Hades_Kane
Hades_Kane
Hades_Kane

This reads like one of those “Millennials are killing Applebees!” headlines.

Except, was anyone really getting “bent out of shape” or “throwing a fit”?

The vast majority of what was going around were people making fun of it, making memes, or simply being like “eew, I don’t like it.”

Mars could be transformed into a planet with a livable surface within a century

Update... In this last episode, Agent Davis refers to the “space puff incident of 2019". Practically everything you’ll find has Infinity War taking place in 2018 (Sony messed up a little with Spider-Man: Homecoming but Marvel has since clarified and the events of Infinity War specifically corrected that error to place

Mack doesn’t lean too heavily on slang, and again, the dialogue was spoken rather flat and without the normal upward inflection that would denote a question (even a rhetorical one). But, that’s moot anyhow...

The latest episode clarified the time frame a bit. Agent Davis, speaking to Yoyo and Daisy, referred to when he

They are “on the same page” basically, but they weren’t merged.

There’s even a scene in Planet Hulk where Banner emerges and its made clear that especially based on their situation, and Hulk being in an environment where not only could he thrive, but actually be a hero, Banner let him take the wheel (and that it was

You can really, really dislike something without being a “dreadful drama queen wanker”.  Like, for real.

The media made sure the chuddiest of chuds got represented on this, not people watching the show in general. Comparing the reactions of show-watchers at work, or who I know IRL, to the internet showed a pretty stark difference

Reading up on it more... “Professor Hulk” (as he was called) had a higher baseline strength than regular Hulk, but actually risked reverting back to Banner’s form (with savage Hulk’s mind) if he got too angry.

So when discussing upper limits of strength, he was weaker.

The strongest the Hulk ever had been was in the

I had to google that one :p

Yeah... they didn’t “kill the Hulk.”

Look at “Banner” and “Hulk” like multiple personality, and what we saw in Endgame was a complete, “integrated” personality that combined/resolved the issues between the two that caused the split. It wasn’t Bruce piloting Hulk’s body.

If you aren’t familiar with Hulk from the comics,

I pulled it from the subtitles on Hulu.  Whether or not that is 100% accurate is up for debate I suppose :p

So how do you reconcile the fact that the last few episodes of Season 5 both in the story itself AND from the showrunner’s mouths, that those occurred within the span of a single day and alongside the events of Infinity War?

And that season 6 is at least a year after that point?

My transcript is from the subtitles directly. There was no “have”, there was question mark, there wasn’t even an upward inflection indicating that was a question (even if rhetorical).

I will say though, your comment/reply is the FIRST that gives a plausible alternative to my interpretation of the comment (that it was a

Thank you for this. You encapsulated every bit of how I felt about the film and why I really think Hasbro ought to stop and consider building off of this.

The origin is out of the way, you could friggen open the next film with them already morphed and in Zords, and it laid the ground work for what everyone was eager to

He referenced the five years they’ve known each other.

So now you go by what the showrunners say?

I just don’t also think that Mac’s comment means that the writers are suddenly pretending it’s been five years instead of one year since the events of Season Five.

I don’t think there’s much room to interpret any other way than “Mac is saying Daisy has been in space the last 5 years.”  Sloppy writing?  Timeline retcon?  *shrug*  Full context of the conversation: