Only someone who's not a Yankees fan and/or wasn't there in the 80's and early 90's would say that.
Only someone who's a Yankees fan would say that.

Only someone who's not a Yankees fan and/or wasn't there in the 80's and early 90's would say that.
Sure it's good if Disney is putting out good stuff, but what happens when Disney starts putting out shit and there's nobody left to offer an alternative?I get that. I acknowledge its a problem, but it all comes down to this: I only give a shit about Hollywood to the extent that it puts out stuff I like. Disney buying FOX means I will definitely be getting things that I'll really enjoy that were never going to happen if FOX didn't sell. There are problems with the deal, but in the end as a consumer/viewer it will be a positive thing.
Sure it's good if Disney is putting out good stuff, but what happens when Disney starts putting out shit and there's nobody left to offer an alternative?
Anti-monopoly laws don't make as much sense for entertainment. These aren't service providers like internet companies or things like that. Its movies. I don't really care what big company is getting my money when I pay to see a movie, I just want the movie to be good.
Perhaps Alec Peters could buy/lease the lot to make AxanarThe other thing I find really weird is that the remnants of FOX holding on to the bricks and mortar studio lot in Hollywood. You just sold off the film and TV business but you're hold on to the lot? Are thy just going to lease the space back to Disney and other production companies? Perhaps start another TV and Film studio(s) from scratch? Sell the property and buildings off to some other studio as a separate deal?
Weird ....
Q2
Expect to see even more 5-star and 95%-99% fresh reviews for Disney flicks.
Gods, I hope not. That'll piss off a lot of people and confuse plenty of others.Despite my better judgment, I glanced at a CBR listicle on theories of how Marvel/Disney could integrate the universes (e.g. use the Multiverse a la Supergirl/Flash, use the Reality Stone to rewrite the continuity, or pretend they've been merged all along and gloss over the differences). The simplest suggestion, and a rather interesting one, was just to start introducing X-Men characters into the MCU... but call them Inhumans instead of mutants. Since the MCU has already been using Inhumans as its substitute for mutants and set them up as a persecuted minority, it would be a pretty simple fix, aside from the difference that Inhumans need Terrigenesis to trigger their powers (but there's always the fish oil pills, or they could do a Terrigen Bomb storyline like the one in the comics that empowered Kamala Khan and other new characters). Sure, it would offend the purists, but it's an imaginative thought.
Sure it's good if Disney is putting out good stuff, but what happens when Disney starts putting out shit and there's nobody left to offer an alternative?
It means a hell of a lot. One point I haven't seen touched on is an issue of creative voices. It makes a lot more sense for entertainment to be coming from multiple sources. The more creative voices you have, the more ideas you have bouncing around, and you have greater chance for something really interesting and worthwhile to take hold. It's sort of like a chemical reaction, where one source will create enough movement, ie excitement, to start a trend among other sources. You can't have trends without multiple sources. If you only have one source, then your creativity will start to stagnate. If you funnel all that creativity throughout one source, then the higher-ups will have the final word on everything that you hold dearly and effectively drown out your creative voices, and you'd have fewer good movies. They can spin it all they like, but fewer choices for consumers and the overall industry will show a shift as the other media companies work to counter this. It may not seem much to those who consume media, but this is a huge move that will have much impact.
I don't see any reason why both Inhumans and Mutants can't exist in the same universe as superpowered who are persecuted minorities. It's like the real world only has one (or just two) persecuted minorities. There's plenty of creative potential storytelling is in showing that and how their conflicts aren't inherently the same (just as it is in the real world).
The problem is, they don't want any competition. And that, in the long run, is the problem. Right now, this argument feels very short sighted, that as long as output isn't affected, that it doesn't affect me, then everything is just fine.When it comes down to it, Disney executives are better then FOX executives on every level, commercially and creatively.
Yes, I was so excited to know that the Yankees would be in year after year....Only someone who's not a Yankees fan and/or wasn't there in the 80's and early 90's would say that. There aren't enough roll eyes emoticons to properly respond to that comment.
Arse.RuprtMurdoch's son is getting a place on the board of disney, and the Murdochs now own five percent of Disney.
I could see a MCU version of Flashpoint featuring infinity gems, or a take on the last Secret Wars with the Ultimate and 616 universes combining.As I've said before, that would work fine if you were starting the universe from scratch, but the way the MCU has established things, it would be awkward to fit mutants into the existing continuity. They've never been established to exist before, and if they suddenly started to appear somehow, then they'd feel like they were echoing the beats we've already gotten with Inhumans (and other superbeings in Civil War) anyway.
Of course, there's no chance they'd actually do it this way. I'm just saying it's an interesting suggestion, one I hadn't seen before.
Arse.
The problem is, they don't want any competition. And that, in the long run, is the problem. Right now, this argument feels very short sighted, that as long as output isn't affected, that it doesn't affect me, then everything is just fine.
"Peace in my time" and all that and forget the consequences. It's not about Fox-it's about consequences to an entire industry that is slowly dying.
Or, alternatively, there are people like myself who are generally pretty cool at best on the Marvel Studios movies (I've liked Iron Man 1 and 3, the first Guardians, parts of The Incredible Hulk and I guess most of Winter Soldier; the rest is dogshit), but generally enjoy Fox's comic-related output, who just got told to suck it.
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