The Ringer-Verse - ‘The Book of Boba Fett’ Chapter 4 Deep Dive | House of R
Episode Date: January 22, 2022Mal and Joanna return to the Sarlacc pit to give there deep dive into Episode 4 of 'The Book of Boba Fett' (05:50). They take on the "stoic" archetype and examine how both Boba and Fennec can occupy t...hat roll (32:32). Later, they are joined by Ben Lindbergh to talk about the history behind Boba's famed ship (97:10). They also speculate with Jomi, who may return for the finale (1:50:10), before offering a heartfelt farewell to producer TD. 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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Hello, I'm Juliet Littman.
And I am Joe House.
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Boba is dead.
I was left for dead on the sands of touch.
Between.
Like you.
I was rescued by the sand people.
They took me and treated me as one of their own.
I tried to help them.
Instead, I got the massacre by Nectoist Speed bikers.
Speed bikers defeated Tuscans.
That's highly unlikely.
And welcome into the Ringerverse here on the Ringer podcast network.
I'm Mallory Rubin.
And it is my absolute pleasure.
to invite you not only to Jabba's Palace Hanger,
but also to join us on the Ringers Nexus podcast feed for All Things Fandom.
Joining me today to talk about the book of Boba Fett, Chapter 4,
now that she's brought me to a mod parlor on the outskirts of Mos Isley,
it's my house of our working title, co-host,
And my favorite Banta writer, Ringer's senior staff writer Joanna Robinson.
Oh my God, where are we getting our matching mod implants now?
Where like which parlor are we going to or where which part of our body?
We got numerous mailbag questions about the latter.
I guess we'll save it for the mailbag.
But yeah, I'm delighted to, you know, forever bear some sort of gear or piston that will remind me of you when I look at it.
I feel the same strong, strong tattoo parlor vibes from the mod parlor.
I think we'd both be right at home.
Yeah, I don't think they're going to let you get a mod if you've been drinking.
You know that tattoo parlor rule?
If you walk in visibly drunk, they're like, this isn't for you.
A few programming reminders before we talk more about the cybernetic augmentations that we'd choose,
our thoughts on the black melon milk.
and everything else that happened in this episode
before we call the rat catcher,
all of it, Joe.
We got to remind everyone, of course,
that the Midnight Boys, Van and Charles,
Poo, Poo, Poo!
We'll be back with you next Wednesday
with their instant reactions
to Boba Chapter 5.
Also, in addition to being able to hear
their chapter 4 instant reaction,
which is already on the feed for you,
you can hear their Moon Night trailer response
on this week's pod.
So check that out if you haven't yet.
Daniel Chin also wrote a great breakdown
of the Moon Night trailer.
And Joanna,
wrote an awesome piece on the Lord of the Rings's title reveal. So head to the ringer.com.
What a great website to read that. If you haven't yet, we will, of course, be back with you next
Friday for our chapter five. Deep dive. How can you follow that? Joanna, you might be wondering.
I'm always wondering. Thank you for asking. You can follow all of it by following the pod on Spotify
or wherever you get your podcasts. And of course, by
following our social feeds.
The ringer versus everywhere.
We're all over the social feeds.
Find us.
And of course, for today's episode,
please bear in mind
our friendly neighborhood spoiler warning.
Today's podcast will feature plot details
from the Book of Boba Fett
Chapter 4, The Gathering Storm,
as well as the wider Star Wars canon.
So proceed with more caution
than the Trondotion
who threw a drink.
at Cresanton's head.
I mean, that was unwise.
And this is a podcast for wisdom right here.
And we, as far as I know, can't regrow our own limbs.
So that's some real Spider-Man Canon lizard stuff right there.
He would be delighted.
Congrats, Dr. Connors.
You've found your favorite Star Wars characters.
Favorite episode.
Joe, you want to run us through the, uh,
key details for this episode and take us right into our flashback to?
I'd be so honored. So this is chapter four, the gathering storm.
Written as ever. You're making me giggle today. It's Friday. We've had a week.
Written by John Favro, directed by Kevin Tancheron. And we are run time-wise, we're back up to
a chunky 49 minutes. For sure. Yeah. And this may or may not be our last
flashback present day breakdown of an episode. We'll see. We'll discuss. But it certainly could be
our final flashback. And we get some information. We're going to dive right into the flashback.
But this is a lot of information we've been waiting for. How did he meet Fennick? How did they get
the ship back? What does a mod parlor look like? All those sorts of stuff. So many answers in
this episode. It's true. I will say just preemptively, listening to the Midnight Boys,
who straight up did not have a good time with this episode.
We even lost Van, stalwart Boba defender.
And I'm actually more optimistic for the rest of BobaFed
than I was before after this episode,
after spending time with this episode and thinking about it,
thinking about where we might go from here.
So I just want to lay that out there
in case people are sitting at home being like,
is this another hour and a half of dunking on something?
something that I enjoy it. And I'm like, I have my thoughts and feelings about this episode. But
overall, I've got some optimistic, larger, longer views of the show. Yeah, I think it's fair to say,
you know, if we think about the title, the episode, The Gathering Storm, should the storm still
be gathering four episodes in? You know, each of the first four episodes has in any fashion at least
felt like it could have been the kickoff for the show, could have been the pilot for the show.
And I agree with your framing that the optimistic way to kind of spin forward and look ahead and anticipate what might be to come is that if the storm has now gathered, the rain's about to fall.
And we're more than halfway through now.
It's a seven episode season.
This was chapter four.
The final three chapters, I would hope, would be relentlessly in a positive way, action-packed and continue to answer questions and expand our sense of character.
character, character art, character motivation,
lore, filling gaps, though,
without maybe jumping around quite as much.
And to move us forward toward a really robust,
and I hope, fun and satisfying finale.
But we've had some shifts across the timelines
and then the pacing and the flow
to get to that point, if that is where we land.
I think this probably could have been a four-episode season
or, you know, maybe a five-episode season.
But I think these first four episodes, if people are feeling shaky, I understand.
But a couple things to point out, which is that trailer-wise, we have not seen a single frame from the final three episodes in the trailer.
Like the last stuff that we were waiting for, this dinner with the head of the families, that's sort of the last thing we saw in a trailer.
So they are keeping all of that back on purpose to hopefully dazzle us with a bunch of things.
And then also, Mignan one gave an interview where she was just saying, once you see the finale, you're really going to understand what we were doing here.
Now, if there are people sitting at home being like, I can't wait six hours to find out what you're actually doing here, I understand that.
But I think what's possible is this series ends really, really strong.
And I think if it does, people might forget how they're feeling right now or forgive how they're feeling right now.
you know what I mean?
Yeah, I'm with you.
You know, if we actually pull a line from this episode and think about it in a meta sense,
I think we can kind of lean into that, at least for, you know, until we can assess in full how we feel about the season.
When Boba is trying to convince Fennick to consume the black melon, right?
To let that restorative milk throw through her, flow through her new pistons and all.
Get right in there with that blue windshield wiper flu.
Coarsing through your abdomen, you know?
Milk. Nothing better for a piston than some milk. Love it.
He says it takes some getting used to with time you start to crave it.
And I couldn't help but think that was like a little message to the audience.
It might be. Can I give you my black melon hot take?
Please, I would be delighted to receive it.
I could probably handle drinking it. I would probably not want to, like, given the way that Cobb Vance reacted to it in Mando season two,
I think I don't want to smell it.
You don't want to quaff a melon before you drink it, right?
No.
It's like plug up the nostrils, knock it back.
What I don't want is to ever have to open it myself or watch someone else open it
because the cloud of dust that pops up when you pop a black melon, I don't like it.
I'm not a fan of that.
Strong disagree.
Okay.
I love that.
It reminds me of like the crack of a soft.
dosage skin, you know, or the plume of smoke that emerges when you open a barbecue,
like, and to the point about trying to mask your smell so that you can tolerate the taste,
smell and taste are linked.
This is all part of the gustatory experience, you know, now let me say in the interest of full
disclosure.
I sampled the foodstuffs of four NFC playoff cities mere hours ago last night for a house
of carbs taste test.
And so I'm really thinking right now about commestable.
of all sorts. I'm ready to try anything. I would love to sample the milk of a melon.
As soon as you said, the crack of a sausage skin.
I did eat brats yesterday. I'm not sure anyone has ever said. I remember just what you ate last
night. And I was like, oh, that's the headstay she's in right now.
I did slack you and the House of our team a warning that I might be sidelined with a
it was the phrase tacos. Tocos and curds. Oh my.
All right, Boba Fett, what's happening?
Should we just predict right now whether we think it's going to be the final flashback to?
Or do you want to go into what we see and then circle back to that point?
I'm really curious to know if you think that this is the end of it, because we do get that line later in the episode when Boba emerges.
Congratulations, Master Fet, you are completely healed.
We then get that follow-up, very enticing exchange between Boban Fennick.
What about the scars in the inside?
Those take longer, which of course is going to be one of the mission statements of the
show. And one of the points ultimately to the, hey, should maybe this have been a movie of the appeal, as we talk about often, of a television show, of the Disney Plus experience, that you can take more time and spend more time with the characters in any timeline, past, present, future, past that turns out to be the near present, even though we thought it was the kind of far away past all of it. And you can learn about those scars on the inside, what caused them and what it might take to heal. And so I'm not quite ready to let go of.
more flashbacks,
healing pod aided or otherwise,
because even though we did catch up
to the timeline, in a way
I will talk about more in a few minutes
that I will preview for you, I found shocking.
I feel that this is somehow embedded
in the structural DNA of the show
and that there's just going to be more we need to pop
and weave in and out of and learn over time.
If we never got another one of these,
I would find that strange, but I don't know.
It did really feel like definitive
in a certain way. What do you think?
I don't usually shock.
call in a confident way, but I'm going to do it.
Do it.
Babe Ruth, you're on the pod calling her shot.
I'm going to point to the fence and I'm going to say, this is the last one.
Okay.
This is the last one.
All right.
You're probably right.
I just don't want it to be.
I think I see that that's probably true.
I just don't want it to be true.
I'm not ready.
I think they yada, yada, yada their way through five years in this episode.
So I think we're done.
But I will be happily proven wrong if that's the case.
But, I mean, let's just talk about the time.
timeline right now because my first my first ping on the timeline comes right at the very
beginning here we see bobo scoping out java's palace you know before he finds fenwick he's scoping out
the palace and he says still too many guards which means he's been on java palace surveillance
for how long question mark let's ask ourselves because five years are covered in this flashback
and what have we seen we've seen boba crawl out of the sarlac we don't know how long he was
in there, but crawls out of Sarlac,
gets picked up by
the Tuscan Raiders,
becomes one with their tribe.
I know, I'll let you talk in a second, I swear,
becomes one with their tribe.
Train heist goes to see the pike.
This might be a whole pod, the timeline part.
Goes to see the Pikes,
nose lizard trip.
Is that ears? We can ask.
We can decide.
Go goes to see the Pikes,
comes back, Tuscans are gone,
wanders around the desert on a bantha by himself
for a question mark how long,
finds Fenwick, and by the time we finds Fenwick, we're caught up to the Mando
timeline. So there's five years somewhere in there. Let me point out my biggest issue
with this, which is a lot of people are like, well, he was with the Tuskins for years.
Here's the issue. If you go back to the train heist episode, he's in his crusty little
long johns during the train heist. And he doesn't get his robe until the end of that episode.
And then right after that, he goes to see the Pikes and the Tuscans are dead.
So you're telling me he would have had to be in his crusty little old man prospector Long Johns for years with the Tuscans before he got his roves.
Or he was wandering around the desert by himself for years before he found Fennick, like not outside the rubble possibility necessarily.
And he's very bonded to that banthos in which we will obviously talk about it length in a second.
It makes us sense.
The best answer saw, I think, was my friend Eric Goldman on Twitter was like maybe the nose lizard trip took years.
And I was like, sure.
But it doesn't make a ton of sense.
I mean, that might be my new favorite theory.
Yeah?
Perhaps the only one that I can.
He wandered in the desert on.
on pure lizard fumes for years.
Lizard warped mind around.
Yeah.
That's compelling.
The part where I made a little grunt into the microphone
and almost can contain myself
was about the how long could he have been in the Sarlac
because that's something that's definitely been popping up
since the episode aired.
And, you know, on the one hand, we have the iconic,
you know, digested over thousands of years' lines.
We know that the disintegration or disintegrations
is not happening instantaneously.
however, Boba Fett is a living person, right?
Like not an inorganic piece of material.
And so he would have died.
Maybe he has some snacks in his helmet.
Maybe.
The armor's just feeding him, like intravenously, perhaps.
