then the empire shows up and crashes the party.
And that's really the last that's known of the Pikes before Book of Boba Fett.
Not much is known of what becomes of them after.
We know that they have their own pike starships.
Evidently, they're flying commercial to Tatween, which could be to try to take Boba by surprise.
But I imagine there is more to come here, as you were alluding to there.
And I'm not someone who needs every single Star Wars story to be about the fate of the galaxy
or to have someone like Luke Skywalker show up to save the day, it's okay to have a smaller scale
standalone Star Wars story.
I don't know if Lucasfilm thinks it's okay.
But if the Pike Syndicate is the big bad of Bukubo, it would be a bit of a wet town
for me, I think for most people.
So when I was on a few weeks ago to suggest things to watch to prep for Bukubo, I suggested
solo.
And I watched it.
I stand by that.
Because you said so.
And you loved it because it's a wonderful movie that deserves.
a sequel. And at that time, I said, Kira was a good crossover candidate, right? And that still
seems like the likeliest solution to me. Because here's the thing, it's, I hope it happens soon.
Because I don't know how much longer a leash everyone is going to give Book of Popa, but here's the
thing. Back in 2019, there was a solo two hashtag campaign, which now probably started.
I remember well.
And John Kasden, who co-wrote solo with his dad, tweeted in response to that sequel hashtag campaign,
that there was a war story yet to be told involving the huts, the pikes, and Crimson Don.
He had the three insignia there.
And it's possible that Bukuba is using some material that was meant for Solo, too.
We already have the huts and the pikes.
So now we just need Crimson Don.
And we know from the comics that Kira took control of.
of Crimson Dawn after Darth Mall died.
Yes.
Pretty much all of the old criminal syndicates are out of power by the time the sequel trilogy rolls around.
And we don't know exactly how that happens.
So maybe Boba plays some part in that.
He has the spy kids on his side now.
It could be a powerful ally if they could be turned, which they were in a couple minutes.
The, um, and Lucas Holmes done as before has recycled, uh, material that was meant.
Like, I'm pretty sure that plots from the Maniloreum.
are from the original concept
for the Boba Fett film that they were going to make.
So, like, they've done this before
where they've been like,
well, we went to all this trouble to map out solo two
that we're never going to make
because that movie wasn't very good,
despite very smart people like Mallory
and Ben Lindbergh liking it.
So it's not anyone's fault.
It's just you can't recapture Harrison Ford.
You can't.
It's not Alden-Haron-Rick.
Would that it were so simple,
but it's not Alden's fault.
I just need to say that because you guys are, I speak for the people when I say solo two.
No, thank you.
Oh, man. Tough crowd. Tough crowd, Ben.
Anyway.
Tough crowd.
But Kira, yes.
Kira yes.
So Kira and Krimps and Don, maybe they come in to contest the Pikes claim.
Right.
I mean, that's the question.
And are they on the other side?
Is it a tandem deal?
Is she in both?
Do we get Amelia with like a little bit of gray in her hair?
and a little bit at that.
Yeah, exactly.
Right, right.
I mean, bloodshed is bad for business, right, as we've heard.
But you could get a three-way war between syndicates with boba in the middle of it.
And for what it's worth, Amelia Clark seems pretty invested in Kira's story.
She apparently wrote her own version of what she thought would happen to her next,
which I don't think is considered canon, but she did.
And she was excited that the character showed up in the comics.
And obviously, she's still in the Disney orbit with secret invasions.
So as Joe is just saying, it's been almost 20 years in the Star Wars timeline since solo.
So we'd need some Station 11 style wigwork, presumably, to age her up a little bit.
That's a real Joe sentence right there.
Station 11 wigwork.
Those are all of Joanna's favorite things.
Yeah.
I feel like she would get the Caitlin Fitzgerald treatment, which is like barely, barely different.
Yeah, yeah.
She looks fantastic.
So last clue, if you listen to Ludwig's.
Main Book of Boba themes all the way to the end.
Yeah.
It seems to pretty clearly incorporate the Crimson Don theme from Solo.
