Foreign.
Speaker BThe coercive, controlling love of God in this chilies.
Speaker BToday we're going to be considering whether or not love can ever be controlling.
Speaker BSpecifically, we're going to be looking at this through the lens of the character Kilgrave, aka Mr.
Speaker BPurple in the Alias comics and Jessica Jones television series.
Speaker BWe're going to have a blast.
Speaker BWe're going to get deep.
Speaker BIt's going to be wild.
Speaker BI can't wait for this.
Speaker BWe are the priest of the geeks.
Speaker BI'm Joshua Null and I am here with the wondrous pastor of Holy Trinity Lutheran Church in Chapel Hill, North Carolina, the one and only Pastor Will Rose.
Speaker BHow's it going?
Speaker AGreat, guys.
Speaker AGlad we're here.
Speaker AWhat a cool topic.
Speaker ACan't wait to dive in.
Speaker BAnd usually I use hyperbole here, but I'm going to tell you guys the truth for once.
Speaker BThis conversation was actually inspired by the guest and former host, the beautiful and handsome Nick Polk.
Speaker BHow's it going, dude?
Speaker CI'm so good.
Speaker CEspecially when Pastor Will pulls out the Shaka.
Speaker CYou know, when we're talking about freaking double Shaka.
Speaker CI'm ready.
Speaker CTalking about Jessica Jones.
Speaker CI'm ready.
Speaker ADouble Shaka.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker BThis is one I do think is.
Speaker BYou know, it'll be good on the podcast, but you guys should check it out on YouTube if you haven't because this is going to be a YouTube friendly episode.
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Speaker BThank you for supporting the show.
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Speaker BApple Podcast Captivate or Patreon?
Speaker BAll right, guys, Will, what are we geeking out on before we get into the episode?
Speaker BWhere are you at, man?
Speaker AIt is a good time to be a TV fan.
Speaker AThere's so many cool shows that are out there right now, like Abbott Elementary, White Lotus, Daredevil, Righteous Gemstones.
Speaker ANext season came on and or season two is right around the corner.
Speaker ABut one thing that I am totally geeking out on, I still need to watch the finale is paradise on Hulu.
Speaker ASterling K.
Speaker ABrown, incredible TV show I heard about through the grapevine.
Speaker AThen we started watching it.
Speaker AI'm totally hooked.
Speaker AIt is un, unbelievably good if you haven't started watching.
Speaker AIt's only eight episodes, but man, it's so good it's hard to not just binge it all the way through.
Speaker AI have one more.
Speaker AIt's out there.
Speaker AIt's been out there a while.
Speaker ABut the finale is.
Speaker BYou're always trying to make every geeking out on into a lightning round.
Speaker BThat's what he started.
Speaker AI did it.
Speaker AI did it.
Speaker AIt's just a good time.
Speaker ABut Paradise.
Speaker AParadise is the TV show that I'm most geeking out about right now.
Speaker BAll right, I will next give Nick as much time as possible think about what he's geeking out on.
Speaker BYou can share with us.
Speaker BI'm geeking out on Relevant to this episode, actually.
Speaker BIt's a series that came out last year that I forgot to finish.
Speaker BI started it and then stuff happened at my house and then moving and all this stuff happened.
Speaker BBut it's Rivals.
Speaker BIt's a Hulu series starring David Tennant.
Speaker BIt's fantastic.
Speaker BHe's not quite as evil in that one as he's in what we're going to be talking about today, but he's pretty darn close.
Speaker BYeah, Evil billionaires.
Speaker BGreat stuff.
Speaker BIt's so much fun.
Speaker BLots of drama and conniving.
Speaker AIt's fiction.
Speaker AIt's fiction.
Speaker BMostly.
Speaker BIt's mostly fiction.
Speaker BIt's about like the beginning of the broadcasting world, you know.
Speaker BBut anyway, also here with the one, the only beautiful.
Speaker BNick, what beautiful items have you been geeking out on, man?
Speaker CYou know, I keep hearing about paradise and I need to watch it as well as, you know, David Tennant as a villain and anything.
Speaker CAnd David Tennant in anything is amazing.