We know that he had to take that like hit of the stormtrooper, the oxygen, the air from the stormtrooper, right?
And like that almost felt like this one last breath that he needed to muster the strength to escape.
But I think the biggest timeline clue that we have there to really like reaffirm what is already intuitive,
which is that he escaped the pit fairly quickly in order to still be alive,
is what we know from Cobb Vance about when he got the armor from the Mando season two premiere.
Because that whole sequence with the mining, the mining contingent coming in and everything that happened,
that's like established in that episode, right, as being right on the heels.
of the fall of the empire.
So exactly how many minutes, days,
setting of the binary suns and rising of the triple moons passes?
Like exactly, who knows?
But I think that's a pretty tight timeline.
And so that gets us back to, yes,
this big picture confusion.
Was Boba actually with the Tuskins for five years,
which we did not realize, if so?
Was he with his bantha on his own
for the better part of five years
after he found that the tribe had been decimated,
or was it,
is it some, like, split difference or some fun theory,
like the one you just outlined about the time frame of the lizard trip,
which is pretty fun.
I have a big picture point I want to make
and the thing I want to discuss with you here,
and then a few, like, clues or questions
that we can latch on to to maybe see which camp we settle in here.
It's certainly not a comprehensive list of every bit of evidence
for either time frame, but just a few that might help us.
Oh.
And spoiler alert, they don't help us.
That's part of the problem here.
I feel like you're an attorney preparing your opening arguments.
So please approach the bench, Mallory Rubin, and tell me what you think.
Oh, boy.
Justice Robinson.
Yeah.
Members of the ringer verse jury.
D.D. Arjuna, Steve, Jomey.
I ask you today to consider the following.
Okay.
I will just say, I found the moment where we see the flares. You know, Boba is
roasting some scurrier meat, feeding his bantha. I've decided that we should name the bantha
Myrtle. I'm curious what you think about that, but I don't want to get to five tangents within
five tangents before we're even at the 20 minute mark of the pod. Though, why choose this week to not do
that? I know, I mean, par for the course, my dear. We see the flares. Yeah. And, you know, every now
And then, Joe, we like to take the listeners behind the curtains. Tell them about how we experience
something in real time, right? Yeah. I paused the episode. Did you crack a sausage?
Hadn't heated up the brats yet at this point. I was so shocked. Not only when we see the fliers,
but then you hear, obviously we're going to get to the Mandalorian music cue that concludes the
episode. Is that man? But the little burst of the Mando score that we get here in conjunction with
flares, right, which solidifies for us before we even see the, you know, mirror imagery of
the loop closing sequence of Boba walking up to Phenic, left for dead on the sands of Tatouin
after Toro shot her in Mando season one, episode five, the gunslinger. You see the flares, you hear
the sound cue, you know, these are the, these are the Mando Toro flares. This is the Fennick
moment. Boba is about to find Fennick. And I was so disoriented by this, so, so,
so disoriented to realize that we were in 9 ABY because I thought we were in 5ABY.
And to the point where I was like slacking you guys dropping notes on our Google doc,
like, did I miss something?
Is there a clear answer here to how long Boba was with the Tuskins that we just somehow
lost track of?
Or is this deliberately unclear?
Is it just unclear?
And I think the thing that I'm, I kind of can't shake here is, and I say this is someone
who loved the flashbacks. You know this.
Loved the flashbacks. Episode two was my favorite, all of that time in the past with the Tuskins
I loved. Why do the flashbacks if you are still going to net out at a point four episodes in
where you have confusion about how much time has passed and where and when and with whom
our character has been for however long? Like the whole point of that is to fill in the gaps
in this re-origin story, right? This origin redux.
And so are we, yes, the rebirth.
If we are left still with this like puzzle,
then it feels like that saps some of the value gained
from that structural choice in the first place.
Like if you're going to end up with either way here, whatever it is,
if it's he was with the Tuskins for longer
than we realized he was on his own with the bantha
riding through the duncee for a really long time
or it's some split difference
and we don't know exactly what the math is.
No matter what the answer is,
there's a lot of his life that is still unaccounted for then
before we get back to finding Fenwick and to that present day.
And so if the point of the flashbacks was for Boba to work through what he is experienced in that rebirth
and for us to understand how he felt that time, like, does this confusion diminish the success of that?
Or do you feel that ultimately what we learned still achieves the purpose despite this confusion
that we're left with?
Well, one comment that I've seen from some people about, you know, because a lot of, you know,
I think we got some questions about this, the mailbag, but a lot of people have been wondering,
should they have just done the flashbacks all in one go?
Right.
Should this have been a chronological show rather than cutting back and forth?
Because it really does feel, if you look at everything that's happened in the present day, the 9-A-B-Y timeline, exactly what you're saying before.
It feels like we're at the beginning of the show.
You know what you mean?
And we talked about this last week when he was getting the droid download and we're like, how is this in episode three moment?
You know, this all feels like episode one stuff.
So, and I've seen some folks say it would have been helpful to see all of flashbacks at first so that when we saw Bubba make certain decisions, we could be informed about what happened in his past that inspired those decisions.
As we talked about in the first few episodes, the fact that they kept his motivations obscure for four weeks until this week when we get some kind of explanation.
I'm not sure I feel completely whole with it.
But, like, there is some sort of explanation here.
All of that just feels a little jangly and funky.
And I think I would have loved if Boba spent five years with the Tuskins.
And it would have actually been, I think, pretty easy for them to make that the case.
If only, like, his visit to the Pikes hadn't been so chronologically smushed up against the train heist.
We could have been, like, well, and many years later, he went to see the Pikes for some other reason.
And then everyone died.
So, and then yada yada, everyone's dead.
So, yeah, I don't know that it saps that I think the, I love the Tuscan stuff too.
You and I are agreement that episode two is our favorite thus far of the season.
But I think that...
I miss you, Tuscan kid.
I still believe you're out there.
I'm a Tuscan warrior, too.
I think this week makes it less likely that there were Tuscan survivors.
But yeah, so that's a lot of...
I don't feel like, unless the deaths were really recent and he hasn't had time to come across, to come across them.
That's one of the considerations for how we could wrap our minds around these events being closer together.
Let me share.
Okay.
I'll throw out a few considerations for you for each case.
None of which I'm sure, again, really, like, allow us to make a clear decision.
I'm just hung up on the fact that he would have had to been in those disgusting.
It's the long-dons.
Yeah.
For years.
Okay, go ahead.
Now, obviously, he would have had to work his way toward that, you know, that ritual,
that initiation into the tribe of earning the Tuscan garb.
But he could have put on, you know, literally anything else other than the acid-coated
sarlac-inered-strewn undergarments.
Okay.
Not a comprehensive list, just a few bullet points for consideration.
Bobo was with the Tuskins for five years or...
longer than we realized.
This will get us to a few things we'll talk about more as we go across the episode, of course.
Only going for the ship and the armor now, nowish, in 9-A-B-Y indicates, I think, that he was with the tribe for quite some time and only began to crave to seek those out again when he was on.
his own. Right. Now, you noted like that not today, old girl, still too many guards exchange that
Boba has with his Bantha as he's looking down with Dear Sweet Myrtle as he's looking down at the hangar.
And I do think that indicates quite clearly that he's been going there and scoping it out,
but for how long? Like maybe that's days or weeks or months, not necessarily years. Okay. Another thing. Only
killing the Kinton Striders now. Killing them now, waiting this long, does not track to me.
This Anakin-esque murder spree, right? Just decimating an entire group. Maybe he didn't think that
he could do this without his ship. Like, that was a prerequisite for staging this attack. But that
doesn't really feel like Boba. I mean, he goes in and charges and attacks. He went into
Tashi Station. That was a smaller group. But I don't think he would have.
have waited for that aid. He would have sought vengeance immediately, right? He beat them in his long
johns. And now he's got the robe and the musket and everything else, you know. I just can't
believe, like, that he would have let them live for that long if he blamed them. So the idea that
the Tuscan time period is short and then Boba has been on his own for a really long time and waited
all that time to exact his revenge is really hard to wrap our lizard lobe. And it's really hard to wrap our lizard
lobe minds around, I think.
Yeah.
Okay.
Boba hasn't found any members of the tribe yet, right?
We just talked about this possibility.
Now, maybe that's just a foolish thing to mention because I'm hanging on to something
that isn't real, which is the belief that the warrior and the kid are still out there.
But we did not see their body, so I feel like they must be.
And if he's been riding around the Dune Sea for half a decade, I feel like he would have
crossed paths with them.
It also seems like Boba is only just now realizing that he's just now realizing that he's, he's
his bantha wants to eat meat.
And I think that if they had spent as much time together on their own as the other scenario
would require, their rosenoscur or two over five years.
And this would have come up sooner.
We'd get that lip licking, you know, sooner.
And then that fenwick line, living with the Tuskins, has made you soft.
Now, she's just catching up in real time.
Like, she doesn't actually know the answer.
But it certainly seemed like that was something you would say to somebody who had been in a
circumstance for quite a while. Okay. Anything I'm missing from the evidence set for he was with them
for five years or longer and we are picking up basically right on the tail end of him discovering
that they have been slain. No, I think you got all, you gathered all the crumbs. I'm just saying,
I don't think they create a sturdy trail anywhere. I agree. Let's see if this other set is any sturdier
to stand a bantha on. Boba and his Bantha Myrtle were alone together.
Just them, Joe.
Yeah.
Riding to the Doon C.
Great company, to be honest with you.
I agree.
And also, like, I love Abantha, but the pace at which Abantha moves, I mean, five years, you know, it takes you that long, basically, to get from one dune to another.
And listen, we were, we got a little, I mean, I don't know about you, but I got a little frosty at the end of Game of Thrones and everyone was fast traveling.
So maybe it took Boba a month to go see the pikes and get back, you know, to the village.
I love my sprinting boy, Gendry.
But not five years.
But, okay.
As noted, it seems like Bob and the banta have been together for a long time.
They have a real bond.
It's beautiful.
When he sends her off, which I'll share my feelings on in a second here.
I'm sure you can anticipate them.
It just feels like there have been some moments in their shared history.
It's time to say farewell, my friend.
You served me well.
She then licks his face.
Yes, I know, I know.
I'm going to miss you two old girl.
Now go.
Find other bantas.
Make baby bantas.
Go.
free to roam the Dune Sea. So, I don't know, that feels like years, a really long time, at least,
months, certainly not just days together, right? That's like a forged friendship. I'd
comfortably give it a year. Oh my God. Joe, do you know what this reminded me of this, this sendoff,
which was deplorable? Like, I want this bantha to be safe and happy. I don't want the bantha going
near. Can I guess? I know you're going to get it. I know you're going to get it. Is it Aria throwing
rocks at Nimeria? That's on the short list, but that's a very painful one, almost too painful
to mention. Okay. Then John saying goodbye to ghosts. Okay. Can't bring up that one because it's,
it's, it's one of the most offensive moments in the storytelling history from my perspective.
Uh-huh. And, uh, I'm going to throw this out there. You make me think of our dear pony bill.
You know, the fellowship, send it bill away. Aragorn saying to say, Sam, the minds are no place for a pony,
even once a brave as Bill.
Like, couldn't you just hear Boba saying
Jabba's hangar is no place for a banthe
even one so brave as Myrtle?
I have a Lord of the Rings TikTok I need to send you about this.
Yeah, that's a great comparison.
I can't wait.
By the way, a bunch of people are asking me
if we're going to cover Lord of the Rings on this show.
The Amazon Prime show, Lord of the Rings.
Will we be covering it on Ringervorverse?
You bet we will.
Lord of the Ringervverse, yes.
Obviously.
No doubt.
Join us in September, folks.
We will be talking about that show
every single week. Of course we will. We can't wait.
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There, there, isn't that better?
I mean, you had nothing left to prove.
You are a champion.
You are above such pettiness.
Now, you have run up quite a bar tap, Santos.
So let's say you release this customer and let these fine folks get back to their fun.
And in return, I will wipe your debt off the books.
We already outlined that it just doesn't seem like Boba was with the Tuskins for long.
You outlined all those points already.
The Long Johns, the history lesson that he gets from the Tuscan chief and how early that makes it seem like they are in their forged friendship, everything with the Pikes.
So where do you land after all of that?
Just still unclear, right?
I think they yada yodd at it for no reason, like in a way that they didn't.
need to. I'm not mad about it. I know we just spent like 20 minutes talking about it. Well,
we're just trying to find answers. Just trying to understand. I'm not mad about it. If anyone at Lucasfilm's
Story Group is listening to this, which I don't think they are. But if you are, please let me know.
