Tonight's episode, another crossover episode between Welcome to Level 7 and the comic book time machine as we take a look at the Colson Comic Book Chronicles with Infinity Watch number 1 and an MCU tie in, your friendly neighborhood Spider Man number 1, which may or may not be part of the MCU. And no, I'm not gonna talk like this the entire time, but it's it's a pattern for the last few episodes. These crossover episodes where I talk dramatically and growly, and I'm gonna stop now.
Welcome to level 7, a podcast about Marvel's Agents of S. H. I. E. L. D. And the Marvel Cinematic Universe. It's a magical place. Hello, everyone. It's me, Ben, Ben, Avery, and welcome to this special crossover episode between the comic book time machine, and welcome to level 7, where I take some chocolate and I take some peanut butter, and together, they taste great. At least, that's
the hope. The chocolate, in this case, is the Marvel Cinematic Universe, which is why this is going out on the welcome to level 7 feed. The peanut butter is the comic book elements. The comic book time machine feed that this is going out on is a podcast that is about comic books, just comic books that I happen to be reading or that Daniel, or or Matt, my my cohost there, happen to be reading about. And, yeah, and, of course, mixed together, they taste
great. At least that's the hope. And so for the last few times that I've been doing these episodes, it's been primarily talking about Coulson and Coulson's appearances in the Marvel Comic Universe, specifically the 616, which is now even more confusing since the 616 actually refers to comic book continuity. So when you're in the comic books and they talk about the 616, they are talking about comic books, and they are talking about the things that have happened in their comic book world.
But, of course, they also now call the Marvel Cinematic Universe the 616. So if you're over there and you're, in that prime universe where everything has been taking place until the multiverse, and then there's multiple multiple universes outside of that, but the 616 is also that universe. So, yeah, let's let's clear things up by making things more confusing. Right? You know, we need a label. So let's let's use a label to make things very, very clear for our viewers and our readers.
And the label that we should use, since labels help things to be less confusing and more clear, we should probably just use a confusing label. And that's kind of the thought process that I feel like went into that decision, but that's that's just me. So here I am to talk a little bit more about Coulson, but I'm also mixing
in Your Friendly Neighborhood Spider Man. Your Friendly Neighborhood Spider Man is a comic book series that is the official prequel to the Disney Plus animated series, Your Friendly Neighborhood Spider Man. And what's interesting about this comic is that this is official. So this is official continuity to that series. We'll talk more about how that fits into
the Marvel Cinematic Universe. The other comic book I'm talking about today is the Infinity Watch, which is a comic book series that I've been anticipating because of the the annuals that they had, where they had that crossover. And in every single one of those annuals, except for the final one, there was a backup story giving the background to Coulson coming back to the Marvel Comic Book Universe and not as a devil worshiping, bad guy. And and that's good. That's a good thing.
And he is now deaf. So is it better? Well, yes. It is. Because, ultimately, they have retained his core character, and that is what's important here is that Colsonness that you are going to get here. So, or at least hopefully that we're going to get here. So I'm gonna start by talking
about your friendly neighborhood Spider Man. I'm gonna talk about how this comic book ties into that animated series, but also how that animated series relates to Tom Holland's Spider Man, relates to the Marvel Cinematic Universe. And the answer to that question, honestly, is it doesn't, except in the sense that everything does because it all can be a multiverse. And so everything that they do relates to each other because they're happening side
by side in in that multiverse. And I just watched an episode of Lower Decks today, And the season this final season of Lower Decks has to do as a through line of breaches in the multiverse. And so as they're going along with their regular adventures, it's it's kinda like the X Files when they would have the monster of the week, but then there'd be, like, some sort of tag scene where the cigarette smoking man shows up and says, hey, Mulder. Did you think about
this? And and Mulder's like, of course, I did because I'm Mulder, and I'm always thinking about that stuff. And then, and then Scully comes and says, well but but it's not possible because it's not scientifically feasible. And and then and then that's the end of the episode.
Well, they have been dealing with sometimes in the forefront of an episode and sometimes just kind of the background of an episode or, like, the episode will start, and they're just finishing up an investigation on a breach, in between universes. And one of the universes was the purple universe, where it's the same as their prime universe, except everything's purple. And it's kind of funny.
I have appreciated this season for being less about be, about being jokey jokes, where it's just we're gonna have characters say things because they know about things that we as the viewers know about, but that I just can't wrap my head around. Like, how do they know exactly what Spock was thinking in this random episode? That's not the kind of thing that we put in the general public record, so to speak. And so, yeah, it's just they're they're getting beyond that.