Speaker CBut DAV lieutenant is a villain is so good currently.
Speaker CReally the thing that I've been geeking out on lately has been on various versions of universalism.
Speaker CSo I just presented a paper on Tolkien and Christian universalism.
Speaker CSo that has been something I have been doing a deep dive into.
Speaker CAnd I am hopefully going to be back into doing some more pop cultural geeking out.
Speaker CSince I'm finished with that.
Speaker BWhere can I get a hold of that paper if I wanted to?
Speaker BDo I have to just like email you?
Speaker CYeah, you can have it.
Speaker CAnd I'll probably submit it to the Journal of Tolkien Research, which is a open source journal online.
Speaker CSo that'll probably be on there at some point.
Speaker AI like a piece of that too.
Speaker AI like a piece of that too.
Speaker AZap it my way.
Speaker COh, I got you.
Speaker CI got you.
Speaker BOf course, I'm also geeking out on Kingdom Hearts.
Speaker BYeah, always.
Speaker BI actually, I'm gonna move on from this, but.
Speaker BBut briefly, because this is funny.
Speaker BI actually had the other day where because the weird world that I live in now, my wife was like, why are you're in bed and you're still playing Kingdom Hearts?
Speaker BAnd ironically this time I was actually doing it for school because part of my dissertation is gonna specifically have to do with Kingdom Hearts and how it has to do with politic philosophy.
Speaker CSo ooh, man, that's what I'm talking about.
Speaker BWell, it's funny because I had to like, I had to submit like different ones for them to choose from and I thought of two really like solid topics and I couldn't think of a good third one.
Speaker BSo I was like, let me just put something silly out there that I know they won't pick.
Speaker BAnd then they chose that and I was like, sick.
Speaker BKeeping them Hearts semester.
Speaker BHere we go.
Speaker BAnyway, onto the actual topic.
Speaker BToday we're going to be talking about Nick Polk.
Speaker BYou know, Will and I, sometime we just get together and we geek out about Nick's beard, Nick's Tolkien writings, his substack.
Speaker BWe just talk about Nick a lot.
Speaker BAnd that's what we're here to talk about.
Speaker AIt's a non coercive beard.
Speaker AIt's a non coercive beard.
Speaker BYeah, a non coercive loving beard.
Speaker BIn honesty though, this episode actually was inspired by a series of books that Nick was a part of.
Speaker BIt is Omnipotence sort of by Thomas J Ord about Thomas J.
Speaker BOrd's philosophy of omnipotence.
Speaker BNick, help me out.
Speaker BCould you unpack what these books are and just tell us a little bit about how you contributed to this.
Speaker BAnd yeah, for those wondering, we did an episode on Whole Church Together.
Speaker BThere was a panel with us, Thomas J.
Speaker BOrd, Aaron Simmons, Josh Patterson, all you guys who aren't me contributed to this.
Speaker BAnd what you wrote inspired today's episode.
Speaker BAnd then later on whole Church podcast, I'm going to plug my other show.
Speaker BWe are going to.
Speaker BMe, Thomas J.
Speaker BOrd and Josh Patterson are going to review this podcast we're recording right now.
Speaker BSo we're recording for an episode or two, perhaps three.
Speaker AOh, man.
Speaker AThey're going to be listening to this and then responding to us.
Speaker BYeah, we're going to, we're going to review this.
Speaker BI'm reviewing this.
Speaker BWhat you guys say?
Speaker BHey, Tom, for review.
Speaker AHey, Josh.
Speaker AGreat.
Speaker ALove you guys.
Speaker BTell us about this future Josh.
Speaker AHello, future wills.
Speaker BYeah, future Josh, you're looking good.
Speaker BBut better than me.
Speaker BBetter than me, I'd like to say.
Speaker CSo for those who don't know, omnipotence is this concept developed by Tom Ward, which is this idea that God power is not primarily controlling or coercive or just all encompassing, but it is informed by a non coercive love.
Speaker CAnd so it's love power essentially is what the word means.
Speaker CAnd so these two volumes, because Tom is a man of integrity, he wanted to collect a bunch of essays that responded to his concept, both support as well as criticism.