John Favreau, Dave Loney, let me know. What's the timeline here? Yeah. But yeah, if the answer is
Boba Fett stayed in his crusty long johns because they reminded him of his dad for four plus.
years.
We all mourn in our own ways, I guess.
You know?
Joe, take us to the mod shop.
All right.
So a controversial moment.
The mods's not the most popular aspect of episode three.
So we go to the mod shop on the outskirts of town.
I wanted to ask you actually about the music.
So the cameo here, Stephen Thundercat Bruner from Suicidal Tendency is the Mod Doctor, which is like, so we talked about mods last week as like the
British biker game
that might have been
an inspiration.
And by the way,
I got a well actually
it's based on
something Japanese.
But I think in this episode
it's clear that it's
based on the British
biker gang,
the mods.
And I like the wordplay
of like calling back
to that gang and mods
for modification.
I think that's really cute.
All of this happens.
We find out that
like maybe aesthetic modifications
are for the young.
There's been a lot of good
discussion around
thinking about
the way that
Vader and Luke and their mods compared to these mods.
All that stuff is really interesting.
But the sticking point for a lot of people,
and I think this goes back to an old Clone Wars debate
that maybe you know something about,
is the music choice here.
This was a baseline,
was the guest, Thundercat, who plays the Mod Doctor.
This is one of his real-life baselines that they use here.
It's sort of like a techno-thumping beat.
A lot of people, you know,
people who feel certain,
way about what a Star Wars need to be, or like, this is not a Star War sound. I don't feel
touchy about it, but apparently this is a Clone Wars season one debate as well, the music in
season one of Clone Wars. Do you have any thoughts or feelings about this now? This is sort of what I was
attempting in my typical meandering fashion to articulate last week. Like, I just don't feel that
Star Wars is only, and I know you agree. I know we feel the same way about this, is only one thing in
terms of how it looks or sounds. And I think we actually need to like kind of actively rebel against
that notion. Like expanding the universe and what we see and hear and feel inside of it is is part of the
real proposition, I think, certainly of continuing on with the Star Wars journey. And I want to spend
a lot of time in the galaxy far far far away, but I want, I want those, those returns and those
trips into that galaxy to strike a balance between learning more about the things we already love.
And no.
And trying new things, being exposed to new things.
Now, am I ready personally for a barren Harconin-esque spinal harness mod?
No, not personally, you know?
Yeah.
How do you think she felt, by the way, about having to wait once the modifier realized credits were on the line?
And he's just switching to Phenic while she's mid-spinal implant.
Yeah.
I would ask for a discount
or my money back.
So here's what I'll say.
I don't love, love, love the mod-pillar stuff.
I don't love, love the mod stuff in general.
Like, it's not my favorite, but I don't feel like Star Wars needs to be
exactly one thing or another.
So that's awesome.
I think we can debate and discuss and, like, analyze and assess the successful rendering of
any given storyline or character.
place inside of a Star Wars story as we can in any other story without sort of like dismissing
immediately the very presence of the thing in the first place. Can I hop to the fireside chat that we get?
We get two fireside chats with Fenwick and Boba. I want to talk about Fenwick and Boba as a pairing,
okay? Because I want to love them together. I love them both as characters, actually. I want to love
them together. Here's an issue that I think the show has had so far, making them the central
duo of a show. There's an archetype character known as the Stoic, right? This is like the
gunslinger. Mando is a Stoic. Boba is a Stoic. Fennec is a Stoic. They are all Stoic archetypes.
But what's true in successful Stoic archetype fiction is that you pair the Stoic with someone
else. So Mando obviously gets a freaking the cutest thing in the world. Little gumdrop, baby
grogo. But like the landscape of fiction is littered with example. Like you can't have a Lego
loss without a Gimli. You can't have like Holmes without a Watson. You can't have a Jeeves without a
Worcester. Like it's all over everywhere. And so to put two stoics together, I think is tough stuff.
I think there's a reason why you, Mal, keep gravitating towards wanting to see Boba and Garza Fippe.
Because whenever like Boba's around- She's going to bring up FIP, you know, it's just like, that's sparky.
Or even Boba and the Tuscan warrior, like, even though she didn't, you don't have to like be verbose to be a non-stoic character.
There's just like a sparkiness to you, which that character had, you know, like, I think this show would have been better with a,
a sparkier contrasting character paired with Boba.
The Bantha is sparkier than these two.
And this is not a slight on Fenwick because I do love Fenwick.
But again, I would put Fenwick with a sparkier character.
You know what I mean?
And then that's just like we've talked about the Conan comp.
Like Conan has a sidekick.
We've talked about Michael Corleone.
Like Michael is bouncing off a sunnier, bouncing off Afraido.
You know, like, it's just like two stowies together is tough.
And so when you get these two fireside chats between Fennick, when you get this episode,
which is really supposed to sell to me why Fennick gave up her life as a solo bounty hunter to be loyal.
Like there's the, you say my life, I'm loyal to you.
But really, she's like, we're going to do a transactional debt for debt.
I'm going to help you with her ship.
Then I'm done.
Then Bova says things throughout the episode that or does things like, I don't know,
slaughter a biker gang from the sky.
And she's like, she's into it.
it. Yeah. That make her want to stay with him. But I think I want to feel that more in these,
in these fireside moments. And I think it, I think it really comes down to that, that stoic on stoic,
not the most enervating kind of fiction. I don't know. Do you any thoughts or feelings about this?
I hadn't thought about it that way. I think it's a really astute observation. And it does help to kind
of crystallize why some of these moments that we get with the other characters really pop so much,
like whether it's the shadiness of the majorudomo or just luxuriating in every single,
too few seconds that we get to spend with our gal Garza Flipp who is an icon and deserves
to spin off immediately.
My favorite.
Yeah.
Oh, my God.
She is just sensational.
I think that everything you're saying is, is, is.
completely right.
If we're heading toward some sort of fracture.
Oh, yeah, maybe.
I'm feeling less certain about that as we ran out of.
I am too, but I wonder hearing you say it,
if we are heading towards some sort of fracture at some point,
this could be one of the things that helps make that feel really organic,
like the fact that they actually convey sort of similar.
vibes and sensibilities have
done similar work and have similar
experiences in their lives
and consistently, including
in this episode, you know, another like, you're sure
that's a good idea exchange, disagree
will lead to some sort of, and I'm with you,
I don't necessarily think this will be true, but if it happens, we'll
lead to some sort of like, wait, well, why can't I just go
be the one who's doing this sort of moment
from Fanek? Because she doesn't need to be
the sidekick, actually.
Right? And like,
part of that
you know, ability to like instantly process that, hey, my, my stomach is now like a prop for Ford versus Ferrari.
Response does really reinforce that stoicism, as you're noting. So I think it's, I think it's a really good point.
Incredible Ford versus Ferrari reference. Love rooming back into my life from an Oscar season three years ago.
But also, I want to say, here's, having said all that.
having talked about why Fenwick is like or is unsuited necessarily to be the co-lead of this series.
I want to say why Fenwick immediately endeared herself to me in this scene.
Welcome to Theory Corner Fenick Shand.
Boba's like, well, obviously these Nicto bikers killed all the Tuskins.
And she says, speed bikers defeated Tuskins.
That's highly unlikely.
And all of us at home are like, exactly.
Exactly. Exactly. So, you know, I love a theory corner and I welcome Fenwick to sit with me and talk these theories over.
Yes, I loved this from Fenwick, and I loved in general getting to spend more time with Fenwick in this episode and learn more about Fenwick. And I thought, you know, it was important as we've discussed heading into this week to better understand how Fenwick and Boba got to this point and why they decided to do this together, why Fenwick is staying with him. And to that theory corner point, like, you do just immediately think, right, okay, especially because Boba, part of his like pitch and that comes in the later fireside chat of leaving this life of, you know,
of misguided bounty hunting and misguided leadership behind,
like, that's worse, smarter idea when Boba makes so many decisions all the time
that are baffling.
And, like, to be clear, I don't think that's specific to Boba or even an indictment.
That's actually, I can be part of the charm of getting to learn more about a character.
Like, The Mandalorian is one of my favorite shows of all time.
I could not possibly love The Mandalorian more.
There is rarely a Mandalorian episode where I don't shout at my TV.
Dan, why are you doing that?
are you leaving Grogo with strangers again?
Why are you saying you need credits and then immediately giving them away, et cetera, et cetera,
et cetera, right?
Like the fact that the characters are fallible and not always doing exactly the right thing
at exactly the right time is part of what makes them compelling.
It's part of what makes them human and interesting, right?
But it's like, yeah, Phannick just sees something a little more clearly.
And it's helpful for us as viewers because we can again say, oh, is it the twins or someone
else in the wider hut family?
Is it the Pikes?
Is it Kira?
You know, what is going on here
and just spark that theorizing anew.
But Boba's not thinking that way.
And I think that part of the reason that's interesting
in terms of assessing his character
and his readiness for what he is trying
to pull off here is that he doesn't realize.
Not only does he not realize he's not thinking that way,
he actually believes that he is superior
in terms of his ability to assess the lay of the land
and the state of affairs.
And I think that that primes him for,
a fall that could ultimately be like really, you know,
narratively rich and compelling.
When he's sitting here and he's like,
all the masters are dumb and I'm smarter than them and I'm like,
it's like, bro, you just climbed back into a sarlac pit
without any protection.
This is not the moment to boast about your wisdom.
They had a bottle of Desert Tasani on hand to hose him off.
It's fine.
Yeah, I think that's a really, really good point.
there's there's some slight sloppiness to this show that I'm not mad about if it if it
is able to nail a larger story the point that the midnight boys made that I do agree with is
you know boba's talking about getting his armor back and says without my armor I'm less
persuasive and honestly having um we're going to get to this in a bit but having just read a
boba fat comic and seeing how often I mean we're going to talk about that comic but like
seeing how often he does utilize his armor and how
cool that it's in
that story. I'm like, okay, I
kind of get it. But
something that we saw in
when he first showed up with Fennick
in Mando is
a more emotional attachment
to the armor when he talks about
the chain code and his father
and all that sort of stuff. And I think that would have
been a richer story
to tell here is to talk about
I need to get this ship back
because it's my father's ship and I need to get this armor back
because it's my father's armor. They
gave us the Camino flashback. I mean, I really do feel like that's why we got those Camino
flashbacks to like underline that connection to the ship, right? But I think it could have been
in the text as well for him to talk about his father and the sentimental reasons why he needs
his ship, not just I need it so I can, I'm just going to irritate Steve right now and say,
shove it head first down a Sarlek pit, you know what I mean? Like that emotional stuff,
I think, I think would have been, I think would have been really rich here. Yeah.
I agree. And there's there's kind of, just in terms of like the plot mechanics, there's a fascinating, fascinating duality at play, which I think in some ways actually really works because there's this duality that's a part of Boba. But like, even just in terms of the practicality of thinking about the armor being in his life again. On the one hand, he's saying, you know, I might not like the answer without it. He wants to restore that aspect of his reputation, what he can instill in people instantly just when they see that signature.
green, that signature visor.
But then you have something like
when they're talking about repairing the ship later,
you know, I'll do it myself. There's an advantage
to people thinking you're dead. Well, once you're
galivanting about in your signature armor,
they're not going to think you're dead anymore. So
which one is it? And how
is he even trying to reconcile those desires
within himself? Is he thinking about
the conflict between those two impulses? Maybe not.
And then that gets to your point about
what is going on inside of him?
Those scars inside, Joe, that take
longer to heal, right? Like,
when I think that the one moment where the episode like,
uh,
loudest to think about this for like a second was when in the Sarlac sequence,
which I can't wait to discuss it in more detail shortly,
she says,
you're burning.
It's not safe in there.
And he says,
my armor's not down there.
And her reply is,
it served its purpose.
It saved you from the acid.
And it's like to Boba,
that's not the purpose of that armor.
That's not what the armor represents.
It is not just this this cocoon, this physical protection, this shield.
It's his father.
It's his past.
It's this phase of his life.
It's a key to reflecting some aspect of his power.
And it's a key part of his identity.
And so I look forward to seeing the character and the show reflect that in the episodes to come.
I think we're going to be in that present timeline more.
And so we have some opportunities for it.
I think and hope.
What did you think about Boba saying sand people to fennick?
Again, like, honestly, I could, I could, I'm trying to hang in the positive so I could dwell
forever on these like little moments and I don't mean to be like, I don't want to think about it.
But at the same time, like, it was our interpretation at home that we're no longer going to call
these people sand people, we're going to call them Tuscan Raiders.
And then Boba calls them sand people.
I've seen a bunch of different interpretations of this.
I've seen some people say, he said it to test.
Test Fenick, yeah.
Phenic?
And she says Tuskins and he's like, ah, you do respect them.
Yeah.
Okay, maybe.
Or I've seen some people say.
Sure.
Or I've seen some people say Sandpeople is actually the more respectful thing and calling them Tuscan Raiders is to emphasize the Raider part.
You can just say Tuskins.
Tuskins are the D-N-C.
Choose your own adventure on this answer is how I feel about it.
Oh, boy.
Should we talk about a ship heist?
Operation Fire Spray.
All right.
So take us into the hangar.
Here's the moment that separates from the men for the boys, and this is what I mean by that.
I mean, I don't mean in a gendered way.
I mean it like this.
Remember when the prequels came out?
You do.
I do too.
And a lot of people didn't like them.
But then the generations passed.
And the people who were kids when they saw the prequels are now like, hey, the prequel's ruled.
Some of them might be on this call right now.
I remember when I found that out.
It was when the Force Awakens opened
and I went to do a report on this one theater
in Marin County where a bunch of people
is George Lucas's theater
his sort of favorite theater
and people have been lining up for generations
to see Star Wars there.
People who lined up for the original trilogy
there got married, were in a lot
like, you know, it's like all this rich history
around this thing.
And I interviewed a bunch of young people
who were in line there.
And they were like, yeah, the prequel's
they were like the prequels rule.
They were like young teens to see the Force Awakens.
They were like the prequels rule and I had a real moment.
Yeah, exactly.
The mods were there and I was like, oh, because you were kids when you saw it.
Right.
Okay.
That makes sense to me.
And Star Wars is always going to be a thing that is going to meet kids where they are at some point, right?
That doesn't mean there isn't plenty for people who are still loving it as an adult.
it can meet you both ways.
But I've seen a lot of people not enjoy this kitchen sequence.
And I've heard from a lot of people that their kids loved this kitchen sequence.
So if you're a kid watching Book of Boba Fett, maybe grim fireside chats about
seizing the means of production from the Masters isn't for you.
But maybe watching various droids run around a kitchen is for you.
Wasn't my favorite part of the episode.
But it's a little Easter egg parade here.
But droids from Return of the Jedi, attack of the clones, like all this sort of stuff.
They're trying to make the animation look a little stop motion, which we talked about.
They've done in some other effects.
It's not my favorite, but I'm not bothered by it, and I get exactly who it's for.
How do you feel?
You know who it was for?
You.
Me.
Yeah.
Your child.
Valerie Rubin.
Your child like wonder is one of my favorite things about you.
I thought this was so, I thought this was so fun.
I've, I've been surprised to see the response to this particular sequence.
And I, I can't totally.
And again, you know how I feel about this in this particular moment and in general.
Not everybody has to like the same things.
That's completely fine.
People responding differently to things as part of the interesting, part of what makes it
interesting to talk about them and experience them together.
I wonder how much of this is contextual to feeling this sense of like, okay,
why are we what's exactly going on with this ship and why are we like lingering so long in this
particular flashback when are we going to get back to the present when is all of this timeline
especially now that we're in 9 a b y when are all of these timeline threads going to fully
stitch together into the tapestry of this show i think that first of all i just love these little
glimpses of life in the galaxy right so like seeing what the
the state of affairs inside of the
Jabba turned Bib
Palace kitchen is.
It was interesting to me.
Like I thought it was cool to just see
the, the COO series cook droid
with his total general grievous
ripoff swirling hands,
you know,
swapping the lightsabers for meat cleavers
as one does,
Joanna,
as one does,
just chopping up the vegetables
and then readying for battle.
We got an LEP droid,
our little rat catcher.
I fucking.
love this dude.
He is all,
this series of droids
is all over the Clone Wars.
I was honestly,
like,
delighted to see him.
I was just delighted.
I think he's precious.
I'm a big fan of him.
He's precious.
I'm not mad about,
like I said,
I'm not mad about it.
I'm delighted that you're delighted by it.
I just thought it was fun and inoffensive, I guess.
But it's,
it's certainly fine to dislike it,
but I enjoyed it.
I don't know.
Speaking of,
like, TikToks I need to send you,
uh,
one of my favorite TikTok trends,
from like, I think it was two years ago thereabouts,
was the audio of like,
General Canooby and like, hello there.
And what you would get are two people, usually teenage boys,
one sitting on the shoulders of the other,
and all four hands of these two people
would be holding some kind of item and swirling them
to do like a general grievous impression.
And my favorite version of that,
one of them had like a potted tree,
like a small lemon tree in a pot.
and was like spinning it like a lightsaber.
It's the coolest thing I was.
Anyway, I'm like, were the branches of the tree like like Groot moving or the tree was
stationary?
It was like a small tree.
Baby, but he was like swinging it.
Anyway, the thing is, we should recreate this or is this not a hip thing to do now?
Dibbs on bottom two.
On the bottom of you to sit on my shoulders.
We won't be using meat cleavers in our recreation.
Well, you need a third person to play Obi-Wan.
go hello there.
Anyway.
Steve,
you're ready?
You ready for your
Obi-1 moment, my guy?
Hello there.
That was pretty good, Steve.
It was pretty good.
It was pretty good.
I will say,
when we move from the kitchen
to the actual hangar,
I have some notes on Boba's driving.
It's flying and driving.
That's a pretty shitty three-point turn.
Also, why did the gongk droid have to die?
Why?
But I will give shout-out to Phoenix
like shot of the counterbalance
weight on the,
and like, and the,
You know, to shout out the direction of the episode.
We talked about Kevin Tanchard being here as someone who's worked with Mingna Wen and
especially in action-heavy episodes of Agents of Shield.
The shot of the door of closing on her face as she made the shot.
That was, I think, framed by a director who loves an actress.
And it just was like a beautiful hero shot for Phenick for Mingnawan.
That was a really cool moment.
Yeah. And, you know, to return to what I said earlier about Stoic on Stoic, it's not an anti-Fennic thing. I love Fennic.
I just think you need that well as well established. Another ingredient in the stew.
Anything else we want to say about this ship boost?
I don't think so. Again, I just wonder why Bobo waited this long to do this if five years have passed.
I just have some questions about the time frame.
I have an answer for you. He, no way was he doing this by himself. He couldn't even like catch the droid by himself.
You know what I mean?
He needed Fennick to do this.
We should try to do that without her.
We should probably mention the moment when Fennick says, when a boba says to the precious
little rat catcher droid, do you know who I am?
Which is genuinely a very funny moment of television.
Exactly.
And once again, if it had been Boba and the rat catcher droid, that's the mix you need.
It could be in the future because that little dude is.
back with them in the gathering of the family's sequence, right?
He's just scurrying under the table.
I don't want to zoom too quickly through the rest of this.
We have to talk about the sarlac.
We have to talk about the sarlac.
We don't need to go back to the NICDOS.
I just want to say really quickly the NICTO biker slaughter.
I didn't like this at all.
I don't love those Nictor bike.
I have no reason to defend them, but to slaughter them from this guy when we're not even
certain they did the thing that Boba is mad at them about was I think it was an odd
moment. All right, let's go to the start.
We need a, Steve, we need a spliced soundbite of Anakins'
infamous post-Tuskins slaughter reveal to the women and children too.
And not just the men.
The children.
But the women and the children, too.
Wow.
But to make it specific to Boba and the slaughter that he unleashed from above.
I mean, I will say the shot of the ship just kind of growing.
Oh, looks great.
Very cool.
But what's this the right thing to do for?
One of the videos I watched and I forget which one compared it to the Falcourt ending of never-ending story.
But those, like, those bullies just go in the dumpster.
They don't die on the sands of Tatween.
So, you know, anyway.
Left for dead on the sand of Tatween, you know.
Moving on from Bastion.
Yeah.
Let's go back to the pit.
Okay.
This raises another question.
Mm-hmm.
Which is, yep.
When we get these flashbacks,
whose point of view are we in?
Because in the flashback, okay, so Boba crawls out of the Sarlick Pit the first time.
He's in the armor.
He's groggy.
He's acid-ridden.
He's passing out.
All the sort of stuff that we see in the flashback, the jaw was come and take the armor from him,
which we knew they did because that's where, you know, the armor ended up.
But that's a flash, like, I'd assumed.
The flashbacks we were seeing were all from Boba's POV.
But apparently he does not remember that the Jawa's came.
And I'm fine with that except what flashback POV have we been watching this whole time.
But anyway, regardless.
He does not remember that the Jawa took the armory.
He thinks it might be in the Sarlac.
I have a lot of questions about the whole approach to the pit and why this was a good move.
I know Steve is particularly frosty about this.
Mallory, do you have any thoughts or feelings about...
the sarlac maneuver.
I do. I have a few. One of them is let's leave this
this sarlac in peace.
Let's let this sarlac rest. We have now
burned and sliced and crawled through the sarlac's
side to escape from the
underneath the sand. Boba's coffin, emerging anew.
We're getting
I love a seismic charge. Fun fact for you.
The seismic chart, one of Adams,
single favorite things in Star Wars.
Every time they unleash a seismic charge,
whether it's Attack of the Clones,
Mandelorian, he's just delighted.
So it was fun to see the seismic charge.
Did this Sarlac need to receive the seismic charge?
I thought it looked really cool.
Again, visually so much of the show
has been just really, like, scintillating
when Boba is lowering the fire spray above the pit.
But you just have so many questions again
about the logic.
To go back, I think the question that you're asking
is a great one about the point of view.
I had been thinking about it,
like just the,
the logistics of when he was awake and when he wasn't, what he would remember or why.
But to the point about the structure of the show and the fact that we know from the flashback
is that he has been processing that sequence so that we, as viewers, could see it at home.
It is then hard to kind of reconcile that if he doesn't remember it.
How can he be reliving it?
Is he not conscious of what he's revisiting?
Is that repressed in some way?
But, you know, he crawled out of the Sarlack during the day.
then it's nighttime when the javas arrived.
So time has passed, right?
They begin to strip him of his armor.
He's out.
He's asleep.
However, we see that he does briefly wake up and, like, reaches out and tries to attack
one of the javas.
That jawa then knocks him out cold, a hit to the head.
He's still passed out when the Tuscans find him in daylight, presumably from a combination of
the head wound, the sarlac acid, fatigue, hunger, and now being under the sun.
in the daylight, rough combo, right? Rough combo. You'd be forgiven for not retaining everything that
happened to you. They needed that worm juice, the Tuskins, to revive him, right? So maybe even though
he woke up, he was just incoherent and didn't retain that Jawa sequence. But then again, that gets
back to what you're posing, which is, I think, a great question. Like, how does he, why is it
implied that he remembers it in the flashback to sequence, regardless? Maybe the Bacta is healing him
on the inside.
Bringing it to the four.
Unerthing repressed memories.
I think that would actually be really interesting
and cool if that's the case.
In terms of just how the sequencing
of all this plays out though
in this episode in the first four episodes,
I think that, like, first of all,
I'm genuinely not sure why Boba Fett
thinks it is a good idea to spunk
down into a Sarlock pit uncovered.
Like, my guy needs a little lesson here on protection.
Boba.
Prophylaxis.
You got to cover up.
Okay.
You got to cover up.
A little PPE something, you know?
And again, like the time, the five-year part.
But like, here's one of the things I kind of couldn't shake with this in terms of that larger thing we've been discussing about, I guess how much stock we're supposed to be putting in at this point in Bob's wisdom and abilities.
And his ability is not just as a fighter, but as a tactician, as a strategist.
If he doesn't remember it, that's fine.
The audience knows the answer to this mystery.
Right. So it's dramatically, it's dramatically inert. Exactly. Exactly. Like, whether that is fair or not, it just makes this whole sequence lack a little bit of the umph that it would have if we were genuinely, it's sitting there right alongside Boba waiting to discover whether the armor was inside. And also, I think fair or not, it can't help but make us think again that Boba is a little bit rash, like a little bit hasty and unprepared in the decisions that he's making because we know the thing he's doing is wrong, even though he doesn't know that. So visually,
very cool sequence, but
a little bit of a head scratcher.
Tough follow up to the fireside
chat number two, which where we
mentioned he says we're smarter than
them and we're like, sir,
you are literally, your skin is literally
still burning from your last
tactical maneuver.
This is a moment
presumably that
he wins Fenwick over.
Don't feel like I see
big movement from her in this moment.
You know, she's skeptical.
And at the end of the chat, she still seems skeptical.
And so it's like, okay, we're going to see one more thing that's going to push her over the end.
But they're like, nope, you're healed.
No more flashback does, you know, like blah, blah.
So I don't know.