We're we're and it's it's less well, it's very self aware still, but it's less self aware. And so they did this most recent episode is the penultimate episode. Next week is the series finale. And in this episode, there's some talk about multiverses, and one of the characters is just I hate multiverses. It's so boring, and and it's just boring and derivative, lazy copies of universes we already know. And he's kinda speaking, I think, for the audience a little bit.
That said, the episode itself is pretty good. So, you know, whatever you wanna say about, Multiverses, then they turn around and do a pretty good Multiverse episode. So I'll throw that out. And I know that on Welcome to Level 7, I have talked about how I'm not a big fan of lower decks, and I'm not. I'm not a big fan of lower decks, but I do watch every episode the morning, of release. And it's a part of my Thursday morning routine where I wake up, make
breakfast. For a while there, I I would make breakfast while I and watch Frasier while I'm making breakfast and then watch Lower Decks while I'm eating breakfast, or sometimes it'll be, watching Lower Decks while I'm doing laundry or something like that. But it's part of my Thursday morning routine because Thursday is my day off from my day job. So I I have been enjoying this season, and the multiverse is used to its fullest potential and extent,
with this episode. And I'm not gonna talk much more about that. That said, anything can be multiverse. Right? I mean, any anything can be. And so kind of the stance we take on Welcome to Level 7 is it's not a part of the multiverse until they directly reference it on screen as part of this continuity. What does that mean for what the Marvel Cinematic Universe or the Marvel Cinematic Multiverse looks like right now?
It means the Spider Man, series from the seventies live action series might not be a part of the multiverse yet. They have not pulled it into the fold, so to speak. The Lou Ferrigno Incredible Hulk series, not a part of the multiverse yet. It could be at any time. At any time, they can make a reference to to that. And and suddenly, it's that whole series of The Incredible Hulk and the TV movies are all part of this all encompassing
multiverse. And there's something about it, you know, kind of getting going back to those in The Incredibles quote, where if everyone's special, no one's special. There there's something about the multiverse just kind of taking everything into the fold that just feels I don't know. It just makes it less special. Like, The Incredible Hulk as a series is a very, very special thing because it exists in its own realm and it does its
own thing. And when they had those, TV movies where he meets Daredevil and he meets Thor and they were trying to do some backdoor pilots for other series, and there was even a talk It didn't get very far, but there was even talk about, the camera, the actor's name, Nicholas. I can't remember his last name, but the the Spider Man from the seventies actually being, part of a crossover TV movie with Lou Ferrigno and Bill Bixby
in an Incredible Hulk, TV movie. They never did it, and and I I don't know how far that the talks actually went, but there was talk of it. But, anyway, I once they started realizing that they might be getting into the multiverse, I I started wondering, like, is this gonna feel unwieldy? Is it gonna feel less special? And in some ways, it is less special. It means that, yes, a character might die, but that character could be brought back at any point because of the multiverse. And, yes,
it's a different variation. It's a variant. And and, yes, they've done some great things with the variants and with the multiverse. Loki is a great example of an amazing show that really embraced the multiverse and and told some really well made stories. And the multiverse of madness, the doctor Strange movie, not not a bad usage of it. And the Spider Man, Far From Home. Was it far from home? Homecoming, far from home. No Way Home. No Way Home. That that
was also a a a good story. So I knew that the stories could and and probably would be decent and and and enjoyable. But once you bring in a multiverse, there's no putting the genie back in the bottle, and suddenly anything's possible. And it just it takes away from some of the specialness to me where you're pulling away from these characters that you're spending time with and saying, yeah, but we can have more,
more, more. And it just feels like that indulgent fan service rather than, you know, telling cohesive stories that are relatable and with your following characters that you want to follow along. And it's not just I'm because now now suddenly you're following the actor who is doing other variations. I mean, Deadpool and Wolverine just again embraced it and did some fun things with it. But then also, again, brought in and and that's where talking about the whole, like, on screen, validation
of of what is multiverse. Well, Deadpool and Wolverine brought in all the X Men movies. All of them. They're all in there. And the Fantastic Four movies. Now, fan forecast or fan fortis for stick or however you wanna say, a Fantastic 4 that was not as well received back in, what, 20, 2019 or whatever it was. There has not been on screen validation for
that. But as far as the Fantastic Four and Rise of the Silver Surfer, pretty much they they said this is Johnny Storm played by Chris, not Chris Pine, not Chris Hemsworth. Chris Evans. That's the Chris I'm looking for, who's a a current Hollywood Chris. So your friendly neighborhood Spider Man has been confirmed by the creators not too long ago or not I mean, not too long after they were they had announced things as being
a separate universe. This is was originally pitched to us as an upcoming series that would tell Tom Holland's origin story. And they said we stayed away from doing the origin story when he first appeared because you've seen it already. You've seen it 2 times on screen with the 2 different, with with, Tobey Maguire and Andrew Garfield. We've seen it already. We've seen that origin story and Uncle Ben and all that stuff. And we're not we don't need to do
that here. And so we never saw, like, what what spider bit him and things like that. Well, it turns out that this was supposed to be, when they originally talked about it, this was going to be Tom Holland's background and his origin story and all of that. It's not. It's not. They then reversed their the story on that, and they said, actually, it is basically a what if story. And so this is part of the MCU's multiverse officially, but it is not a part of the 616 MCU.