Speaker CAnd so the first.
Speaker CSo the first volume is where I'm in, because I support Tom's concept of omnipotence.
Speaker CI am fond of that idea and tend to lean that direction.
Speaker CAnd so I'm in the support and criticism under the support section of that book.
Speaker CAnd mine is the Decline.
Speaker CMy, my essay is called the Decline of Pop Culture or Omnipotence.
Speaker CSorry, the Decline of Omnipotence in Pop Culture, which I think will be really exciting talking about with Jessica Jones.
Speaker CAnd then the second volume is just taking.
Speaker CThere's people who respond where they expand on Tom's idea, where they're like, hey, this is cool, but here's where it could be taken.
Speaker CAnd then other people actually apply it, where they're like, hey, let's take a theological omnipotence and see what it looks like as a pastor or a therapist, et cetera.
Speaker AYeah, yeah.
Speaker BSo basically, Tom writes a book, the Death of Omnipotence, the Birth of Omnipotence.
Speaker BAnd then he gets these two books to respond to that book.
Speaker BAnd then we did an episode responding to that, and now we're doing an episode responding to that episode, responding to this, responding to the original book.
Speaker BAnd I'm going to do an episode responding to this.
Speaker ASo it's like a Groundhog Day time loop.
Speaker AIs that what we're doing?
Speaker BI feel like it's like early, early church Council almost, except for, like, we don't have to meet in person these days.
Speaker BWe're all just, like, bouncing these ideas around and, like, workshopping.
Speaker BIt's like, hey, do we.
Speaker BIs this a little bad?
Speaker BHow can we make it work?
Speaker AYeah, we have the dec, definitely, Quickly.
Speaker BSo, Nick, you mentioned you wrote in the support section.
Speaker BWhat you wrote inspired some of this.
Speaker BCould you kind of explain what you wrote in there?
Speaker BJust a little bit of, like, what your take was, other than just, yay, good.
Speaker CYeah, I like that.
Speaker CBut I kind of try to analyze specifically superhero IP is through.
Speaker CSo my Hero, Academia, the Boys, Invincible, those type of kind of recent popular shows.
Speaker CAnd I talk about how through those things, through those IPs, pop culture is kind of skeptical of all controlling power.
Speaker CAnd I think that there's a sort of implication there where people generally are not fond of omnipotence and also think that omnipotence is a farce, or if it exists, it is corrupting.
Speaker CAnd so I basically just wrote about how we can trace this dissatisfaction with omnipotence in our pop culture.
Speaker CAll IPs that deal specifically with powerful characters.
Speaker BYeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
Speaker BSo with that, you know, you kind of wrote about some of these heroes, air quotes who have all power and how they're actually not necessarily the best for society or culture.
Speaker BAnd then we were talking.
Speaker BI was trying to.
Speaker BIn the other episode on the whole church, I was trying to respond to all of you guys what I agreed with, what I thought was trying to push back a little bit and trying to shoehorn myself into the conversation.
Speaker BAnd I was like, you know, Nick, what's funny is I couldn't think of anything to criticize with Nick because Nick's always right.
Speaker BWe have a Nick Polk Colt on the show for those who've listened to our Dead Space episodes.
Speaker BBut I remember thinking, I was just like, why didn't you talk about Mr.
Speaker BPurple?
Speaker BAnd then I was like, wait a minute, we could still do that.
Speaker BSo we're here.
Speaker BWe're here to talk about Kilgrave, Mr.
Speaker BPurple.
Speaker BAnd specifically, we're gonna be looking at the Alias comics as well as the Jessica Jones TV series.
Speaker BSo he, for those who don't know, not a hero, not an all powerful hero, but he's pretty darn close to an all powerful villain.
Speaker BAnd we're looking at some of that.
Speaker BAnd of course, if we're gonna have that conversation, we're talking about comic books.
Speaker BWe have to have the ultimate comic book.
Speaker BPastor Will Rose, join us.
Speaker BOh, master.
Speaker AYeah, ultimate will.
Speaker AUltimate Will.