It's interesting because from Phoenix perspective, you know, if we think of what we know from
her introduction in the gunslinger and the Mandalorian and what we know about her canon
dating back, you know, 28 years prior in the timeline to the bad batch,
she's working as a bounty hunter, an assassin, a mercenary,
she's working with all of these crime syndicates.
But, you know, one of the things that she says to Boba in this episode is like,
hey, I'm happy to do jobs for you, but I'm independent, right?
She's a lone wolf.
She's on her own.
Seeing her just like Boba, the parallel path,
so obviously it's a little more accelerated in how we get to witness it with Fenwick,
move toward this embrace of partnership or teamwork or the idea of found family,
I'm into.
I thought that the part that I enjoyed most,
I think in that second fireside chat,
we get a lot of the attempts to answer
the larger questions that you've been posing
throughout the pot about why does Boba want this job
in the first place?
You know, what does he think it means
to be the head of a family?
What does it mean to be operating on Tatooine, etc.?
The part that I liked the most was
Boba explaining to Fenwick and to us
what value he places on the idea of tribe,
on the idea of found family.
You know, when he says the Tuskans took me in,
made me part of their tribe,
I was ready to leave hunting behind.
And we get that ensuing,
living with the Tuskins made you soft.
No, it made me strong.
You can only get so far without a tribe line.
Of course, there's a part of me that thinks like,
okay, well, that in a unpleasant way,
like reinforces maybe the introduction,
flushing out of the Tuskins
just to motivate Boba
that we talked about in chapter.
and how that was something that we hoped was not unfolding and wouldn't be the case, right?
And then there's the other aspect of it, which this is like a nice and important sentiment.
And for Boba, the unaltered clone son of Django, a famous fabled bounty hunter who lived
this solitary life to the point where the only thing he wanted when he became the template for
the clone army, Joe, was another version of himself, but another version of himself.
And yes, a son, but there's that like that kind of entangled spirit of individuality mixed into building out a unit.
And so to see Boba move beyond that, as he has done again, as we've noted across his canon with the bounty hunting units that he built with, Orof, again, tough hang, Basque, etc.
Moving on toward now the Tuscans and now Fennick, I think is nice and a part of the story that I enjoy.
So I liked that aspect of the fireside chat.
No, I like it. I just wish I could have seen, I wish I could really felt how it moved Fennec. You know what I mean? I'm not sure we saw that. And especially since they did it so well, that story so well in Mando, because Mando goes from Lonewolf to everyone's favorite daddy, you know? And so it's like, and that happens that that crest sort of breaks off over the course of a couple episodes. You know what I mean? And so I think I think that's the kind of thing that I would have.
of love to have seen here. The only thing there I quibble with is that I think Mando is introduced to
us as a lone wolf through that bounty hunting lens, but then we see with the covert and the way,
you know, that this Mandalorian creed and that sense of loyalty and found family, you know,
the foundlings, is really central to his heart and so it's an easy leap to make. But that only actually
affirms and supports what you're saying, which is like seeing what the thought process is fennick.
because, you know, the pitch is ultimately like one of practicality as much as it is one of sentiment.
Loyalty, I'll cut you in on the success and pledge my life to protect yours.
How long will that continue to be interesting to Fennick?
How long will that last?
When she is making the appeal and speechifying on behalf of Boba to the heads of the other families above the Rancorp pit,
it feels like she believes what she's saying and like she has opted in.
But how fully ingrained is that belief inside of her
and how much of this is sort of the, you know, the reality of the moment?
It's an interesting question.
I'd be curious to see how much time is devoted to that aspect in the final three episodes.
There's not a lot of show left.
No.
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Plus. Beth and Rip are back in a new series, Dutton Ranch. Kelly Riley and Cole has a
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How many times have you been hired to do a job that was avoidable?
If they only took the time to think,
how much money could have been made,
How many lives could have been saved?
Then you and I would be out of work.
I'm tired of our kind dying because of the idiocy of others.
We're smarter than them.
It's time we took our shot.
Let's talk about the present.
Let's do it.
I don't know why I went full palpy voice there.
Let's do it.
It's okay.
Oh, no, no.
I almost burdened you with a Venn diesel impression.
When Bobo was sitting by the fire side and talking about his tribe, I was like, I don't know, friends, I have family.
Like, that's, that's, I love it.
That's how Boba feels.
That's how Boba feels.
All fast impressions are welcome here at all times.
But so Boba gets out of the tank.
You know, we get the sort of heavy-headed dialogue of like, you're healed.
Like, that's it.
You're at full health, right?
Your mana is full.
But, so he says this line, power hates a vacuum, right?
And I was like, surely that's a.
reference to something. And I looked up and like the, I was like, what is this a, is that a famous
quote or whatever? I looked it up. Aristotle's famous quote is nature abhors a vacuum. That's,
that's like you'll find most references to nature abhors a vacuum, which means, you know,
if something goes away, something will rush into fill its place. Power Heights of vacuum is actually
a Favroian, a specifically Favroian turn on this because the other place you'll find power
Hades a Vacuum is in Mandalorian season two, Cobb Vance says it, about, you know, the people who rushed
in to replace the empire in his town. He says, power hates a vacuum and Moss Pelgo became a slave
camp over at night. So, you know, I don't know if this is just stuck in Favre's head as he thinks
that's what the quote is, or he likes that turn of phrase, or if he's drawing an intentional connection
between our favorite heart throb of the desert covance and boba but i thought that was like a fun
little parallel there i would like to thank everyone yes exactly who was a part of us for giving
you the excuse to put a screenshot of our guy timmy into the dock timmy and his neckerchief okay
let's talk about back to back in the sanctuary which is my favorite part of the entire episode right
what an incredible scene not just because of everything that happens with bK or
Chupac is our Midnight Boys call him.
All that stuff I think is incredible and fun.
For me, it's Garza Fipp.
For me, it's Garza Fipp and it's Jennifer Beals making an entire meal of this moment
where Garza is trying to handle B.K., trying to talk him down, trying to handle him,
putting on the charm and the smarm.
Steve called it condescending.
And, like, it is, but she's trying to manage him.
And she's trying to de-escalate a situation.
It doesn't work, but I really like Treffert.
I feel like she almost got it there.
And again, this is an example of good leadership, whereas Boba just stands there.
You know, to be fair to Boba, it looked like he was absolutely smitten and just frozen by his love for FIP.
And frankly, who can blame him?
Because I think we feel the same way.
She looked incredible too, like that the like shimmery white like wrap around her like headtails and everything.
Resplendent.
Where are you right now on FWIPP Theory Corner?
Like what do you still think we might get a reveal that she, I think that the way she's deployed, like it feels like something is coming.
It really does feel like something is coming and we'll learn more about her connections to the powers.
We're careful to visit her in almost every episode, but not make her overtly scheming.
And that's a perfect way to like, if she's the, like, in a murder mystery, if she were the killer revealed, we'd be like, yeah, we've seen her every week.
Right, exactly.
You can't get mad because it's, yeah, it's been there.
It's been there.
Did you pick up in this, in this attempt to, you know, function as handler, right?
Yeah.
Did you pick up on any bloodlust of her own, like a longing, a yearning, a yearning?
almost when she was talking about the bloodshed of yore,
like when she says in this more civilized place,
in these more civilized times,
what was once celebrated in the bloodlust of the arena
is now seen as horror and cruelty.
It felt like she was like reminiscent about the good old days,
or at least that that could be a potential read.
Now maybe she was just playing to her audience there.
But I think you could interpret it
as speaking to her own personal experience with a certain type of horror.
I got my eye on her for like 90 different reasons.
Yeah.
I can't look away.
Mesmerized.
Oh my God.
Do you ship Fip-Wip-Boh-Bah?
Where are you on the ship?
I ship Garsa Fwip with the wall.
Like she's like anyone, anyone in everything.
That potted plant that is just forever tackling in the corner of the sanctuary.
Like, yes.
Anything at all.
Boy.
It's a comfort to know that the transition limbs grow back.
so that the arm ripping off, of course, a reference to, like, Han Solo talking about Chewbacos and
stuff like that.
Love Baham Easter egg there.
That was great.
That's a lower stakes move that BK made there.
He didn't just, like, brutally murder a bunch of Trandotions in their territory, right?
We're in the city center, which is Trondotion territory.
But is, you know, he gets a job offer out of it.
It's a nice audition for a job.
A little faster return to Boba's side than I was expecting when we saw him low.
off into the desert.
We were fully into hay mate territory.
I loved it.
I loved it.
You know, it's, it's, I'm actually, I was glad because there, I would have been perfectly
ready to accept Boba making the job offer at the end of last episode, you know, right away.
And knowing that that Chrysanin is going to be a part of Boba's squad is, is just really
fun because he's such a cool character and I'm excited to see to see more.
You're a godfather scholar, Joe.
And you got some delightful godfather homage action here.
Super overt, yeah.
In the dinner sequence, in the gathering of the families.
The three families came.
We'll call it four families, I think,
because Boba is certainly working on the,
you know, we're the house of art.
He's the house of B, right?
He's launching his own house.
I got family.
Yeah.
Yep.
I love it.
What did you make of,
all of the different dynamics in this sequence.
The initial pitch that he makes to, that Boba and Fannick make to the three families,
their retort, which is in essence, the plikes aren't coming after us.
And also we're making a lot of money on spice, right?
Because his whole thing is, well, they're going to take over the entire planet.
Right.
They're a threat to us all.
His complete readiness to immediately recant then and go with another strategy, which I have some notes on.
and the rancor intimidation tactic
because I liked that
for various reasons
obviously shots to my rancor
but felt like a blend
of the Boba rule with respect
which is the diplomacy at play in the dinner
and Fennix
rule with fear
like he's starting to listen to her
a little bit more
with a moment like that
he's not sitting on the throne
he's sitting down with them
right beneath the throne
wants to be a man of the people
says I'm not interested in tribute
even though we just saw him take tributes
but isn't above
spooking them a little bit.
Here's what I'll say about, so
I've been, you know,
putting my phone on the gas about the godfather parallels
throughout our discussions here.
This is the most direct parallel.
A lot of people have pointed
it out because this scene
in the first godfather film where Vito
meets with the heads of the families at a long table
similar, and they talk about the drug trade,
literally the drug trade and Vito does not want
to deal drugs and he is seen as
behind the times and the other heads of the families.
and the mob want to deal drugs.
All of that's in there.
But here's where I think they made a mistake
in drawing such a clear parallel
between that godfather scene
and this scene is because in that scene,
what Vito is doing
is actually trying to read the room
of like, who is the real power here.
And I talked about this in a previous episode,
that's something that both Michael and Vito Corleone
do in The Godfather
are really clever at ferreting out
who is the real puppet master.
And in that dinner,
you've got one character, the head of the Tatalia family,
he's doing all the talking.
But it's kind of clear that this other character Barzini is sort of directing from behind.
So I was looking for parallels of that.
Like, it kind of felt to me like Phil Lamar's character, the Clotunian head of family,
felt like he had a little bit more power at the table,
even though he was doing less talking than the Trandotian leader.
And so if Bobo walked away from that dinner and was like, I sense that the real power is this or I ferreted this out or that out.
But he doesn't.
He walks through from the dinner.
And he's like, well, I think my plan kind of worked.
And I'm like, I don't think so.
They promised neutrality and I don't believe them.
And so again, it doesn't put Bova in a position where he seems like the smartest leader, like the most strategic leader, you know.
Yeah, totally.
He, when they're debriefing on the balcony, Bobo and Fennick after, and she asked, you know, do you trust them?
Like when they say, you know, they abide by the agreement to not team.
Oh, okay, you don't want to work with me.
Fine.
Just don't team up with the Pikes against me.
Yeah.
He says, I trust them to work in their own self-interest.
My deal is a lot better than what the syndicate can offer.
They may be stubborn, but they're foolish enough to see the Pikes would eventually take over the whole planet.
either way we must prepare for war.
I think you're really onto something here
because one of the
tendencies Boba has, I think,
is to assume that other people
are thinking the same way he is, right?
And you gotta know your enemies
or your potential allies.
Better than that.
And, you know,
speaking of the Godfather cops
that you're making, which are great,
and so illuminating,
Boba doesn't go into, you know, make him an offer,
he can't refuse territory.
He says, in essence, I'm going to make them an offer.
They can't refuse.
And if they do, I'll immediately change the offer.
Immediately.
Immediately.
That's Boba's approach here.
And that's not going to be the way ultimately to earn their respect.
I think this gives us the payoff at the end of the episode,
which makes it all so worth it.
The Mandalorian music kicking in
when Boba's asking about treasure
and then, you know, we get the line from Boba
about how he's got plenty of credits,
when I'm short on his muscle.
