shout out to Oscar Isaac for completing the trifecta of Marvel Comics studios
X-Men: Apocalypse, Fox, 2016
Moon Knight, MCU/Disney, 2022
Across the Spiderverse, Sony, 2023
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Ayo why Hobie be speaking in riddles and rhymes like the lorax
No wonder Jessica be ignoring him
like okay Rumpelstiltskin this is not a game of two truths and a lie 😭😭
walking around speaking in clues and doing hand tricks and making shit disappear
are you a spider person or an amateur magician you gotta pick one
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Okokok my types of ships everyone finally
1) adhd x autistic aka sunshine x moon aka teenagers in love
2) married and in love aka can die for each other
3) somehow BOTH ( 1 and 2 combined)
End of a tedtalk BYE
May add smth when I’ll remember smth
Edit: guys forgive I forgot the king and queens in the 2nd married type GUYS HEAR ME OUT BUBBLINE AND PUSS x KITTY AND SHREK x FIONNA TUMBLR WONT LET ME POST PICS GUYS
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How the media treats superheroes in the MCU is really interesting.
There's Spider-Man, who was a hero, a helper, the one who looked out for the little guys, who turned into a monster, a murderer, on the word of a man the world had known for all of a few weeks. The world learnt who Peter Parker was and they ruined him, to the point where Peter Parker no longer exists.
Then there's Scott Lang, the opposite. A convict, thief, conniver, turned hero. And why? What does the world really know about him? He wrote a book, and suddenly he's the one who looks out for the little guys, instead of the hero who's been on the streets for years?
There's She-Hulk, who's an instant monster. Is it because she's a woman, or she's a Hulk? The world destroys her reputation in a matter of seconds. They give her zero chance. Her work uses her for profit? She, like Bruce Banner, will always be a monster before she's a hero. (But Bruce has kids asking for his photo in endgame)
Then there's Ms Marvel, who's mysterious. She's a threat, and then, to the people, she isn't. What, because they realised she's a kid? They realised Peter Parker was a kid too, and they destroyed him. Still, the government is on her back.
There's Sam Wilson, who's Falcon and then Captain America. No one believes he has what it takes to take Steve's place, and then he shows them that no, he doesn't, and he doesn't need to, because he's making his own place. He earns the people's respect.
There's Stephen Strange who, really, does anyone know anything about him? Do they even know of him? He appears out of nowhere, but he's been there the whole time.
There's the Wakandans, who we see are trying to be taken advantage of and exploited by the government that "respects them" ?
It just seems that the way the media in the MCU is taking superheroes has drastically changed since endgame. People asked Thor for selfies in Ragnarok, and now they're making Broadway plays? Avengercom? Merch? While, at the same time, there's a blatant discrimination to masked heroes/heroes who choose to keep their identities secret? The government is hunting down these heroes.
Matt Murdock says that Team Cap Won, but wasn't Steve Rogers fighting for freedom, for the chance to remain individual and unknown?
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