Speaker BSo will I need your help?
Speaker BThe sacred timeline will help us understand a little bit going into this.
Speaker BFor those who don't know, this is like R rated comics, right?
Speaker BWe're going back a little bit like, because to understand Alias, the graphic novel, the omnibus comics, whatever, you kind of have to know like what happened with Marvel Comics Code Authority and then what the Max comics line were.
Speaker BSo could you kind of just break down some of that as far as like the history of comics where this falls?
Speaker AKind of going back to Nick a little bit to, just to chime in a little bit about kind of like, you know, as a pastor, when people say, like, oh, do you believe in God?
Speaker AOr you know, before they find I'm a pastor, you say, well, what, what, what do you mean by God?
Speaker AYou know, and let's, let's, let's parse that a little bit, define the terms.
Speaker AAnd then I think same way with love.
Speaker AIt's like I believe in love.
Speaker AWhat kind of love do you believe in?
Speaker ARight.
Speaker AYou know, and so even though scripture describes God is love in a pretty clear sentence there in scripture, what is God?
Speaker AWho is God?
Speaker AWhat's God's character?
Speaker AWhat is love?
Speaker AWhat kind of love are we talking about?
Speaker AThere's all kinds of Greek and Hebrew words for different types of love.
Speaker AAnd I think describing God's power, sovereignty, I think there's room to talk about the kind of love that we mean when we talk about love.
Speaker AAnd there's room for that discussion.
Speaker AAnd so I'm glad that Tom and our process friends are thinking through that when it comes to, you know, stereotypes of God or pop culture understanding of God and power and love and those things.
Speaker ASo.
Speaker AAnd I think in our pop culture that it helps us process those things because we're creating stories with heroes and villains and plots and conflict and whether the story ends with happily ever after or whether it's going to continue to go on because there's trauma involved in iron.
Speaker AThere's.
Speaker AWe as humans use story as a means, as a theopoetic way to iron these things out.
Speaker ASo why not in superhero comics and sci fi fantasy, those kinds of things.
Speaker ASo it makes sense that we're working the character of love, the character of sovereignty of power and what we do with those gifts or tools through the stories we tell.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker BSince we're responding to it and adding, I will let our listeners know since maybe not all of them are going to go listen to whole church.
Speaker BI don't fully get on board with Tom.
Speaker BI like it.
Speaker BI think my biggest pushback was his thing against omnipotence with all power.
Speaker BAnd my thing was more a lot of his arguments, from what I can tell, seems like he's trying to argue against how much power God has by explaining what type of power God has.
Speaker BAnd I think it's just two separate arguments.
Speaker BYou can have all power or no power, and that doesn't necessarily mean anything about what kind of power you have.
Speaker BSo that's where I fall on that.
Speaker BIf you want a little bit more on that take, you can go listen to that episode on Whole Church.
Speaker BIt was a lot of fun.
Speaker BAnd I'm sure we'll talk about it more in the next episode.
Speaker BIn Whole Church reviewing this episode.
Speaker CAnd Tom does say that Josh's critique is a valid.
Speaker BI was validated.
Speaker AWhat?
Speaker BCome on.
Speaker BAnd Tom to Ortcon this summer.
Speaker BAnd I think I might actually go.
Speaker BI might go to Ortcon this year.
Speaker CHey, that's cool.
Speaker BYeah, I might be like a fish out of water, but that's how I was with the first theology beer camp.
Speaker BI've come a long way, so maybe I'll have more further to go.
Speaker BYou know, we'll see.
Speaker AYou can learn to swim.
Speaker AYou can learn to swim, Joshua.
Speaker BFigure it out.
Speaker AI believe in you.
Speaker AOkay, so comics.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker ASo, you know, whether I'm trying not to go all the way back to early humans who are doing cave painting drawings to articulate a story or a narrative or meaning to their lives, you know, we've been doing comics since we could, like, utter a first grunt to communicate how we're feeling about something.
Speaker AAnd so we've been painting on cave walls and drawing and art and poetry and songs around campfires eventually get, you know, there's a long time in between there, but, you know, eventually get to iconography and stained glass and, you know, literacy and books and all those things.
