...
I hope Patton Oswalt's character is more of a regular next season I really enjoyed him who I dub Agent Lanyard...

... Well, at least on a case by case basis.
...
I hope Patton Oswalt's character is more of a regular next season I really enjoyed him who I dub Agent Lanyard...
As you know that the mobile phone signal jammer can cut off the signals of the mobile phones and soon make it impossible to make phone calls or send messages. In this way when you need the peaceful condition and want to stay in it, you can just use the best mobile phone jammer to help you achieve your goal. And now as the technology develops with high speed the advanced jammer gsm has come into the market and are well welcomed by the group of people who need the jammer product.
I suspect there will be some discussion, yes.As to which episodes into which categories...that's going to be a continuing debate!
I'll raise that to the level of profundity: An episode is an episode is an episode.This. I'll boil it down even more: an episode is an episode.
I will grant you that clip shows are mostly filler-- literally.Well it's just semantics, but I don't think these are mutually exclusive concepts. When I think "filler", I think (badly done) clips shows, or episodes that have no storytelling value, either in terms of plot, character or thematically - though I fully admit that's highly subjective.
And here we see the first indications of how SHIELD will raise funds in the interim.As you know that the mobile phone signal jammer can cut off the signals of the mobile phones and soon make it impossible to make phone calls or send messages. In this way when you need the peaceful condition and want to stay in it, you can just use the best mobile phone jammer to help you achieve your goal. And now as the technology develops with high speed the advanced jammer gsm has come into the market and are well welcomed by the group of people who need the jammer product.
Mih ssim, mih ssim, nam, daed si luaP.As you know that the mobile phone signal jammer can cut off the signals of the mobile phones and soon make it impossible to make phone calls or send messages. In this way when you need the peaceful condition and want to stay in it, you can just use the best mobile phone jammer to help you achieve your goal. And now as the technology develops with high speed the advanced jammer gsm has come into the market and are well welcomed by the group of people who need the jammer product.
There'll be as much of SHIELD left as is necessary to drive the plot.
Some of these are easier than others - random three-letter agencies can answer everything but the first pretty easily. There are obviously enough vestiges of SHIELD left (we certainly see not everybody turning HYDRA in CA: TWS) that they can some assets and resources still floating around.
- Where'd the chopper Fury was on come from?
- Who is watching over Fitz?
- Who was going to take away Garrett's body?
- Where is Ward going to be locked up?
Good point. I was envisioning the world (or at least the U.S.) would be suspicious of them no matter what they do. I forgot there were some high-level officers and officials who were witness to it all and who have some pull.Except they just averted a coup of the US military, if not the government. I think that would establish their bona fides and bring the investigations (of them, at least) to an end.If they turn themselves in, they're just rogue agents who are now under investigation.
And presumably part of Coulson's work will involve talking to governments and convincing them to lend their support, or at least accept his group's legitimacy.
Of course, it'd be easier to sell the world on that if they didn't call it SHIELD -- but then they'd have to change the name of the show.
Or turn the responsibility over to his trusted right hand, a man he considered so indispensable that he overcame death itself to bring him back.Fury himself is about the only person with enough authority and force of will to make it happen. But he'd have to come back from being "dead" to do it.
And if they show (or at least acknowledge) Coulson performing some of that negotiation/convincing, then that will cover it. I just don't want to see the cast training new agents, setting up new security protocols, etc. and conducting "business as usual without corruption this time" and having government approval treated as a fait accompli.
Here's a thought... In the comics, a lot of hero teams are basically vigilante or private enterprises, often being uneasily tolerated by the authorities at best, if not actively at odds with them. You can say the same for entities in other fictional genres -- e.g. hardboiled private detectives who are always butting heads with the cops. Maybe that's the direction the show will go next season, with SHIELD as less of a massive government entity and more a sort of private security agency. Or maybe something like the IMF as it was implied to be in the early days of the original Mission: Impossible, a sort of freelance, garage-band spy operation with only limited and unofficial government backing which the government would disavow if they were exposed.
Oh, I was hoping that they would be doing lots of paperwork and filing. Agents of Shield: Extreme Red Tape Edition
If Coulson couldn't handle May reporting to Fury, then how does he reconcile what Ward did all that time? There is no way Ward could be trusted no matter how many times he says "Sorry." I could see him being used in a Suicide Squad type of way.
The questions about Koenig seem like something they'll deal with early on next season, likely in the first episode. His existence is way too unusual for them all not to be asking questions about him.
Seriously, let's look at the name Strategic Homeland Intervention, Enforcement, and Logistics Division for a security/spy/under-the-table operation.
A good solution might be for them to adopt the name coined by Marvel in the 1990s: Strategic Hazard Intervention Espionage Logistics Directorate. That fits your proposal almost perfectly, except for that troublesome "logistics" again.
- "Strategic", sure.
- "Homeland"... well, no opinion in this context, but re. previous questions about their scope, that sure screams AMERICA to me.
- "Intervention"... probably. Depends on how it's meant.
- "Enforcement"... not really. Previously they had serious muscle, both manpower and firepower. What you're proposing most likely wouldn't.
- "Logistics"... that's only worth calling out as part of the name when it's a large-scale outfit; i.e. managing resources of intelligence, manpower and materiel to permit quick response to multiple crises across the globe. Ties in nicely with the use of helicarriers as bases. Doesn't mean much with a smaller-scale outfit.
- "Division"... only works if they have acknowledged ties to some group that they're a division of. With limited/unofficial government backing, that's not really true.
And really that "division" has always bugged me about both this version and the original version of the name. An outfit of that size is a "division"? Who are they supposed to be a division of, and what are the other divisions?
Any better suggestions?
It would be neat if the went back to the 90's acronym as a way to tell the rest of the world they're not the same group (as well as a homage to the comics).
An actor named Robert Firth is playing a character named "Dr. Fitz" in Guardians of the Galaxy.
Coincidence or Agents of SHIELD connection?
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