And that's disappointing to me. And that actually makes Your Friendly Neighborhood Spider Man, the the animated series, a little less enticing for me when it was going to be a part of that character's backstory instead of just a character who's very, very close to that one. What it does for them is it did open up opportunity for him to interact with characters that in the MCU he had not interacted with by the time he stepped into Civil War.
His first appearance in Civil War was his first opportunity to really interact with most of those characters, all of those characters, really. And in the your friendly neighborhood Spider Man, they are changing that, and he is going to be able to interact with any characters they want him to. And so it it and on the on the plus side for them, it allows them to go beyond what a normal prequel does. Because when you do a prequel series, you are beholden to what is supposed to come after it because
it's already been written. The future has been written for that character. And so you have to be careful how you write his present when you're doing that prequel story. They don't have to worry about any of that. And so they're going to be getting into having him appear with characters who have already appeared on screen as his first opportunity to meet them. Well, he can meet them earlier now. So it does, from a storytelling perspective, make things easier for
them. But on the other hand, as someone who likes the challenge of something like that, I do wish that they had gone with the challenge and went ahead instead said, this is Tom Holland's origin story, or at least if not his origin story, this is his story as he was learning to be Spider Man and growing into that homemade costume that he has at the beginning of things with, where before he gets a suit from from
Tony Stark. So yeah. So this comic book, the way this fits in, I wasn't sure what this would be, but it is an official prequel. However, it doesn't feel like a prequel because there's a couple things in here that reference things you would see in the first episode of the show. How do I know that? Because in the middle of the comic, it's actually not quite the exact middle. It's one page away from the exact middle where the staples
are. But in the middle of the comic, there is a caption box that says, see the first episode of your friendly neighborhood Spider Man on Disney Plus for details of the mysterious attack. Yes. This is referencing things that happen in the first episode of the show. And so I can't tell if this is kind of a side quill more than a prequel in that the Your Friendly Neighborhood Spider Man show, that first episode has things happen. There is an attack on the school that causes an explosion.
And, and this this, the comic book actually starts the attack has already happened. And then you see him get bit by the spider. And I'm not going to talk about how he gets bit by the spider. Apparently, the first episode of the show actually does give more details where the spider comes from, but it's a little bit confusing because of that. Because I'm like isn't aren't wasn't his show going to be the origin? Weren't we going to
see this in the show? This is a prequel to the show, but they're showing things that I think we're going to show up in the show, and I said the word show way too many times here. But anyway, in the comic book then, they are investigating the explosion that happened in that episode. And so I'm curious, does this take place in between scenes? Does this take place in between episodes? I'm not sure how this is is this is going to work.
The good thing is once you get beyond that kind of initial scene, it does become something that does feel like it's a story that belongs here by itself. It's it's self contained in the sense that it's going to be a 5 issue series. It's gonna be continued to be continued between each issue, but it does, feel a little bit were weird at first. And the other thing that felt weird was in this first scene, actually, technically, the second
scene, but we'll get into that. In this first scene, he meets for the first time, Nico Minoru. Now you might recognize that name from another MCU project that may not be Prime Universe MCU anymore. Although, since this is its own universe, it doesn't necessarily push that show out. But Nico Minoru Minoru is a character from The Runaways.