Speaker ASo if you look at stained glass in your church windows or go back to Greek Orthodoxy with iconography, they're just telling a story through graphic means.
Speaker AGraphic novels on the walls to tell the hero stories of the saints of the day, villains of the day, and virtue will triumph.
Speaker ASo here we go.
Speaker AComics going back to the early 1900s, and whether it's Superman, Batman, DC, Captain America will eventually get to, like, the 1940s, and the comics Code authority makes its debut because they're worried about juvenile delinquency and what's contributing to juvenile delinquency.
Speaker AYou know, what's doing it.
Speaker AThese crazy comics, they're kind of horror and graphic images and sex, drugs and Rock and roll, man.
Speaker AWe can't do that.
Speaker ASo let's put a, let's put a code on it, a rating system so we don't.
Speaker ASo parents can be warned or they can see whatever their child is reading is approved by the Comic Code's authority.
Speaker BAnd fair to the idea.
Speaker BI would be very upset to see a child reading Ice Cream Man.
Speaker BAnd it does sound like, if you hear Ice Cream man, like it sounds kid friendly.
Speaker BSo like.
Speaker ARight, yeah, right.
Speaker AAnd I'm not.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker ASometimes the Comics Code Authority gets shit on a lot.
Speaker AAnd yeah, it's kind of this authoritative means by which to kind of, you know, regulate what kids are seeing and doing.
Speaker ABut sure, yeah, there's a reason, like you put explicit lyrics on some hip hop albums or you have a rating system for movies.
Speaker AYou just walk in, you know, you don't want your 5 year old going to see a Saw movie.
Speaker AI fully understand that.
Speaker ASo eventually you get to the way Marvel and DC kind of got around.
Speaker AThe Comics Code Authority is to do their own imprints.
Speaker AAnd so eventually Marvel in 2001 said, you know what, we're going to do our own thing.
Speaker AWe're going to do an imprint called Marvel Max Comics.
Speaker ASo it's rated R comics, a little bit more explicit, a little bit more violent.
Speaker AYou don't care about cuss words, you don't have to bleep out things or that kind of stuff.
Speaker ASo they do their own kind of like more mature comics for a more mature audience.
Speaker AAnd D.C.
Speaker Awas already kind of doing that with their Vertigo line when it comes to Swamp Thing and Sandman and Doom Patrol, that kind of stuff.
Speaker AAnd here Marvel did this.
Speaker AAnd with the debut of Marvel Max Comics in 2001, you have Brian Michael Bendis, who was kind of their premier creator at the time, created Alias Jessica Jones to kind of launch, really launch and kick off this Marvel Max imprint.
Speaker AAnd you know, the late 90s, early 2000s comics hit a ceiling.
Speaker AThey went bankrupt.
Speaker AThe comics craze of the 90s just really ran out of steam.
Speaker AAnd there's a lot that goes into that history.
Speaker ABut Marvel almost declared bankruptcy and almost shut their doors until they just kind of put it back in the creator's hands and say, what kind of comics do you want to tell?
Speaker AAnd some of this alias, Marvel, Max Punisher, more gritty hardcore comics came to the forefront.
Speaker AAnd it was a big hit.
Speaker APeople were like, yep, the kids that grew up on comics in the 80s and 90s were ready in their 20s and 30s and early 40s to jump into rated R comics.
Speaker BYeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
Speaker BWell, I want to break down a little bit, since you already mentioned Jessica Jones, Alias.
Speaker BThis was one of the.
Speaker BIt was just Alias originally.
Speaker BNow it's Jessica Jones Alias.
Speaker BAnyway, one of the original Max comics talk a little bit.
Speaker BSome of, like, the backdrop of all this, like, with her.
Speaker BBecause you mentioned Bendis.
Speaker BOne of the fun things is originally Alias was going to be Jessica Drew because she, in this time of comic book history, lost all of her superpowers, and, like, this is a perfect opportunity.
Speaker BShe used to be a detective.
Speaker BAnd then as they were telling the story, they realized, like, no, this.
Speaker BIf we want this to be.
