My mistake. I meant Powers Boothe. I had the wrong name in mind. He was one of the characters Fury was talking to on the World Security Council in Avengers and was suspiciously missing in TWS. On AOS they specifically said he served on the World Security Council implying he was the same...
Between the events of TWS and when Talbot brought them back in the spotlight, the Agents operated in covert. That was made clear throughout that run. Where the funding came from was explained when President Ellis and Coulson had the conversation in Season 3 I believe. ATCU and SHIELD were always...
SHIELD went underground hiding after the events of TWS. That was expressed during the show for the next couple of seasons.
When the UN wrote the Accords, did they know about the fish oil pills? The show expressed that the pills were quickly removed off the shelves.
Characters that from the...
I'm telling you... magical dust jacket. Same book but the WV version is how the book is supposed to look while the AOS and the Runaways version had a dust jacket with a lock. That's the way I justify it. Hopefully in a future property they'll have it restored to it's proper look. It is dumb that...
Did you even watch the show? As season 7 progressed, the time traveling rules were the same rules the Ancient One described in Endgame. New branches of time were constantly being created with the Agents being able to return to their original timeline in the same way the Avengers were able to...
The only thing that bothers me from Agents of SHIELD is the "One year later" subtext at the beginning of Season 6. Season 5 ended pre-snap which means that Season 6 takes place about a year into the snap. If you watch Season 6 closely you'll notice that the entirety of the season takes place in...
So WandaVision and Agent Carter are canon but Agents of SHIELD isn't. Why? Humor me.
The only thing that's incompatable is the subtext of "One year later" at the beginning of season 6, and the Darkhold from Season 4. The subtext bothers me as much as it does for Spider-Man and the Darkhold...
WandaVision is considered MCU canon by everyone. This got me thinking... what constitutes as canon? Is it how the story fits into the meta-story? Is it the characters? Is it whatever the people who run MCU say? Or is it something more simple like everything is canon?
I consider Agent of SHIELD...
WandaVision was good but Agents of Shield was 100x better. You don't make 7 seasons of a show that's ****.
And yes, it is annoying that the book covers don't match with no explanation. For a franchise that prides itself on continuity, they sure dropped the ball on this one. The way I explain...
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