Credits can buy muscle if you know where to look.
Deem kicks in.
Is that Mandos music?
And the sea of possibilities opens up.
I mean, we got so many questions
from people in our mailback submission.
about when we'll see Dan or who else might be in the mix.
We're going to talk about that we can do it now.
We can do it in theory corner.
We can do it in the mailbag.
We can do it anywhere.
But that's an exciting concluding note for the episode and to circle back to that big
picture point you made at the beginning.
I think it's a moment that gives us a lot of hope.
My knowledge may vary because I think there were probably plenty of viewers who are like,
I don't want this to ultimately turn into the Mandalorian show.
That feels like an inversion maybe of what I wanted the Boba Fett show to be.
But I'm delighted and simply cannot wait.
And I think the fact that all of these shows exist in the same timeline
and are building toward that climactic event that we keep hearing about,
these connections are something that I've actually been looking forward to
and am ready for.
So whether that's next week, whether that's in Chapter 6,
or whether it's something that happens in the finale
and the culminating event of the season,
I can't fucking wait.
My first thought, like, Dan is obviously our first thought when we hear the Bovath.
But when she says, like, credits buying muscle,
My first thought about that is Grief Carga.
Like, my first thought is that if I were looking for muscle, I wouldn't necessarily go to, like, my semi-retired pal who's grieving the loss of his kid.
You know what I mean?
I might go visit Carl Weathers and slap some credits on the table and see what I can find.
But either way, I mean, I'm sure Din is coming.
When is he coming?
That's a good question.
Yeah, I think that Grief Carga is definitely in the mix.
I mean, maybe Mando would bring him.
I mean, grief's busy over with his own affairs on Navarro,
but he's always up for a new adventure as well.
It's fun to think about Mando not only because it's Mando,
but he's got the Dark Sabre.
Could that come into play here?
I think it would be slightly strange to deploy that outside of the Mandalorian season three,
given how central that seems likely to be to that story.
But what about, what about Bo?
Oh, sure.
You know, Night Owls.
Yeah, Night Owl hive.
Like, I think a lot of people have been, you know,
there's been a lot of theorizing and chatter on Twitter
in the interwebs about this over the last couple days.
But in terms of how Boba Fett and the Mandalorian
ultimately relate to each other,
like it could be cool to see
Din, Bo, et cetera,
come help here.
And then we know that Boba and Fenwick
because of the deal they struck with Mando in season two,
they're up for an arrangement, right?
A debt can be paid.
And there could be some quid pro quo.
So if they come help here, credits or otherwise,
maybe Boba then,
even with his own territory to worry about,
Maybe he helps in the eventual efforts to win Mandelor, which could bring all of these together
toward that culminating event in some way.
Also, though, credits, of course, makes you think a bounty hunter.
So that gets back to the delightful Cadbane theorizing that we like to return to at least
10 times per episode every single week.
What about Basque?
Bobas old pal Basque.
I mean, the big Basque clue in this episode, I mean, yeah, let's get into it.
Sure.
So a lot of options here.
The Bosque clue that a lot of people are talking about, many people are saying,
is that the reason we're leaning so heavily on BK's hatred of Trandotions is he's going to have to work with Bosk,
and that's going to be a source of tension.
So Bosque showing up, Cadbane showing up, probably not on the side of our heroes,
but maybe, who knows, you never know.
Cobbvan, Cobb v. Cadbane?
Like, like, let's dream a scenario where it's like the end, like, the end of Avengers Endgame.
And we are matching baddies and goodies and stuff like that.
Like, would you not die to see a Cadbane Cobbant gunslinger off?
Right?
Like, that would be incredible, right?
Joe, that's just, that's our shared fanfic right there.
That's like to see if, I don't know if we'd survive that episode if we get it.
If Kira shows up, as we've been talking about this whole thing, if Kira shows up with her incredible fighting style versus the Dark Sabre.
Like, you know, there's just like a whole bunch of options here.
What is the upper limit on the number of guest stars we might see for a finale like this?
And if we saw something like that, if we brought in Kavant and Basque and Kat and Kira and Han Solo and like whoever, like if all of them are here for the finale, is anyone going to remember the first four episodes of this season where they weren't too.
high on the supply what Bobo was serving.
I don't think so.
That would be, that would be the only thing that we could think about for quite some time.
I mean, there's sort of, so you're outlining two different camps of character arrivals that we could get.
There's the maybe more near-term answer to this question with the Mandalorian music queue of who they're going to ask to come help them.
Because Kira isn't entering the story to help them.
She'd be a pho.
She would be opposed to them.
So this maybe is going to build in waves where maybe in chapters five,
end or six, we get Mando, we get Bo coming to help, we get Basque, whatever the case may be,
and then the FIPP or Mayor or Kira, whatever this ultimate reveal is and how all of these
theories that we have do or do not connect to the actual plot inside of the show currently to
this point with the bikes, who's working together, who's pulling the strings.
Maybe that's the arrival that we get in chapter seven.
there's a lot of
I was going to spoil something
from another show I shouldn't do that
I was going to say maybe we'll
maybe we'll see Kira in a screenshot
in a thumbnail and a text message
at the end of
oh my god
the pen ultimate episode before the finale
what a decision remember that good time
different canon
okay this is a spoiler question
I know again I know no spoilers for the show
I've heard the listeners
of the ring ofverse
they're not fun when I know what's coming
and so I've been
trying to say very pristine for the show.
But my question are things that actors said in interviews on the table for speculation discussion.
I think that any, here's my feeling on this.
Leaks, we don't, we don't mention.
But something that is actual text, whether it's source text from a comic or a book that we
can bring into heighten the understanding or something that somebody who's involved in the project
said, completely fair game.
Of course, we should be parsing those for clues.
All right, since we're hanging out in Theory Corner and thinking about how,
big could this finale go?
Here's a couple things
that were said in interviews. Number one,
Timor Morrison
talked about how talented
a double he had
and how there was one sequence
where his double had to work
really hard. And so
my question is, are we going to see
other clones?
Could Rex
show up or someone else
from the Clone Wars?
Was something like that happen
in the finale.
I mean, I would love seeing Rex.
I adore seeing Rex.
You know, we, we obviously,
Rex is one of the main characters in Clone Wars.
We,
Blanket Star Wars,
spoiler issued at the top of the show.
This is,
this is well within bounds,
but just to say it,
Bad Bad Bad Bad Batch,
which is like super fun.
And of course,
down the road,
Rex is in rebels.
So we're with Rex over a large swath of the cannon,
though not this far into the cannon.
So that would be,
that would be a real treat.
And then I'll want to Soka,
because of the Rex Soka Bonn.
Sure, sure.
Here's another thing that happened, an interview.
Timor Morrison, they were talking about, like, he was asked, I think it was a BuzzFeed interview.
He was asked, you know, what was your most, like, favorite thing to work with or enjoyable thing on set or whatever?
And he said, the Ewoks, they were funny.
Ming Na Wen was on this call, on Zoom.
You could see the video.
And she's like, they were funny.
And it was really odd because there are two possibilities here.
One, there are Ewox in this show, and they talked about it.
If you watch the video, he doesn't say in a way that it seems like he's messing with people
or just dropping like a fake spoiler in there to like, you know, whatever.
And she doesn't react in a way of like.
Terian throwing out three marriage proposals to.
Yeah, and she doesn't react in a way that's like, what are you talking about?
Or you got the name wrong they were Jawa's or something like that.
Mingna Wen is like, they were funny.
So are there going to be Ewox in this show?
And again, if we get a finale with freaking Cobvan, Cadbane and Kira and all this.
I'm like, I don't want to Ralph Boner myself into a corner here and like over promise and under deliver.
But if there are fucking Ewoks on this show, honestly, again, 100%.
Is anyone going to remember the time we spent in the desert that they didn't care about?
Real time inspiration here because of this incredible nugget that you have just dropped.
closing scene, okay?
The Ewoks that you have just introduced
into the possibility set.
Gather around at the sanctuary.
And Garza Fwip says,
Hey, can I introduce you to my own friend, Max?
And we get a Max Remo band
Ewok mashup remix of Yubnub.
Oh my God. If they bring Yubna up back.
Do we have any musically inclined of people
on the Zoom.
The Jiz cover,
the Jiz cover of Yubnam?
Love Jiz cover, Joe.
Love it.
Love Jiz cover.
It's the worst thing that Star Wars is ever done.
All right.
So that's, I mean,
that was basically our theory corner,
but let me just say that.
Any other theories?
The last thing to say about that
is that if we believe
that the Pikes were actually
behind the death of the Tuskins,
if that is,
that is the case.
I'm trying to suss out a satisfying reveal of that.
Phil Lamar, we know, was voicing the head of the pikes.
He's doing double duty, right?
Just like Robert Rodriguez.
He's playing the clitunian leader and voicing the head of the pikes in the flashback.
Whatever that took place because we could not constantly say it was 5AVY.
Whatever it is that Bobo went to go see the pikes in the past.
That was Phil Lamar in charge.
I'm sure they'll bring him back because it's Phil Lamar, right?
But is there a moment where a pike saying to Boba, you know who really killed your Tuscan family?
It wasn't the Nicto bikers.
It was me.
I'm having trouble envisioning that scene.
I feel like that we're going to get something like that, yes.
Whether they will say it to him in boastful fashion or he will unearth it somehow, that reveal feels like one that has to come.
I hope he finds his notebook with just like his scribbled plans.
and it was like frame Nicto bikers for Tuscan death.
Or again, maybe they deployed them because they were paying protection to them.
So there was some working relationship there already.
It's not the Pike reveal there wouldn't necessarily mean that the NICDos weren't a part of it.
But the Pike reveal does feel inevitable.
We need to get that Pike reveal before we can then get the reveal that the Pikes are not the ones actually in charge.
Yeah, that's Cura and Crimson.
You know who you really need for a reveal like that?
You need to call up somehow.
Palpatine return to the show.
Because if you've got Ian McDiarmine saying,
I'm afraid you'll find it was the pikes who kills your family.
I mean, that works.
But other than that...
We've reached the end of the list of character returns I'm interested in seeing.
With that submission.
Somehow Palpatine returns.
I have found that even I have a limit.
Really quickly, since I read a whole ass comic book for this.
I read a great comic book, by the way.
I wasn't sure that I would enjoy it.
Okay.
So there's this moment where
Boba talks about how he wants to take his revenge.
Says something fatphobic about Bib Fortuna
and then says for betraying him.
And a lot of us sat up and were like,
we double-crossed me.
Hold up.
When did Bibb Fortuna double-crossed?
We have no evidence of that in the film canon.
When did this happen?
The best answer that most people on the internet could come up with
is a comic that came out in 2021, Star Wars, Colon, War, the bounty hunters, a comic run.
So I read this last night to find answers.
Honestly, the answer isn't actually in there because, like, Bib Fortune is in there,
and there's some double-crossing happening, but the comic is never like, and it was Bibb who portrayed Boba in this way.
That being said, rip-roaring adventure.
Let me just, like, quickly summarize this for you.
This comic book takes place.
So we all know the Empire Strikes Back
ends with Han Solo going in the Carbonite
And we all know the Return of the Jedi
starts with the Busting Hans Solo out of the Carbonite
But what is true
Is that some time has passed
Luke has become a Jedi at this point
Like Staling Carbonite's side quest
So what happened is that Boba loses
Someone comes and steals the carbony
Okay no here's the best part
Sorry I'm gonna get to
this really quickly, I promise. But here's the best part. Had Solo, Harrison Ford,
so hot, he starts to thaw in the carbonite when he's in Boba's care. Yeah. And the thread
is that he's going to turn to goop. He's going to turn to goo if Boba doesn't get him refrozen.
So Boba goes and gets him refrozen. And there's a whole side plot of Boba fighting in a tournament
in an arena. It's great. And we see, again, we see over and over in this comic, what a badass
Boba Fed is, this is the element that I've been missing, which is to see Boba at the top of his game.
And he is really great.
Action-wise and his strategy in this comic book adventure.
While he's in fighting in the arena, Han gets stolen from him from, you know, where he was getting him fixed.
And so then we've got this big adventure where the person who stole Han was, drumroll,
Kira and Crimson Don, they have Han.
and Kira makes this great point where she's like, Han Solo.
He has connections to literally everyone, the empire, the rebels, dark Afra, blah, blah, blah.
And so we get this big auction, Crimson Dawn auction.
The title of this issue is called The Scoundrel's Ball.
Incredible title for an issue of a comic book.
Where Kira.
I love it.
To like establish herself as the head of Crimson Dawn holds an auction for Han.
and everyone converges, the huts are there.