And so The Runaways, when I was first reading this and didn't realize that this was not Prime MCU, I thought, well, that just pushed out, runaways from the prime MCU, but this doesn't push it out. It doesn't pull it in either. I mean, that's the other thing that's confusing right now is just how do all of these different things that they are coming out with fit into that multiverse thing. It's not a bad thing as long as they would maybe, you know, clear things up.
Unfortunately, the timeline book that they put out clears things up only as far as the MCU movies and tie ins that we already knew were officially tied in, Loki and things like that. Agents of S. H. I. E. L. D, we all know that that's a whole bondoogle boondoggle. I don't know. It's a whole problem. It's a whole thing, with with how does that fit into things because it clearly did when they were creating it, and the intention was that it clearly did. But then they did things where they split.
And the movie continuity and the TV show for Agents of Shield continuity definitely split. And so were they together? Do they were they never together? Like, that's something that's going to have to be retconned at some point if someone who cares were to be put in part in charge of something that would allow them to, you know, clear it up. I don't think anyone really cares about clearing it up anymore. AgentShield is done, and
they don't need to worry about it. They don't need to explain themselves to anyone. And not a lot of people that I'm aware of are going back to Agents of Shield. However, there are some of you out there, and some of you have discovered our podcast because you've rediscovered Agents of Shield. And I wanna say welcome to the podcast. I'm so glad that you're enjoying our coverage of Agents of Shield. It was a great show. It's amazing show, and I love the character of Coulson.
And so, yeah, does this push Runaways out? No. That's assuming that Runaways is actually ever in in the first place, though. And and with the whole Darkhold and, basically, the Darkhold that showed up in Multiverse of Madness and Darkhold that showed up in Runaways and Darkhold that showed up in Agents of Shield feel like 3 different things, which would suggest potentially that we are looking at 3 different universes.
Is it a bad thing? Well, yes. I definitely had some disappointment when I started realizing they're kicking my show out. My show being ages of field, not not Agatha all along and and, runaways. But, but at the same time, my show still exists, and it was still good. And it was still so much fun, and it's still highly, highly recommended.
So one thing that this comic does that I did like, although at first, I wasn't sure, is that it definitely starts out in that cliched trope where the superhero is in a horrible, horrible spot and then asks the question, you're probably wondering how I got here. And but the way it does it is, Spider Man saying, don't worry. I'm not going to say you you're probably wondering how I got here. And then the next caption says, I am painfully aware of exactly how I got here.
I decided to become your friendly neighborhood Spider Man. And that was probably a really bad idea. That's the first two pages. And then as he and then he's thrown off a building, and then but let's freeze the frame, rewind, and start back at the beginning. So it's totally, like, embracing the cliche, and I get it. I get what they're doing there. It's clunky. If I was an editor and I would be looking at this and saying, don't worry. I'm not gonna say you're probably
wondering how I got here. And then the very next line is I am painfully aware of how I got here. That that's a little clunky transition. But does it work? It does. It does. And it's definitely, I think, playing with and making fun of the trope and and having fun with it, but also starting with high stakes. I do feel like that the explosion and the attack at the school, I I don't know if they could actually have portrayed it because it's gonna be in that episode.
However, I feel like that would have been a high enough stakes to start with here. But, at the end of the episode or at the end of the issue, I should say, they don't come back to wrap around to the beginning of this. So I do wonder if in issue 4, I keep wanting to say episode, in issue 4 or 5, if that's where we're going to come back to this. So we get to see him get bit by the spider. We get to see him talking about his uncle and
how his uncle has has already died. And so I'm not sure what the time frame is between when he gets bit by the spider and when his uncle gets killed. But we are definitely in Friendly Neighborhood Spider Man, the cartoon, going to be exploring that
for the character of Spider Man. The other thing that we are gonna be exploring that gets told in almost every version of the origin story or at least the ones that matter and that is the whole wrestling match where he is taking on a wrestler as he is learning his powers. How do I know that? Because that's the cover for issue number 2. It's him in the wrestling ring throwing a giant wrestling shaped bodied man, out of the ring. And so I definitely feel like we're gonna
be getting that chapter of things. I'm just not sure how that fits into the hole, where he chooses not to do something, not my problem, and allows a bad guy to get away while, you know and then and then that bad guy kills uncle Ben. Because it felt like there's a line in here where he talks about how I don't wanna be the guy that everyone just knows of as the guy whose whose uncle died. And and so I I I don't know how the time frame works here.
