Clearly there's some history with Coulson, but I'm not sure if he was ever a part of SHIELD prior to this. I'm guessing not, which makes me wonder at his previous experience. Government liaison perhaps? Operative from a different agency? Military?
That gives me the impression that Jeff was a publicly known enhanced person, with a positive reputation.I'd have to watch it again but think the exchange of words were something to the effect of:-
"...now that Steve Rogers when AWOL, you wanted a hero"
"I said 'a powered person the public can trust' and they came up with you."
"And now you're stuck with me."
.
I think they made it clear (like with the episode title) that he's the new director.
However, he's someone who REALLY knows and is willing to play the politics game, and that's where the deception vibe comes in.
Also, he's hiding his inHumanness from everyone right? He seems to truly trust Could on as he knows how he treats other inHumans.
It could be taken either way I think. That he had a pre-existing public persona before he was exposed to terragen or simply that he's known to be good at PR and making people trust him but wasn't exactly known to anyone outside Washington.That gives me the impression that Jeff was a publicly known enhanced person, with a positive reputation.
Poor May is in tough shape.And Mack and Fitz are not happy with Daisy.
I'm intrigued by the talk about "the book." Given that the upcoming Doc Strange movie will introduce magic into the Marvel Video Verse, it could be the Book of the Vishanti. Or it could be the Darkhold, which is the Marvel Universe's equivalent of the Necronomicon, which was indirectly responsible for Jack Russell becoming a Werewolf, among many other things.
No, he can't be hiding it. The line about the new director being a powered person the public can trust wouldn't make any sense then.
There's a joke in there.Jack Russell becoming a Werewolf,
I already researched Mace, but when I made that post I wasn't completely sure we knew for a fact he was Mace. I've since seen him identified as Mace on the MCU wiki and IGN has an article about Mace with a picture of O'Mara side by side with the comics version, so I guess it is true.No, he was a Golden Age character with no superpowers. He was called the Patriot, and later comics retconned him as the third Captain America -- to reconcile Cap being active in post-WWII comics with the '60s retcon that he'd been frozen in the ice since the war. (And some Wikipedia editor has jumped to the conclusion that the Director is Mace, when I don't think that's been verified yet.)
I dunno. His "nice guy" act comes off as a facade to me, or the attitude of someone more concerned with playing politics than anything else. We've seen signs that he's pretty paranoid about betrayal in the ranks -- including the literal signs, the posters on the wall about reporting suspicious activities, which have kind of a Soviet air to them. So I don't trust this guy at all. Even if he is Batman.
That must be where everyone is getting it from, because I don't remember them ever saying his last name in the episode.Subtitles for the episode do identify him as Jeffrey Mace a couple of times.
Yes, I agree. The dialogue about financing and the fact that the new Shield is about to re-emerge publicly and how they could no longer depend on the clandestine financing Coulson supplied was very telling. No way could Coulson shmooze and glad hand like this new guy. Enjoyed the character very much. But new guy knows it has to be done.My impression was that while the new Director is certainly willing and capable at playing politics, he doesn't necessarily like it. More of a necessary evil than his main motivation.
That must be where everyone is getting it from, because I don't remember them ever saying his last name in the episode.
Lots of reveals in this episode: the team meets Ghost Rider, they partially reunite with Daisy, we meet the new Director. But the best reveal was that Robbie Reyes is a Raiders fan! "If it ain't Silver and Black, I don't really give a damn". I howled out loud at this.
Man, May going crazy on the table. That looked a bit sinister and new Director has to be in on it I would think.
In my opinion Daisy, or Quake to the public outside of SHIELD, is running around like Mystique in the last X-Men trilogy, in trying to stop the Watchmen who have taken over from Lash. She is the leader and example to the newly emerged Inhumans like herself. Specifically those who had no knowledge of Afterlife or even hints of it like the Clairvoyant Raina did. and not those who were trying to prove themselves worthy to Jai Ling and have been eating nothing but seafood like Hunter did to get himself enhanced.What does Skye want with Robbie? Her self-righteousness is really beginning to annoy me.
^Never rule out a bait and switch. Marvel knows full well their fanbase can use wikipedia.![]()
Oh is that what that was about? I thought he was talking about his car.
And to go further into American cultural references, Raiders fans tend to have an outlaw image that goes with the choice of a criminal class representative as the mascot and the local outlaw classes choosing to identify with the Raiders even those not old enough to be around when either team left LA. Those who remember when the Raiders and Rams were both Los Angeles teams would know that gangsta culture as represented by NWA often wore Raiders gear in lieu of actual local street gang colors.Little of both with the wordplay. His coworkers were definitely talking about the return of the Rams to LA (American football, for any of those outside the US or non-sports fans in general), and Robbie's answer is a bit of burn in that sense, making like he's a Raiders fan. But the audience also gets the car reference as well.
We use essential cookies to make this site work, and optional cookies to enhance your experience.