Everyone is there to try to get Han for themselves.
Vader shows up.
Vader and Kira fight.
It's amazing.
Boba Fett sets Chubaka on fire at one point to get him out of the way.
Not good.
Lando ruins his favorite cape putting the fire of Chui out.
It's a whole thing.
And I mean, it's just like a really, really fun
adventure and at the end of it, you know, Boba gets Han back through again,
extreme action prowess and strategy and delivers him to Java.
But in the course of that, someone put a bounty out on Boba Fett.
The implication is maybe it was like Java kind of says that he did it.
But I guess the idea is that maybe Bib Fortune is the one who put a bounty on Boba
because Boba lost Han.
And so Boba in trying to get Han back
is fighting off all these other bounty hunters
while he's doing it because someone has put
this astronomical bounty on his head.
So did I find a super, super
satisfying answer to the Bib Fortuna thing?
No. Did I have a great time
with like a cast of thousands
in this adventure? I did.
I really recommend it. Great comic.
It feels like one more
bit of supporting evidence that Kira is coming.
Honestly.
Huge, huge.
Because there are a number of
ways to account for why Boba wanted to go after Bibb or what had what had gone awry there.
And to point specifically to comics canon where a cure of reveal unfolds feels super deliberate
in terms of what this is priming us for and not just priming us overtly, but in a way where we're
like seeking it out, right?
Seeking out that information and then your mind starts racing.
And this just feels like this is going to happen.
Can I be.
the only other
I love that
The Easter eggs in this show have been
delightful
It's true
Ben time
Just like hearing some notes
Of the Mando theme song at the end
And Ben we should come up with a theme song
For you when you're gonna come
It should just be like
Do do do do too too
Ben's here
So Ben
Lindberg is here to tell us
A little bit about that ship
That we saw in this episode
We've been seeing throughout
Ben what can you tell me
about Boba's fire spray ship.
Yeah, let's talk about Boba's starship
because many Tuskans died to bring us this transportation.
The important thing to keep in mind, I think,
is that this is not just a ship to Boba.
It's the closest thing he's had to a home for most of his life.
So we know from the bad batch that Topoka City,
where he grew up with his dad and lived for a while is long gone.
So he couldn't visit for old home week, even if you wanted to.
And remember the flashback to Camino that Boba keeps having,
he is watching his father fly away in that ship over and over again, which seems to be a traumatic
memory for him.
And to him, the ship is closely linked to Django.
So when he loses the ship, he must feel like he's losing his dad again.
It's one of his last links to Django, along with his armor and I guess his own DNA.
And there's a moment in the War of the Bounty Hunters comic where Boba has a price on his
head and a couple bounty hunters, Zuckus and Forlom or four LOM, as some call him, are hunting him.
and they search and booby trap the ship.
And when Fet finds out, he says, you didn't just hurt my ship, you went inside.
This is a real violation for him.
So they tell him they barely did any damage.
And Boa says, still, the disrespect, that vessel belonged to my father.
And then he escapes by activating the ship's cannons with his wrist pad, which shows how
closely the armor and ship are linked to each other and to Django in his mind.
This is his inheritance in a very real way.
So you can imagine how he feels when he loses both his armor.
and his ship, and he finds out that Bifortuna has had the ship stashed away in his palace for
years. So just to give you a bit of background on the ship itself, it was formerly named
Slave 1, of course, a name that first appeared in the 1980 novelization of the Empire Strikeback,
and then of the Empire Strikes Back, and then was popularized by a 1981 Kenner Toy, and then
went on to be used in various sources, including a couple episodes of the Clone Wars. So the ship was
never named in the movie the Empire Strikes Back. And in fact, the bounty hunters weren't even in
the first draft of Empire. And even after they showed up in the second draft, the ship was not
described. It was just implied that he had to have a ship to transport Han. And BobaFed
himself was never named in the final cut of the Empire Strikes Back, which is pretty wild when you
think about it. I don't know that. His name's not in the movie. He had been named in the holiday
special, but that aired one time in the U.S. a year and a half before Empire came out. And then
the first Boba Fett action figure debuted in 1979. So certainly many people knew who he was,
but anyone who was just kind of walking into the theater coming in cold would have known only
that he was a bounty hunter. And for them, that was enough, I guess. I kind of admire the way that
George Lucas would often intentionally keep his characters' backstories murky or just hint at
their histories a little bit because it kind of made the galaxy feel alive and left a lot to the
imagination. So now, of course, the ship is known as the fire spray, which is a reference
to its class. It's a fire spray 31 class patrol and attack craft. It's not totally clear yet whether
its name is also fire spray. There was a recent comic cover that suggested that it might be,
but so far in this series, we've only heard Boba call it my fire spray gunship. I actually
kind of like it if he officially renamed it, not just to clear up any canon confusion, but because
kind of would make sense for the story, right? I mean, now that he's not a bounty hunter,
he's stepping out from his father's footsteps.
It would be fitting for the ship to be rechristened as well.
And naming it after the class of ship it is wouldn't be the most creative solution, I guess.
But Boba's a pretty no-nonsense guy.
Fire spray sounds cool.
And he doesn't really have to refer to it by name all that often.
So fine with me.
And behind the scenes, the ship was designed as so many things in Star Wars were by Ralph McQuarrie,
as well as Joe Johnston and Nilo Rodas Jemero.
The early designs were based on a radar.
our dish that Rada Stramero had seen.
So that's why it has that weird distinctive shape.
It was more ball-shaped originally, and then it became a little elongated and elliptical later
and ended up looking like the iron that we know and love.
And there was a detailed model that they made for Empire, and they thought they put all this
work into it that it would be reused in Return of the Jedi.
But the ship didn't make the cut, ultimately.
However, there is that beautiful shot of the ship in Empire, just in profile on the Cloud City landing
platform as Boba escorts the carbonite slab into the hold. And that was a combination of a
photograph model of the ship and map paintings and live action footage. So that's the behind the
scene story. Just a quick bit of in-universe info. Here's what we know about the fire spray class.
It was designed by Kuat Systems Engineering, which also made the Jedi Starfighters seen in
Attack of the Clones and Revenge of the Sith. So when the ship goes up against Obi-Wan and
attack of the clones. That's Kuat on Kuat crime there. And fire sprays were used to guard this
high-security Republic detention facility on a prison moon called Uvo-4, and Django stole it while he was on a
job there. And the current canon doesn't go into great detail about how exactly that happened,
but there is a video game called Star Wars Bounty Hunter, which is turning 20 this year. Happy
Birthday. And it actually lets you play that level where Django steals the ship,
with the help of the bounty hunter who tries to kill Padme in Attack of the Clones,
Zam Wessel, as it's said in the game.
And that game's not canon anymore, but Tem Morrison voices Django in it,
so it's canon for me.
I consider it real.
And in the game, there are six prototypes of the fire spray produced for this prison.
Jango destroys all of them, except the one he steals.
I've never seen a ship like this.
What is she anyway?
She's a fire spray pursuit special, one of seven.
Six prototypes manufactured for the prison.
She's the last of her kind now.
Won't the correctional authority hunt her down?
I've deactivated her transponder.
I'll assume she was destroyed with the rest.
We're in the clear.
We're ready for the jump to light speed.
Let's see what she can do.
So his is the only one left in the galaxy until many years later.
Yeah, when they manufacture more to capitalize on the fame of FETS fire spray.
But in current cannon, there are a few other examples running around there.
Uvo4, this detention planet, it's an asteroid-ridden region of space, so the unusual configuration
of the fire spray may have made it easier to operate there. It lands horizontally, of course,
with the engines facing the surface and the cockpit facing up. So you have some blood rush to your
head when you're sitting there on the landing platform. Then the ship rotates in the air so that the
cockpit faces forward and the engines face the rear. And the Mandalorian gave us a great look at how that
works on the inside. There's a gyroscopic rotating compartment and reorienting artificial gravity
on the inside. So that keeps the passengers from falling all over the place or getting space sick
while it's in flight. And because it was a prisoner transport, it had holding cells, which
made it perfect for a bounty hunter like Django. So that blue and white color scheme it has in the
prequels, it matches Django's armor. And that gets changed later by the pirate Hondo Onaka, who
Yes, one of the great characters of the Clone Wars.
He has control of the ship for a little while after Boba gets captured by the Jedi and Asoka
slices off one of the ship's wings in the Clone War Season 2.
So Hondo rebuilds.
Tough feet there for RSA.
Yeah, Hondo rebuilds and repaints the ship in that olive green and brown that we know and
love.
And that happens by the time it reappears in season five and then Boba gets it back.
Honda, branding genius.
Right.
He is.
He is. He had that Kenner toy in mind, I guess.
So all of the original parts were upgraded or replaced over the years by Django or Boba.
So it has the souped up shields and sensors and the Class 1 hyperdrive and tractor beam and a signal jammer.
And then armaments-wise, you've got everything.
It has a little bit of all the ways that you can kill things in Star Wars.
So you got your blaster cannons and the tail.
You got your front-facing laser cannons.
You got your projectile launchers, your proton torpedoes, your ion cannons, your concussions, your concussion.
missiles. And of course, you've got your seismic charge. Everyone's favorite weapon. I would love to
say that the most memorable sound in my life was when I heard my daughter's cry for the first time.
But if I'm being honest. Ben, don't do it. Don't do it. Jesse's going to listen to this.
It was definitely when Django dropped the seismic charge on Obi-One. We all remember where we were
the first time we heard that sound. Maybe sound designer, Ben Burt's best work. And for the sound of
ship taking off an empire, he has disclosed that he combined the sound of a trumpet with the horn
of his 1971 Dodge Duster, but he has not yet revealed how he made that distinctive twang in the
seismic charge. The brang, the twang, the brang is still a trade secret. He will take that to
his grave, or at least he is still taking it with him. So he had tried to make a similar sound
that he called a space-ether explosion for the destruction of Thai fighters in episode four.
But George Lucas didn't like him.
So years later, he sat on that idea.
He returned to this audio black hole concept that sucks in the sound and then lets it escape after a second of silence.
It's like thunder after lightning.
So aside from the blaster cannons, all the weaponry is hidden on this ship.
So much like Boba's armor, it's more lethal than it looks.
And also like Boba, it's not the speediest in the legends continuity.
I think it was said to be about...
Faster than a bantha.
Yeah, well, definitely faster than a bantha.
We could walk faster than a panther.
But it was said to be about as fast as a Y-wing bomber, which is fast for its size,
but not ideal in a dog fight.
So it's more about blowing stuff up than outrunning you or out-maneuvering you.
So that's about all we know about the fire spray.
Maybe we will learn more.
But I will leave you with this thought.
if Mando does return, he may have a hot new ride of his own because, of course, the razor crest was destroyed.
So maybe something smaller now that Grogu is gone and Mando's an empty nester doesn't need quite as much room.
Wow, that went from exciting to depressing really quickly.
A swinging bachelor pad for Mando.
It needs to have enough room for Grosu to visit, hopefully.
But stay tuned for future Starship.
developments. Incredible has always been.
Three follow-up notes. One, glad you mentioned a Dodge because Joanna has mentioned the Fast and
the Furious saga multiple times today already. So a Dodge Duster mentioned right at home today.
I think that the, despite the rundown of all of the weapons, felt like a waste when
Boba needlessly deployed a missile on the already largely dead, viciously murdered speeders.
And, you know, while I appreciate your candor, and this is always a safe space for you to share with us and our listeners, that was a tough beat for your beautiful newborn daughter.
I've gotten...
When you said that the sounds of the seismic charge were your favorite of all time.
The charm of her cries has worn off slightly over the past few months.
The first one was special.
Tough affair.
Ben, I follow your wife on Instagram, and she just recently posted an Instagram story for close friends only, so we should probably cut this from the pod of you singing to your baby.
It was wonderful.
Wonderful.
It was a very sweet moment.
I'm just saying the seismic charge means a lot to me too.
Thank you, Ben.
My pleasure.
Thanks, Ben.
Joanna, we're almost at the mailbag.
But before we hear from the listeners,
it's time to hear from that little Kevin Feigey inside of our minds.
Secret Scroll Watch.
There you got.
I'm going to give it to the Mod Doctor.
himself.
That's my pick too.
Okay, great.
We're very much in sync with these lately.
Moving along.
I mentioned this on another pod this week,
but I will mention it here as well
that I'm officially putting Steve Levy
on Secret Scroll Watch
or some sort of scroll-Kree war watch
after the way he said Marvell
during Rams Cardinals
heading into the Moon Night trailer.
Very notable.
Yeah.
Milbag time.
Milbag.
Jomey.
Jomey.
