But if there were two, it'd be called a Duolith.
She didn't kiss (even on the cheek) any of the 3, or even so much as hold hands with them and she knew all 3 longer than she knew Will
(though granted under much less chaotic and frightening circumstances)
By "crazy', I mean, she had sex with Will partially because she had gone a little "crazy". You know, "sympathy" sex, "make up" sex, "crazy" sex.
If that's what happened to Jemma, fine, but there is nothing we have seen of this character that makes her jumping in the sack with a guy after only 6 months
The "apocryphal' doesn't matter. If it didn't appear in the final version of the episode then it didn't happen, period.
Honestly, I think your view of Simmons has more to do with a wider political view of women in general than this particular character.
Speaking of Fitz, the brother ought to try just a tad harder. When he and Simmons were watching the sunrise, and she reiterates her deep potential feelings for him and immediately after asks what they should do, he can't even ask to hold her hand for a few moments? Come on, hombre! The journey of a thousand miles begins with a few steps!![]()
Difference being, Fitz is the one who has made his feelings for Simmons public, but he's basically been friendzoned for the past year.
Let's just get this out of the way: the "friendzone" is a myth concocted by resentful adolescents and man-babies to justify to themselves why their female friend are going out with such-and-such a jerk instead of them. People are your friend, or they are not. They are attracted to you, or they are not. Nobody is "owed" affection or attention from anyone else.
What I find most amusing about all this is that Fitz (a person still recovering from brain damage I might add) is taking this situation a whole lot better and with more emotional maturity than some of the fanbase are.
Fitz is his own worst enemy now concerning Gemma, it's noble and right that he should help recover that guy on the planet who helped Gemma stay alive (little did he know that they developed feelings for one another)
but sometimes you gotta go with Kirk Lazarus from Tropic Thunder: "Nah! It's simple as pie man: you plant your feet on the ground, you look her square in the eyes you say "Hey! baby, you and me's goin' on a date, that's the end of the story."![]()
So I wonder who this group that set up the mission through the portal is? I'm not sure if I want it to be be Hydra or not. It being Hydra is kind of small universeish to me, but at the same time I don't know if I really want another group sneaking around behind the scenes. We already have plenty of those in this world.
I doubt it's Hydra. Hydra only dates back to WWII, and the machinery Fitz used to get Simmons back was centuries old. We saw in a flashback that some secret society was sending volunteers through the portal centuries ago. I'd assume the descendants of that society were behind Will's mission. After all, they used a variant of the same emblem.
Yes, and this brings up something else that has puzzled me; why would Jemma completely give up on the idea of Fitz finding HER, after only 6 months?
How is somebody supposed to behave when they've been stranded on an alien hellhole and struggling to survive for four months? Try it out and let me know. Ever watched Naked & Afraid? A lot of people can't endure extreme survival conditions for 21 days, and they're going into it knowing what they're in for.
Let's put it this way....However one feels about the concept of ancient conspiracy groups, AoS definitely seems to be setting one up as a story element. That being the case, it would be more meaningful if it tied into things that have already bee established in the MCU, rather than being some completely disconnected new faction. Perhaps this group still exists as a distinct entity, and didn't just morph into HYDRA during WWII. Rather, it may have influenced HYDRA...perhaps via infiltration--a conspiracy within a conspiracy.
Let's put it this way....However one feels about the concept of ancient conspiracy groups, AoS definitely seems to be setting one up as a story element. That being the case, it would be more meaningful if it tied into things that have already bee established in the MCU, rather than being some completely disconnected new faction.
Both shows are connected to the movies, but it would require lawyers I'd think, to cross over elements of Iron Fist (From Marvel Netflix) with Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D. (Marvel ABC), since what's happened is that Netflix and ABC each bought limited rights to use a small stable of strictly itemized characters (semi?)exclusively in the "tv" medium over the course of a defined period.
We know that they're gonna get Will back soon, and that he survived his encounter with the specter, because drama, but they don't know that, and to me, Simmons asking what they should do was a pretty clear signal to him that he doesn't have to hold back entirely on Will's account.Well, that's the thing about Fitz -- he now knows that Simmons loves him. But he also knows that she loves Will. And he's not going to prematurely try to force a decision out of her. Because he loves her.
I think SHIELD inherited the monolith when it was created and the UK donated all of it's Torchwood assets into the agency.
Unless there are more than one.
The more I think about it, the less I want it to be Hydra. We already have them being connected to the ATCU story, they really don't need to be the ones behind everything bad or potentially bad happening in the universe.Let's put it this way....However one feels about the concept of ancient conspiracy groups, AoS definitely seems to be setting one up as a story element. That being the case, it would be more meaningful if it tied into things that have already bee established in the MCU, rather than being some completely disconnected new faction.
I don't agree. It wouldn't be meaningful, it would be repetitive. The show has done Hydra. It would be boring if they artificially restricted themselves to merely doing endless variations of the same theme. I argued the same thing last year when people were expecting the Gonzales thing to be just a copy of the first season's SHIELD-vs-Hydra plot, and I was right -- the writers didn't just copy what they'd done before, but instead introduced something new. They expanded the show's universe, rather than just remaining within the same bubble. And I believe that's what they're doing now. Yes, there's clearly a centuries-old society involved with the monolith; but no, I don't believe they have any intention of making it just another variation of Hydra.
Secret Empire? The One Thousand?
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