Speaker BBecause they wanted it to be part of Earth616, the regular Marvel storyline, and a lot of the other Max ones weren't.
Speaker BSo to make this work, if they wanted to keep it in universe, they had to create a new character, because what happens to this character if it happened to Jessica Drew, it couldn't be the same Jessica Drew.
Speaker BThere was just no way to do it.
Speaker AAnd Jessica Drew, being Spider Woman, who was connected, had her own cartoon, her own comic, were part of the Avengers, you know, connected to Peter Parker.
Speaker AYou know, you have a Spider man.
Speaker AYou have a spider woman.
Speaker ASo, yeah, that.
Speaker AThat's kind of her backstory, but she.
Speaker BHas no spider powers like Spider man, though.
Speaker BLike, it's a whole different.
Speaker BIt's a different random.
Speaker BIt's weird.
Speaker BWhich I found out playing Marvel.
Speaker BWhat was it called?
Speaker BMarvel Ultimate Alliance.
Speaker BYeah, that's when I found out.
Speaker BI was like, oh, Spider Woman.
Speaker BIt's gonna be Spider man, but a woman.
Speaker BThat'll be cool.
Speaker BThen I was like, nope.
Speaker BAnyway, so what was cool, though, is whenever they brought this character to light, they wanted her to exist, so they kind of shoehorned her in.
Speaker BSo you'll see these references to Avengers and different stuff, and even in later Spider man comics and stuff, they'll be like, oh, yeah, you remember when she was in high school with me?
Speaker BAnd if you look back, yeah, she just did not exist before Alias, and Marvel decided she should have.
Speaker BSo now she does.
Speaker BThat's how that works.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker AIt's classic recon, right?
Speaker AYou're like Brian Michael Bennes, too, times.
Speaker BRetcons work, though.
Speaker AIt worked.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker AI created a character and then said, oh, she was there all along.
Speaker AShe was a superhero jewel who could fly and had super strength and was.
Speaker AHad super durability and.
Speaker AYeah, he was.
Speaker AShe was.
Speaker ASee that person sitting in the classroom with Peter Parker behind him in the third row on that one comic Way back when, that's Jessica Jones.
Speaker ALike, oh, cool.
Speaker AYou know, why not?
Speaker AAnd, but Bendis was so, so good at dialogue and, and character development and he was behind Ultimate Spider man and that new launch of the ultimate universe.
Speaker AHe, he was behind all that and really their premier creator at the time.
Speaker ASo when I let him run with this, eventually brought her in to the Avengers.
Speaker ANew Avengers.
Speaker AHer relationship with Luke Cage and Power Man.
Speaker AThey had a kid together.
Speaker AShe became Power Woman.
Speaker AI mean, all kinds of just a new creative, cool new character for Marvel there in the 2000s that led into a lot of big relaunches and eventually you get to the tv and when Netflix is doing this kind of series, street level superhero, the MCU is.
Speaker AAnd it's starting to emerge and be a whole thing.
Speaker BSince you already brought up the show, the show in the comic, there's a lot of differences, but what there are some similarities in is like kind of the premise, the premise of the story, like just the bare bones of it.
Speaker BSo Will, since you, you are the knowledge man, the magic head, if you will, could you, I don't know, maybe just give us the premise for those who are like, what is Jessica Jones?
Speaker BWho's Mr.
Speaker BPurple?
Speaker BWhat does it have to do with all that omnipotent stuff that y'all mentioned earlier?
Speaker BMaybe just kind of fill in what the premise of this story is when it comes to Mr.
Speaker BPurple and Jessica Jones specifically.
Speaker ASo in the comics, Bendis did have her as a private investigator kind of backstory.
Speaker AShe experienced some trauma and, you know, she was just kind of like a noir detective series up.
Speaker AWhen you get to, I think it was a couple, you had the first couple volumes of Alias, it's just her being a detective.
Speaker ABut eventually get to this Mr.
Speaker APurple Kilgrave storyline where basically mind control power, Kilgrave.
Speaker ALet me see if I can find, like, he's a different name in the comics than he is in the TV show.
Speaker ASo Zebediah Kilgrave, who appeared in Daredevil issue 4, 1964, he's the long term villain in the Marvel universe universe in terms of this guy who has the power of suggestion, the power Psycho Psycho powers of controlling your psyche, your mind and power.
Speaker AWhatever he says he can make you do, which is a pretty powerful power.
Speaker AAnd then if you're not in your own right mind, you use that to manipulate others, to do your own bidding.
Speaker ASo, yeah, even the purest of heart would have a hard time resisting what they have to do if they could control people around them.
Speaker AAnd eventually it Gets around to.
Speaker ATo this storyline of Jessica being controlled for his own pleasure and doing and ego.
Speaker AWhen it comes to Mr.
Speaker APurple.
Speaker ADidn't know what else you wanted to do there in the comics.
Speaker BYeah, yeah.
Speaker BNo, Jason, the comics on the show.
Speaker BJust talking about the general premise.
Speaker BI think that's basically it.
Speaker BShe ends up a detective.
Speaker BEx superhero.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker BKillgrave.
Speaker BMr.
Speaker BPurple has the ability to control people, causes terrible things.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker BI think it's pretty clear that this episode's already going to be explicit because there's no way to talk about this without it.
Speaker BAnd the pastor already said shit.
Speaker BSo here we are.
Speaker BThere's a lot.
Speaker BSystematic ecology met and sexual assault and all that kind of stuff.
Speaker BSo you just can't not be explicit when you're talking about that.
Speaker BThere's no real way to do that.
Speaker BSo that's what we're talking about.
Speaker BAnd that comes up in the show as well as the comics.
Speaker BI think it's made a little bit more explicitly clear in the show, but it is.
Speaker BDoes exist in both.
Speaker BIn both of them, there's a reference to him making her watch him rape somebody else.
Speaker BSo it's kind of like a.
Speaker BYeah, you want to talk about an awful bad guy.
Speaker BIt's one of those, like, you know, like, everybody can be like, oh, yeah, I like Kill Grave, Kill Gray is a cool bad guy.
Speaker BNo one.
Speaker BI don't think anyone in the right mind feels comfortable saying they like Mr.
Speaker BPurple.
Speaker BDavid Tennant's betrayal.
Speaker BAmazing.
Speaker BIncredible how he does that.
Speaker BBut there's no way to be like, oh, yeah, that's a good bad guy.
Speaker BI like him.
Speaker BNo, it's just not really a character anyone he, like, relates to.
Speaker BNot like, yeah, if you create a.
Speaker AVillain, you know, a super villain, though, it makes a difference what they're kind of powering.
Speaker ALike, you have Dr.
Speaker ADoom, you have Thanos, you.
Speaker AWhat are they after?
Speaker AThey're after control.
Speaker AThey're after power.
Speaker AThey want to rule everything.
Speaker AAnd.
Speaker AAnd when Kilgrave.
Speaker AMr.
Speaker APurple shows up on the last page of a cliffhanger comic book, you're like, oh, crap, it's about to happen.
Speaker AOr to explain what's going on within the comics, why people are doing what they're doing out of character.
Speaker AThen Purple.
Speaker APurple man is one of those up at the top that, like, yeah, you should be scared of him.
Speaker ASimilar to, like, Joker and other characters when they show up.
Speaker AIf you're intimidated and scared, well, you should be because he's.
Speaker AHe's got a pretty awful power set.
Speaker BYeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
Speaker BSo going back to drilling in a little bit more to the comic part of it.
Speaker BWill, I know you like to do this, so who do you want to mention?
Speaker BWho do you want to cred for the Alias series?
Speaker BWe mentioned Bendis.
Speaker BAre there any artists letters, anything like that that you want to shout out?
Speaker AOh, oh, yeah, the artist.
Speaker AWhere's his name?
Speaker AMichael Gaydos.
Speaker AG A Y D O S.
Speaker ADefinitely.
Speaker AHe's the guy that was kind of on there.
Speaker AThere's definitely with all the artists with the Max series with Marvel, they pick really gritty, kind of shadowy noir kind of artists and storytelling.