All that said, this is shaping up to be, I think, a fun retelling of early Spider Man Adventures. That's what they're hoping for from the cartoon series, the which we will be covering here on Welcome to Level 7. I'm not sure how what frequency. As you can see, the frequency of welcome to level 7, if you were to ask me what's the frequency, Bennett, the frequency has not been as hot as
I would like it to be. I haven't recorded many episodes with Samantha or with Stuart lately because I have a backlog of episodes that I need to edit about Agatha all along. And so we're we're getting there. We're we're getting there. But, I wanted to hop on the mic and talk about this comic book. It's really more timely than Agatha all along, obviously. But the truth of the matter is I'm more excited about these comics than I am about Agatha all along. But I do need to get to it.
And, Samantha, Stuart, I'm sorry that I haven't. It's hard. It's hard. You know? So anyway, let's talk about the Infinity watch, which is, the main event here. Although, I might talk about it less than I talked about, Friendly Neighborhood Spider Man because I don't think I'll have as many rabbit trails to go down. This, Infinity watch is something I was expecting them to do. I knew they were going to do. I talked about a little bit with
Stuart. I did not talk about it in a specific episode about the comics and I did not talk about it with the comic book time machine. And so some of this might be new information, but by the time they got to the end of those annuals and that whole Thanos thing that they were doing there, I you could tell they were building up to a team up with these people who are their stone bearers. And so it's a it's a superhero team book. The Infinity Watch is a superhero team
book. It includes Colleen Wing, so she's a known character in the Marvel Comics universe. It includes Coulson, also a known character, And it includes, what's the guy's name? I'm trying to remember his name. Apex, I think. I'm looking through the comic to find the name. I probably should just look it up online, have the list in front of me, but that's not what I'm doing. Apex, who appeared in Thor comics ahead of time, and it includes the other new characters who
have the soul stone. And so you have all the stones. There's time, space, soul, power, reality, mind, and death. Death being the new stone that is, now Phil Coulson, who has taken on that job. He he is not just a character in this book who has a superhero life. He also is at the same time going and escorting everyone who is dying in this universe to the afterlife. He goes to them and appears to them as they expect to be to be seeing death appear.
And so when he first shows up in this comic, he looks like the Grim Reaper because of the expectations that some of his clients he doesn't call them clients. I am. But some of the expectations of people who have have just died or about to die, that's what they're expecting to see. And so he does take on the regular, Agent of S. H. I. E. L. D. Look being in a suit and tie with a skull for a lapel pin in this in this comic.
And what's interesting, though, is as they go into battle, because there are some bad guys who come and who are able to drain the Infinity Stone powers. That's what they do is they drain and eat Infinity Stone powers and stone bearers as well. And when he is fighting these guys, he says, hey. Is there a nonlethal setting for my death powers? And so that's why I do appreciate what they have done with Colson here. He is death. Yes. He has the role and the job of
escorting people when they have died. He's not going around killing people, you know, but he's going around and and being the guy that they're gonna see when they die. And it's kinda interesting to have him have that aspect of things. But then also along with that, as he goes into action as a superhero, he doesn't want to kill. Even though these bad guys are really bad guys, and they're doing some bad things, and they, there's no reasoning with them.
And so what happens in the midst of this is there is someone who shows up with those bad guys who ends up needing the help of the stone bearers. And the twist is I don't want to get into the twist too much. I'm trying to decide how much to spoil or not. And so I'm not gonna spoil anything as far as what the twist is, but he needs all of them and all of their powers. He himself
is a stone bearer. And so he's coming to specifically request their help with fixing what the other bad guys because, well, I don't know if he's a good guy or bad guys for I mean, without binary, good bad, good evil, white hat, black hat kind of a thing. They did something to his universe, and now he needs the reality bending powers of this team to help them. And the other interesting thing as they are going through all of this story is that they are kind of talking about when we are together,
we are a God. We are God. Like, we are so powerful with the the reality stone allowing this the reality stone bearer to literally shape reality however she wants to, to death, to, you know, controlling time and being able to move through time and being able to move through space and being able to, pull in and and speak to souls and all the things that they're able to do, they are a very, very powerful team. That's one of the things I was curious about.
Like, what's going to happen when you bring these characters together into a team that would be overpowered, that that that could very, very seriously be an overpowered team for any kind of of foe and any kind of antagonist. And so the they bring in this small team of antagonists who are able to kind of fight them to a standstill until the other guy reveals himself. And then it's like, okay. We've got a we've got an antagonist here, a team, that they actually is a match for them.