The first question is,
technically for you, so we'll actually read it to you and you can answer it and then we'll
go back to answering them. Timmy asks, did Phoenix mini probe droid feel like a nod to Shield Tech
given the director's agents of Shield Connection?
You know, I didn't think about it while watching the episode, but now that it all, you know,
blends together.
It does remind me of the dwarf
the dwarf drones that
Fitz would use
in the early seasons. This is
a, that's a tough one.
That, that, that, that, that,
it brings back memories.
It brings back memories.
That's for you, man.
That's for you.
A little bit of closure there.
Via, via,
via, well,
spy droid.
Malina Mae memories.
Yeah, everybody gets their shows back.
Daredevil, you know,
and I got a,
you know,
Aged as Sealed is just,
is dead in the mud,
you know,
tough.
It's a tough scene.
It's a tough scene.
I'm sorry,
it's okay.
It happens to the best of us,
you know.
All of our,
all of our agendas,
either,
you know,
flourish or perish.
No.
The old flourish,
parish parish binary.
Well,
we got,
we got a whole bunch of questions
about one thing.
So this is what we're going to
cover in this mailbag.
Everybody, Nick,
Lauren, Kahar
wants to know who's coming
back. Who
have we seen in the Star Wars universe is coming
back? Nick wants to know is
Omega coming back.
Kahar wants to know what are the chances to
bat bathe are coming.
And Lauren asks,
are we on Grogu Watch?
Hashtag Grogu Watch.
Oh boy. I personally am always on Grogu Watch.
So we got a ton of questions about who, about Mando and Bo and everyone else that we, you know, already kind of covered earlier today.
But we had this whole other cluster of questions about other characters show that we haven't hit on yet.
This is interesting.
I think that we will not see Grogu as much as I would love to.
I do not think we will see him.
I can't allow myself to imagine that we'll see him.
No, Grogu, but I don't think we'll have to wait long in Mando season three to see Grogue.
Right.
But that would be the moment.
That's going to be from the Mando show, not the Boba show.
Yeah.
I'm really interested in the questions about Omega and the Bad Batch.
My instinct is no, we will not see either,
or we will not see any member of the Bad Batch of Clone Force 99, Omega, or otherwise.
Because I think that that would just tell us, basically,
whether those characters lived, like how far they made it past the canon of the Bad Batch.
You know, we're not that far away from getting Season 2 of the Bad Batch.
That series is set right on the heel.
of Order 66, and so there's a long stretch of canon between where the bat batch is set and what we're seeing here,
and to know that Omega or Hunter or anyone else is still out there. Nearly three decades later would just be too much to tell us, right?
I do think that Omega will come up at some point. Still, I don't think we'll see Omega, but I think Omega will come up because the fact that Omega and Boeba are both Django clones and Fennec was deployed to find Omega.
in the Bad Batch, that tie that Omega represents between Fenwick and Boba feels like something
that has to surface at some point in the plot of this show. I'd love it, but I don't know that they're
going to be like, you have a sister.
Side chat, maybe. You have a sister, folks at home. It's like in a comic book when you get
like the asterisk and it's like asterisk, see season one of the Bad Bad Bad Badge. Watch all of it.
I think we talked about this on the Midnight Boys, but if Groger were to come back,
would you want to see him with like a big like normal sized lightsaber
or like a tiny little baby lightsaber
like a chopstick type thing?
I think he should have like Asoka has the like double saber
that like too tiny.
The Shoto Saber.
Yeah, two tiny ones that that like connect together for a big one.
That's what I would hope.
Oh my God.
A tiny lightsaber for Grogu.
I seeing Goelho wield a lightsaber for the first time,
hopefully in season three of the Mandalorian is one of the things
that I genuinely look forward to most in life.
sincerely.
It's not too proud to say that out loud.
I see the vision.
I see the vision.
We have a special question.
Oh, boy.
TD, come on in.
You have a question for the people.
What's up, people?
House of R is so glad to being here.
I think this is my first time
since it was previously working title
mentioned House of M.
I'm excited to be here.
Is this a normal reaction?
I have a fun question.
I have a fun question.
And, you know, very recently in the Midnight Boys,
we talked about leadership.
And this question is inspired by the conversation
you guys just had on the pod discussing, you know,
the black melon.
And it's something we all like.
It's food related, right?
And so it's a fandom food question.
Oh, my goodness.
And it goes.
Okay.
What food slash edible drink, dish, whatever,
in all the fandom,
are you most waiting in the line?
for. I have some options.
You can fill in the blanks too if you want to.
Here are the four options that I got.
Yeah.
The Matrix steak, Van talks about this at a time.
Yeah, that's a great one.
Amazing steak.
The Game of Thrones are more specifically the hounds chickens.
You know, he loves his chickens.
Loves him.
Willing to fight for him.
Willing to kill for.
He loves those fucking chickens.
Yeah. Absolutely.
Yeah.
The classic post-credit scene, the Avengers show armor scene that we all know
was shot post-premian.
I love me a good show armor.
Love an attempt to hide a beard.
Yeah.
There you go.
And then a good old rabbit stew from Lord of the Rakes.
Those are the four options you have, but you can fill in your own option.
Whoa, Charles Holmes is jumping in.
Charles Holmes on the midnight boys, he might have.
Poo!
Poo!
What's going on, T.D.
What's happening?
What's happening?
T.D., you thought you were coming on to say goodbye to us, but we've got a farewell for you.
Whoa.
Well, we'll answer your food question.
Yeah, we'll answer your food question and say, I got to get, I mean, we've already mentioned him once in the pot.
I'm going to mention him again.
My guy Sam Wys Gamji, there's no one else I would trust in all of fandom to feed me.
Then Sam, do you remember they're like deep on their journey?
And Sam's like still all the way up the side of Mount Doom.
He still has his cast iron pots on.
his backpack. He does not throw them away
until the last few
steps of his journey. This man knows
his way around. He has a box of seasoning with him
the whole time. This man knows how to season
a stew. He is committed.
Anything that he wants to cook.
I don't like the way that he
calls rabbits. Coney's. It sounds
off to me, but
I will eat the rabbit stew with
the taters, yes. I'll go for
the raw fish, the gallum bites
right into, pulled fresh out of
spring. Now, just kidding. That would be weird.
and a wriggling.
I don't know
juicy.
Oh, he definitely would.
He would love it.
He would love it.
You know, I got to, if we're talking about
fictional food stuff,
so I've got to,
I've got to go with a butter beer,
of course.
I have to pick a butter beer.
Not from your list,
but I just let delicious,
warm, soothing, wonderful.
Mal is always going to be the sweet
and I'm always going to be the savory.
I think that's true of us.
Charles, do you have a fictional,
a fictional food?
You didn't hear the nominations on TD's list.
I already had the one off top.
The bugs that Timon and Pumba eat and Lion King,
it always looks so good.
It tastes like chicken, right?
He's still very satisfied.
I always wanted him as a kid.
I'm like, that was a really good.
Great pick.
I don't want to go anywhere near the,
in terms of your list, TD,
I don't want to go anywhere near the hounds chickens
because there's too much horror
and bloodshed around those chickens at all times.
That's not a relaxing meal.
I'm looking for some leisure time with my snacks.
However,
Hot Pie never neglect the gravy.
Anything that Hot Pie wants to make for me.
This is a good bread.
You've got to brown the butter.
Do not neglect the gravy.
That's what I'm going to pick.
I'm switching my pick in real time, inspired by Joe.
I'm going with the wolf bread.
The whole that hot pie makes Ferrari.
This is my pick.
So precious.
But not lamprey pie.
Or honestly, any pie in Game of Thrones.
I'm not eating.
It might have a person in it.
It might have an eel in it.
I don't want it.
You can't trust it.
No.
That's amazing.
Great calls.
Great calls.
But hey,
it's been a pleasure.
It's been a joy.
And that's something we all did in addition to watching movies and TV shows talking about it.
When we had a chance,
we would meet up and break some bread and, you know,
break down with the no way home movie or turnos that we just watched.
And, you know, when you guys can, I'm more than happy to hop in and do that once again.
Have we made it official?
If anyone listening does not know, this is TD's last day here at the ringer.
And we wanted to gather the entire ringerverse family.
Van is popping onto Zoom right now.
Wanted to get the whole ringerverse family here on Zoom together to say goodbye for a minute
and to say thank you for everything that you have meant to us.
Steve, you have a little something?
TD, it's Matt.
Hey, TD, I'm going to miss you so much.
Yo, T.D. I'm going to miss you, my man.
TD, man, my Nigerian brother, we're going to miss you around this way.
TD, it's been an honor, man.
Yo, man, TD, bro, thank you so much for the work that you've done since you've been with us over at the Ring of Verse, man.
TD, what can I say, but absolutely thank you.
Just thank you for everything you've done for us.
There's not many people who can corral the midnight boys.
You really gave me a chance, but the battery in my back.
So I can't thank you enough.
It has been such a joy getting to know you, working together,
all of us as a team, building the ringerverse together,
making this wonderful podcast together.
You know, we had a lot of fun moments.
Still remember our first Zoom scheduled for 30 minutes.
We went north of two hours.
Shocking because we were having such genuine fun
talking about these stories,
talking about these fictional universes,
and how much time we love to spend inside of the fandom.
I'm bummed I don't get just even a little bit more time
to try to convince you to come over
to the dark side of spoiler culture with me.
You know, aside from your still to this day
inexplicable decision to not include
a cap-wielding Mielnir
in your Rhyr's nomination set,
it's been a treat every step of the way since.
We will always have the Andrew Garfield Hive,
you and me, where we were ahead of everyone on that.
Garfield Hive forever.
Once a midnight boy, always a midnight boy,
midnight boy for life.
Piboo!
Thank you so much for being
And the homie that you've been for me for the last, I guess, what is it, three years.
You know, just wanted to say, we love you, man, and have fun over on that side.
We're going to hold it down for you.
Don't worry.
We're going to hold it down for you.
We're going to keep it going for you.
Obviously, you're not going anywhere.
You're a fan from day one.
You'll be listening.
So can't wait to get all of your questions.
From all of us at the Ring Reverse, thank you for everything you've done.
And we'll be seeing you soon.
Miss you so much.
Thank you for everything.
Remember that you are always a part of Ring Reverse assembled.
We love you, 3,000.
Steve!
I thought Station 11.
I thought Station 11 was a tough one.
And here we are.
Here we are.
And I'm going to try to make you do this without shedding the tear.
It doesn't mean I don't want to.
I appreciate you guys.
Love you guys.
I love the audience.
I love the crew in the community we built.
Now, I just hear, obviously, the entire ring of versus Spotify family.
Can't thank you guys enough, man.
This is going to be a tough one for me.
But I know the show is in great hands, audience included, and, you know, legitimately love you all.
And I'm down to be a house guest.
And Van Charles, I'm taking off the Midnight Mopster hat.
I'm going to be a part of the cam whenever you all need me.
But this has been legitimately one of the most rewarding experiences work-wise.
And just if you know me personally, which you won't do, you know, this is not work for me.
This is personal.
And love y'all.
Can't thank you enough.
We know that you're like, Wolverine.
You know, you can't stay in the man.
You have to come and get the road to find out who you really are.
We always know one thing about Logan.
He always comes.
Always comes back.
I did not expect to have the old man Logan character art, especially coming from Old Man Van
van himself.
Guys,
D.D.
is not dying,
okay?
He's around.
He's alive.
I won't say something
seriously, though.
Like,
TD,
you,
I want to get on
the podcast
and just let it rip
and have a good time.
Your watchful eye
has really helped
the midnight boys
at the entire fee
because we've stayed in touch
even when we've been
in other places.
I've been knowing
this guy for a long time.
I've been knowing this guy for a long time.
I don't.
So, like, we'll, I will stay friends, but I'm definitely going to miss work with you, man.
Never say never, guys.
Never say never.
Oh, Logan's coming back.
Hashtag Groby Watch, hashtag TD Watch.
Love you all.
Well, friends, on that emotional note, just remember, podcasting takes some getting used to,
but in time you start to crave it.
Still, it's time to wrap today's show.
Thank you to our minds.
lot of fire, Steve Allman, for producing today's episode.
Our Dimeos, Arjuna Ramgapal, and TD St. Matthew Daniel for their additional production work on this episode.
And one more huge thank you to TD for everything for the entire lifespan of the ringerverse.
And of course, thank you to our favorite Sarlack Pit Spelunker, Jomea Denneran for his work on the social media for this episode.
navigating the feeds.
Be sure to head back into the Ringerverse next week
for the Chapter 5 Wednesday instant reaction
from the Midnight Boys, Pugh, Pugh,
and the Friday Deep dive here on House of Our title.
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