ihavenomouseandimustsqueak
iHaveNoMouseAndIMustSqueak
ihavenomouseandimustsqueak

French GQ responded to Scott’s comments by farting in his general direction.

Soros is the Goldstein in the right wing 1984 universe. There is one liberal billionaire and he makes them lose their minds.

Because they want to show the world that they’re big, smart boys who got rich all on their own because they’re so smart and not because that got a huge head start from birth.

I’m pretty sure Marvel is just waiting as long as possible to see what happens to Majors.  Recasting him should be easy.  After all, if Loki can be a woman, Richard E Grant, or an alligator, then Kang can be Not Jonathan Majors.

This show ruled; I never understood why it didn’t get the buzz other period costume dramas get, when it’s so funny and well-plotted on top of all the typical pleasures of the genre. (Well, if you’re not super-duper into historical accuracy, anyway.)

The show found a pretty lovely way to end. It could have found material for a fourth season, but the death of Hoult’s characters definitely gave the third a good sense of finality.

If Netflix advertised its games in its streaming menus they could get tons of users, but now its pretty much out of sight, out of mind.

Disney+ has always treated its Marvel shows more like miniseries than traditional TV”

I only see you making this claim.

How did you arrive at this conclusion?  

Stuck the landing. Not a perfect show or season (episodes 2 and 3 were a bit talky and spinning their wheels) but better than most and I enjoyed most of it.

Superheroes are all gods in other guises. Yeah this was Loki’s All-Star Superman ending, but that’s pretty great.

Husbands! If they aren’t demanding you empty their ever-filling venom bowls, they’re writhing and screaming about all the venom falling on their faces. Either way, I don’t see the gutters getting any cleaner, am I right ladies? Sigyn and Skaði, you know what I’m talking about!

It seems like it could, but I’d struggle to see how it would have been planned that way since Loki filmed before Majors’ legal troubles surfaced. 

I mean, the MCU can do whatever they want, but nothing about this specifically makes Kang and his variants a non-threat. The branched timeless of the multiverse exist, they’re just being “stabilized” by Loki.

I suppose that this is a slightly better fate than being chained to a rock with a serpent dripping venom onto your face forever?

Hiddleston’s “Don’t set the multiplier down because it WILL roll off...” had all the barely-concealed exhaustion of a parent who REALLY wants to yell at his kid, but he’s in public in front of other parents and can only half smile as he whisper-screams at the kid who keeps making the same mistake. Perfection.

It’s probably fair to guess whether there was originally a stinger set up to offer a look at another Kang Variant -- Renslayer washing up near a pyramid in the Void suggested to me Rama Tut -- and pulled in light of the Majors situation. But as things stand this episode was a suitable off-ramp from having to deal with

I think it was less that Loki was suddenly more powerful and wiser, and more that Loki specifically asked him why the hell dont you ever fight back (which I guess technically counts as wiser). This tipped him off that this wasn’t the first meeting.

Loki may not be my favorite MCU character, but his character arc, is by far my favorite. By a wide margin too, it’s not even close. From being the first big-Big Bad of the MCU to being arguably it’s most selfless “hero” at the end(for all time. always). Hiddleston nailed it every time. The exhaustion, the realization