Can't imagine that's a complete coincidence.
Definitely not.
We've been on Kira Watch.
And honestly, thanks to you.
You were the one who put me on Kira Watch in the first place.
It's why I rewatch Solo.
And we are into it.
It is our Mephisto of this series.
Oh, boy.
She's not here.
This one will actually happen, I think, probably.
Jomey, there was a Mephisto mention.
A lips season from Jomey in the chat.
I'm a thought leader, I'm a trendsetter,
I'm a tastemaker when it comes to Cura.
And solo too.
All right, Ben.
A delight as always.
And for me.
Thank you.
Rancor are emotionally complex creatures.
Why does it wear blinders?
This one is the calf.
It was bred from champions for fighting.
I saved this one for myself to train.
It imprints on the first human it sees.
Now that we arrived, I will begin his training.
All right, this is not a spoiler warning,
because we don't know anything for certain that's happening.
But the Reddit detectives have been quickly putting together clues to figure out
which directors remaining that we do know are directing episodes
and which episodes they're directing.
And I think it's a fun game to guess what those episodes,
episodes might be about based on which directors we have.
Okay.
Intriguing.
Yeah.
Okay.
So Dave Faloni is the only co-write.
John Febvre was the creditor, credited screenwriter on all seven episodes, and only one
co-writing credit goes to Dave Faluny for episode six.
Faloni often directs the episodes that he co-writes.
So we can guess that episode six, which be the penultimate episode, would be a
Faloni episode.
Okay.
Exciting.
Tamara Morrison has teased colorful individuals in the series.
He might be talking about the Vespa kids who are technically colorful because of their bikes.
Or is he talking about your favorite blue character, Cad Bain?
I mean, I would lose my mind.
I would be so excited.
Do you feel like if Faloni were to direct an episode, he would want to direct the Cad Bain episode.
Or is there another character that you think Falunic?
Because Faluny usually wants to have a hand in on something from Clone Wars or rebels.
Yeah.
I mean, I think there are any number of possibilities, again, given the connection to the Mandalorian timeline.
Could we get some, you know, something in the Asoka or Bocatan, like, realm that we already got a little taste of in Mando?
Could we get any of that action or any of those connections here?
I won't even allow myself to consider.
the possibility that we could see Grogu because then it's the only thing I'll be able to think about.
But if there's some, I think there are any number of possibilities from Clone Wars, Rebels,
or the Mandalorian, honestly, and the parts of the Mandalorian that Faloni is involved with that
could bear fruit here.
The Cadd Bain possibility is thrilling and I think really logical because of Bain's direct
ties in the canon, obviously to Boba, to bounty hunters.
They have direct connections and interactions.
Boba's like one of the moments that I really like to honestly like make
fun of with Boba is that he's sort of like Cadbane's lackey in prison and just like
is the part of his ploys and all of his cons but but Caddbane also has a thrilling
sequence with Fenwick in the Bad Batch where she bests him in the pursuit of Omega and of course
Omega is Boba's sister because they are both Django's clones so Cad fits together with
all of these characters, and that would be incredible.
How to bring Cadbane to action to life in live action is a fascinating thing to think about
because he's a character who just like hums at this perfect frequency in animation,
but I would love to see it.
I'm always delighted to see Cadbane.
He's such a badass.
This would thrill me.
All right.
Episode five is the Bryce Dallas Howard episode.
Bryce, we know from her work on The Mandalorian.
Bryce is often brought in for like really emotional episodes.
I find she is like considered sort of one of the more sensitive and like actor-focused emotional.
So you wouldn't expect a huge action episode from her necessarily.
You would expect something that would tug at the heartstring.
She also tends to be brought in for some of the female centric storylines as well.
Ming now one has promised that Fenwick Shan is getting like we're going to get some sort of
fenic-centric episode, at least to find out more about who she is, where she is from,
like, why she ticks.
Would this be a fenic episode or another possibility?
Episode four is directed by Kevin, and please forgive me if I mispronounced his last name.
Tantran, who is related to, it's Marissa Tantran, right, who did Agents of Shield.
I think that's her brother.
He directed a bunch of Agents of Shield episodes.
And Sto mentions and Agents of Shields mentions.
So real emotional swing here for Jomey in the last few minutes of the pod.
Including some of the iconic Melinda May episodes, that's Mignowen's character from Agents of Shield.
So would they bring Kevin in because he's worked with her before to direct a Fenic-centric episode?
That would be as early as next week.
So when we get a Phenic episode next week, is that immediately what Boba does after
the Tuskins are decimated,
that seems like a contraction of the timeline.
Or do we get in episode five?
What else will we want to see Bryce do?
I think this is fun.
This is fun for me to think about.
I don't know.
Do you have any thoughts or feelings about it?
I'm intrigued.
So many possibilities.
I would love a Phenic episode sooner rather than later,
though now, given everything we discussed earlier
about what happened with the Tuskins,
I don't want to have to wait too long for clarity there.
That would have a bum me out.
But there's so.
so much more to learn about Fennick, as you said, across the timeline. I mean, we have Fennick
in the Mandalorian, we have Fennick here, we have Fennick in the Bad Batch, and that spans, you know,
nearly three decades in total, but there are chasms of open cannon timeline there to fill in and
start filling in. I think that if we are in any way heading, I don't know actually still
where I land on the heel turn theorizing a possibility, but if we are heading there, we must
get more time with Fennick soon in order for that to really, really, really land.
So the idea of either a fully like focused Fennick episode in four or five or just much more of Fennick in those episodes is really cool.
I'm into it.
I want to throw out a Fennick question to you that I don't personally believe or want it to be true.
But I'm curious if you think there's any possibility that this could be true.
Do you think that Fennick could be working for the Huts still?
Is there any chance that Fennick is involved in a Lankan?
Because we know that Fennick used to work for the huts, but of course so did Boba.
So that doesn't have to mean anything, right?
But if we think back to the Mando intro in the Gunslinger episode and what Dinn says to Toro,
it's Fennickshand is an elite mercenary.
She made her name killing for all the top crime syndicates, including the huts.
If you go after, you won't make it past sunrise.
Now, we know how much of that fell apart and how much changed.
Could that connection in any way and that history in any way still be an active part of Fennick's life or no?
I mean, I think anything is possible.
And I think, I mean, where was Fennick when Black Cresantan?
attacked. She joined it at the end
to dump him in the rank or pit.
And of course she has to sleep sometime.
That dagger throat in the hand, you know?
Yeah. Of course she has to sleep sometime.
But like, where was security?
Why was it the street kids?
You know, like, isn't she his body man?
Like, you know, like, let's get a few more people in the, in the rotation here.
Yeah.
I agree.
But, uh, but she showed up not looking like she came from napping.
She was bright-eyed, bushy-tailed, and her braid was nary a strand of hair out of place.
like, you know, where was, where was Venick during the attack?
I don't know.
Definitely a possibility.
Hair watch.
It's always on with Joe.
Always.
It's true.
It's true.
Speaking of watches.
Yeah.
You got for your secret skull.
I'm going to go with Go Go Gadget Foot Kid from the Vespagay.
Okay.
That's my pick.
I'm going with Danny Trejo.
Have to.
Secret Scroll.
Danny Trejo.
Wow.
Talk about crossover possibilities.
I mean, that would just be.
I love that for us.
That would be an incredible,
an incredible thing for Disney Plus and all of us.
Danny Trejo, who's made an entire career just being Danny Trejo in every movie that he's in.
Incredible stuff.
Incredible stuff.
All right.
Mail bag.
Let's do it.
All right.
It's mailbag time.
Jomey a Deneron.
What do we got?
I'm back.
I am strengthened by the Agen's Shield Love on this show.
It's big for you.
Though you took that Mephisto hit, just mere moments prior.
You know what it's like, you know, it's a setback rating for a comeback.
You know what I mean?
You got to take the L's to see the Ws.
That's how life rolls sometimes.