Well, then this other guy is a match for them as well as he's making his case and asking for what he wants, and they are not willing to give him what he wants right away. They and he's not willing to wait. And so the the ending like, there's some weird stuff going on here. There's some mind bending, reality bending, story bending stuff going on here. Some 4th wall breaking potentially, if not 4th wall breaking, then potentially it's it's kinda getting into that Grant Morrison, meta storytelling.
And and so there's there's some interesting stuff going on here. I wasn't sure what to expect, but I did know that this would be a comic book that was going to go on my poll list. I have 3 comics on my poll list right now as far as ongoing series.
Your Friendly Neighborhood Spider Man, Infinity Watch, and Gatchaman, which is based on the anime series Gatchaman, which spawned the Battle of the Planets, which is a huge, huge influential cartoon from my youth that is still influencing me today when I, do some of my storytelling as far as some of the characters and team dynamics and things that I've done and am doing. More on that later. I'm not gonna talk too much about, you know, future things that haven't happened yet, but that are in the
planning stages. But that's another reason why I haven't been able to get into the podcast editing the way I would like to. I'm still part of that whole Larry Boy project for Veggie Tales, but I have some other things that I'm trying to get going and and we'll hopefully be able to talk about, on microphone in the not too distant future. So there was a rabbit trail, but not as big of a rabbit trail as the friendly neighborhood Spider Man rabbit trails were.
I recommend this, but it's a hesitant recommendation. It's not for everyone. It features characters that you're not going to be familiar with unless you read those annuals. Those annuals are part of this story, and they directly lead into this story. So if you're picking this number one issue up, hoping you're gonna get to know all the characters, you will get a sense of the characters personalities. That comes through very well in the writing, which by the way, let's talk about the
credits. Derek Landy is the writer. Penciler was, Rari Coleman. Anchor was Scott Hanna. Colorist was Brian Reber, and Eric are Arkanagia. And the letterer was Corey Pettit. And so this as far as the writing goes, the characters come through. You'll get a sense for who they are as far as personality types. You will not get a sense of who they are as far as where they came from unless there's there's there's very few lines of exposition.
There is one line where the person with or the the robot guy with the soul stone says, do you think the soul stone chose me because I don't have a soul? And, the time guy, who they were just talking about how maybe the time stone chose you because you want to change the past. And, you know, so you don't get a whole lot more than that.
There's a brief mention that Colleen Wing is the one person out of this whole team who wasn't the first choice of the stone because the first choice was killed in that in that annual. So, yeah, I I'm not a huge fan of this team book. I am a fan of a character on this team, and that's why I'm buying it, and that's why I'm interested in it. And
I will be reading it. And so monthly, you can probably expect maybe not every month, but but generally speaking, I'll be talking about more of these comics in comic book episodes. The same with, Your Friendly Neighborhood Spider Man, which was written by Christos Gage, drawn by Eric Gapster, colored by Jim Campbell, and lettered by Joe Caramagna. Now, the one thing I will say about the Infinity watch is the artwork sometimes
is dynamic. And then there was one splash page that felt more like a cover. They're supposed to be in an action pose, but they are just standing there, and it's not dramatic at all. It was very interesting, when I turned the page, and it just wasn't this very dramatic pose. And so, yeah. I I enjoyed it. It was good enough for me to say I'm not gonna feel bad picking up issue number 2. I'm not gonna feel any kind of trepidation picking
up issue number 2. But both of these comics aren't they're not things I'm super excited about. They're just things I'm interested in. And that's my comic book collection in a nutshell, stuff I'm interested in. There's no comics of any value other than they had value to me at the time when I purchased them because I was interested in it, and I wanted to read it, and I liked it. So with all that said, I wanna say once
more to you. Thank you so much for spending time with me and for listening to me ramble, and have fun talking about comic books and characters that I like. And as far as the Colson Chronicles and the Friendly Neighborhood Spider Man comic book stuff, I'm not sure if I'm gonna break it out into their own episodes or if I'm just gonna do, like, every once in a while, do something like this, where I'm just talking about MCU comic books comic books related to the MCU.
And yeah. So as far as that goes, I I don't know. I'm not gonna do any deep dives into okay. Here's all the Agatha all along comics. I'm not not anything like that. It's just gonna be really following Colson and following the friendly neighborhood Spider Man. So that's what you can look forward to, but yeah. Until next time, I just wanna say wherever you are, wherever you are going, I wanna say thank you so much for spending time with me as you're going there, and I also wanna wish you Godspeed.