Our first question comes from Aaron, and Aaron asks,
is Boba the easiest job interview ever?
I mean, exactly.
He's like, do kids want to come fight for me?
I'm not going to ask you any questions.
Do you Gomorians want to come fight?
For me, I'm not going to ask you any questions.
Boba needs to work on his process a little bit.
He really does.
Can I actually ask you an Agents of Shield question, Jeremy?
Yes, please.
What do you think is the best?
Because I am not the scholar that you are, but one came to mind.
What do you think is the best Melinda May episode?
I think, I don't know if I could say like episode,
but my favorite Melinda May moment that like comes to mind immediately is when,
Spoiler alert.
She's fighting Ward,
Grant Ward.
And he's,
you know,
and they've had like a sexual relationship
in the past.
And he makes the comment like,
oh,
you're on top.
And she's like,
you are never on top.
And it's great.
And it's great.
This is on ABC prime time.
Geez.
I'm telling you.
Positively peacemaker-esque.
The first thing that came to mind for me,
is the season two episode where she has to fight herself.
Like there's another person with like her.
So it's like age of 34.
Yeah.
So it's it's Migno N versus Migno N.
And Kevin did direct that episode.
So I think he's been on the on the Migna beat for a while.
So I would be excited to to see what he can do with her.
Anyway, sorry.
Just just a quick Asians of Shield aside for you.
I mean, got to.
Listen, Boba, I was, I was Boba interviewed me when I was getting my jump at the ringer.
I had like three.
I had like three interviews.
You know, it was like a whole thing.
I wish, you know, someone would have been like, hey, can you tweet?
Yeah, come on in.
You're hired.
That would have been nice.
Can you shank a wookie with a switchblade?
Yes.
Great.
You're on my team.
Come on in.
Cool of an easy.
All right.
Next question comes from Mario.
And Mario wants to know, is it odd or noteworthy that Boba doesn't seem consumed at all
with any kind of desire for revenge against Luke or Han?
He spent so much of his life seeking revenge for the death of his father.
But when he escapes the Sarlake Pit, he has no desire to seek out the people who sent him there.
Not saying it would be a good story, but it seems odd that someone with his emotional background wouldn't be scheming revenge.
Maybe we're meant to believe older Boba is just a different dude than young Boba?
Or maybe he was so focused on survival, he didn't have time to think about retribution.
But it struck me.
So I like this as a progression for Boba to move beyond.
revenge that that might be a preoccupation of a younger boba.
I think I wish I understood.
So it'll get complicated if he immediately swings back into revenge mode though.
For Tuskins, yeah.
But like, two things.
Number one, I wish I understood what changed him.
If it's crawling out of the Sarlac, is it the time of the Tuskins?
Like, I don't know.
Is it getting a lizard up his nose?
I don't know.
But like something changed his nature inherently and all of that.
That being said, if he is concerned.
with the idea of revenge for what happened with the Tuskins.
He's playing it very close to the vest.
That's why I was questioning whether or not we would see the Tuskins wiped out in the
flashback because he didn't seem like a man who's here on Tatouin to get revenge for his family.
That just didn't seem to be how he was playing it.
But again, that might just be a virtue of them trying to keep a lot of things back from us.
So we still don't understand.
I mean, I just want to back up Charles on the Midnight Boys,
because Charles is just yes-ending what we've been talking about,
which is that we don't understand
exactly what Boba wants in all of this.
I'm excited to know, but for right now, we don't understand.
I think that the Luke Han thing,
to me, it makes sense that he wouldn't be thinking about that
given this stated kind of like this mission statement for his character,
which, to be fair, is uttered in the Mandalorian,
not in his own show, but that, you know,
fate sometimes steps in to rescue the wretched line.
I think that that is how he's viewing his rebirth after emerging from the Sarlock Pit,
and so being guided by the thirst for vengeance the way he was when he was younger
and hunting Mase Windu because of what happened with Django,
not doing that here would represent progress.
Also, that progress doesn't have to mean that there's not some sort of really rich possibility
in the future if he does come across Luke or Han, you know, or anything for, again,
we got the sail barge disaster mentioned here.
Like, I don't think we need to see an active pursuit,
but it still might be a tense moment
if they end up on the same screen at the same time in the future.
So it's interesting.
But it feels right to me that his character evolution tracks
with him not just going off to like hunt Han
for knocking into his jetpack, you know?
Ah, the jetpack.
By the way, we should say.
Blindly.
Does just land in front.
I know we didn't want to talk about the chase more,
but it just lands in front of the major domo with the jetpack.
Rendering the entire chase.
Exactly.
Unnecessary.
Exactly.
But you don't get the Power Rangers, guys.
Listen.
Listen.
Oh, boy.
The Mighty Moped Power Rangers.
Mighty Morpher and Tattooing Rangers.
Listen, we get some morphers, you know what I mean?
We get some guys in rubber suits.
We've got a stew cooking.
Lucasfilm right here.
Talk to your boy.
You know?
We can do this on a...
Call Jomey.
He's ready.
We can do Disney Plus.
Mighty Morpher and Tattooing Rangers.
I'm here.
we can get 10 episodes real quick.
All right.
Before they're going to block me,
they're going to be like,
Jome, don't tweet at us ever again.
Have you been tweeting at Lucasoff?
No, God, no.
I know Kathleen Kennedy, she's listening.
Kathleen,
she's listening, she's listening.
She's like, I might stop listening right now
because Jomey, he's making too much sense.
Kathleen, like everyone else,
if they made it to the two-hour mark,
they're going to see it through.
You know, you know,
how people who like love the midnight boys are called midnight riders like that that's a thing.
Yeah.
Did you know that people are calling like our fans house guests?
Mm.
I know.
Yeah.
Come on in.
I love it.
I'm welcome.
Welcome.
How sweet.
It's like positively charming.
It's very sweet.
Come in.
Take your shoes off at the door.
Yeah.
I got some.
We're just wrapping on to our back to pots.
Yeah.
Yeah, yeah, we'll do it.
Down in a minute.
Visit with the rancor in the meantime.
Speaking of the rancor, our next question comes from Nick.
And Nick wants to know, what would you name your rancor?
What a wonderful question.
I don't know the answer.
I don't have one.
So, you know, the rancor we lost in Return of the Jedi, poor Mal, you know, mourning.
That's Ptisa.
Of course, we've spoken of dear sweet Moochi, wondering what happened to Mucci.
Do we find any inspiration in those names?
I'm not so sure.
You know, I'll just say, I never would have come up with Grogo.
And at first, I was like, are we sure?
But now I love it.
Now I love it.
And it feels like he's always been Grogo to me.
So I'll accept any name the rancor gets.
What, what suggestion do you both have for what to name the rancor?
I'm so close to it.
How about like when, I was going to say like something like, I don't know, like a, like a, when,
no, we can't have anything that sounds too much like, like,
Mace Windu because Boba hates him.
Okay, I would have...
How about...
So Boba...
Boba makes me think of tapioca balls and tea, right?
And Moochi makes me think of mochi.
Okay.
So I'm going to go with Shabu Shabu and, like, keep it in the Japanese, in the Asian food family.
That's right.
I think Shabu Shabu is a great name for a rancor.
Okay.
Show me a Greece.
It's...
It's a choice.
It's a great choice.
It's a great choice.
Jomey, do you have a competing nomination?
No, no.
If I was going to name my own Rancourt,
I think I would steal from, like,
I don't have any pets.
I'm not a pet owner,
but if I had a pet,
it would probably be a cat because, you know,
me and cats would just be chilling, you know.
Absolutely.
And if I had to steal a name,
the name I would name my cat would be Izumi,
which is if Legend of Corey fans,
you know,
that's Zucco's daughter, the fire, the fire lord in Legend of Cora.
So I would just steal that name and name my rancor, Izumi.
Should we name the rancor, Pabu?
I have a Pabu plush, as I think, as I think you know, I love Pabu.
And I have a Pabu T-shirt.
My friend named her kitchen aid mixer, Pabu.
That's incredible.
I love Pabu. I love Momo. I love Appa.
I mean, anything connected to those would be wonderful.
For, you know, I like human names for pets.
It's like my childhood cat, my best friend, Jeremy.
You know, Halo was Halo's name when we adopted him, right?
Like, so...
You would have called him...
I mean, it's perfect.
Tom.
It's the only thing that fits right now.
But yeah, we probably would have gone with like, you know, Ronald or something.
I don't know.
Jimothy, the rancor?
Timothy.
Yeah.
How about...
Oh, okay.
We've mentioned Cobbant.
We've mentioned Timothy.
It's a justified day.
How about Ollie or Oli?
No?
Only for only fan.
No.
How about Raylan?
All right.
Raylan the Reinhore.
I think that's my final answer.
Raylan is phenomenal.
Co-signed.
That's a great name.
Let's do it.
Raylan the Rancor.
Raylan the Rancor.
No matter what they call them in the show, that's what we'll call them.
Yeah, yeah.
That's what we'll call them.
Last question comes from when.
Wynn wants to know
is Boba Fett the Ted Lassau
of Tatooeen
Think about it
Incredible question
I think it goes with our
Discussion of the Coalition of Kindness
Right
I mean Joe it's the hope
That kills you
You know
Oh my God
Oh my God
I do you
I might need Steve to
Tap in for this
Do you think there's any chance
That this question is about
Hype Beast culture and sneakers
Ted Lassow big sneaker head
he's got some amazing Jordans.
It is.
What if Boba just breaks out a new pair of AJ ones midway through the season?
No?
Is this about his toe again?
AJ ones would be tough with a toe sticking straight up.
You need a looser shoe for that.
Yeah, you need a boot.
I think you need a roomy boot for that or a sandal.
We need like a fly knit.
We're going with like an epic react, I think, for that, you know.
some flexible material.
If Bubba's anything,
you know,
he's curious,
not judgmental,
right?
So,
you know,
he's,
you know,
just trying to,
he's trying to do
the right thing by being a crime boss.
That's really,
we don't even know,
because,
we don't even know what,
this is the whole question
of Boba Fett.
What do you mean by crime boss?
Like,
because he's not been like,
well,
we're going to run the spice here.
Like,
this is what the brothels
are going to look like.
Like he's,
He's busting no crime.
Bossing zero crime on Tatooine right now.
Boa.
Just wants to receive tribute and tell people that he's not interested in riding on a litter.
I really think he should run for mayor.
If he's Ted Lassow, then who is his mate?
Who is his beard?
Fenick.
Who's Roy?
Who are all the other characters?
I guess Fenwick right now is beard, but as, you know, we talked about,
she could be Nate, maybe.
Who knows?
Oh, boy.
Garso FIP as Rebecca.
I need more Garcifip, like a stat.
Yeah, I missed flip time in this episode.
I did.
I really did.
I mean, like, the episodes get a little repetitive when he's like back of the mayors,
back of whatever, but like, I'm never mad to be back to the sanctuary and have
Garcifip say something suggestive again.
Bring it on.
That's a heaping spoonful of truth soup right there.
Wow.
Jome, you were really ready for this question.
Yeah, you were ready.
We're ready.
Barbecue sauce.
A wonderful mailbag.
As always, Boba said,
we better fight as good as we talk dank,
but Boba Fett has never recorded a podcast as far as I know.
And so what does he really know?
We have reached the end of today's episode.
Thank you to our crime lord, Steve Allman,
for producing today's episode.
episode. Thank you to our podmongers, Arjuna Ramgapal and TD St. Matthew Daniel for their
additional production work on this episode. And thank you to our strider. Make it his way
across the social feeds Jomi Adenneron for his work on the social for this episode. Be sure
to head back into the ringerverse at the top of next week for the Midnight Boys Peacemaker
Premier Breakdown and head back Wednesday and Friday.
for our Boba chapter four pods.
Until then, gather up your gag.
Follow me.
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