Speaker ABut, yeah, I think there's.
Speaker ABendis really helped form that.
Speaker AAnd then the artists that he chose to come along with them were definitely the right picks when it comes to expressing and putting the story and images on the page for us.
Speaker ABut Bendis is very wordy.
Speaker AYou know, he has a lot of talking heads.
Speaker AHe's not known for his action sequences.
Speaker AA lot of people, a lot of talking heads on his pages just because he's so good at dialogue and characterization.
Speaker ASo, yeah, that's what he does with his comics.
Speaker BYeah, yeah, yeah.
Speaker BAll right, so let's jump in.
Speaker BStill heavy on the comic side.
Speaker BI don't know if Nick had anything he wanted to chime in with, but we read this whole thing and watched this series in preparation for this.
Speaker BThis has been an episode a long time in the running, making like a month or so.
Speaker BNick, as far as, like, when you read this, were there any, like, connections to other Marvel heroes and stuff that you were kind of surprised by reading the Alias comics?
Speaker CIt was more just like how the references on the TV show were, like, allusions to the comic.
Speaker CYou know, it's always those things where, like.
Speaker CBecause I watched the tv, you know, I did the whole Defenders thing on when it was originally Netflix and, you know, knew had not read any of the Mac stuff really.
Speaker CI mean, like I said, I think the only real comic series I ever read was the God, the Gore Butcher stuff that y'all suggested to me a few years ago, so.
Speaker BGood.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker CAnd so I was just kind of riding the little TV MCU there.
Speaker CAnd so I think it really was just more about, like, oh, I recognize, you know, that from this illusion, you know, the Jewel costume, you know, from the first season and things like that.
Speaker CAnd then, you know, then to the.
Speaker CThe Spider Man Stu stuff and things.
Speaker CAnd then even Learning about how Mr.
Speaker CPurple was connected to Daredevil first.
Speaker CBecause in Jessica Jones TV show, you think that it's like a Jessica Jones original villain when you first watch it.
Speaker BWhich I think since the Alias comics dropped, I think even most comic book readers, when you think of Mr.
Speaker BPurple, you probably do first think of Jessica Jones now, because that story was just so impactful.
Speaker BIt's almost like, for me.
Speaker BAnd we'll talk more about it here in a minute, I guess.
Speaker BBut, like, the old ones that I've read with him and, like, Daredevil or the X Men or, like, even, like, when he showed up in other places, it was always like, oh, Mr.
Speaker BPurple, that's a fun, silly.
Speaker BYou know, fun, silly bad guy.
Speaker BAnd then, like, you read this and you're like, no, not a fun, silly bad guy.
Speaker BAnd that's where, like, I think it went from, like, we all called him Mr.
Speaker BPurple to now, like, it doesn't.
Speaker BLike, it feels weird calling him Mr.
Speaker BPurple because that's such a silly name that you're like, I feel like I have to call him Gilbert.
Speaker AAnd there's other analogies, too, with other villains.
Speaker ALike, with.
Speaker AWhether it's Thanos or even Joker.
Speaker ALike, Joker was just a silly clown, right?
Speaker AYou know, he made jokes or made, like, weird things come out of Gun.
Speaker AI don't know.
Speaker ALike, I think as.
Speaker AAs we've matured as a medium, comics have made a medium.
Speaker ASome of these villains have gone darker and darker and darker and darker as we think about the world we live in and things like that.
Speaker ASo Mr.
Speaker APurple.
Speaker AYeah, just a kind of a villain.
Speaker AOh, isn't it fun?
Speaker AStan Lee's like, oh, cool.
Speaker ASomeone was like, can control your mind?
Speaker AOh, no.
Speaker AHow are you gonna get out of this tight one this week?
Speaker ADaredevil friends, Spidey friends.
Speaker ABut then eventually, you can really go, like, what Bendis does in this Mech series.
Speaker AGo.
Speaker AGo really dark.
Speaker AAnd I think the same way with, like, Joker.
Speaker AHe was one of Batman's villains, but, man, you get Scott Snyder on a Joker book, and you're like, that's the scariest thing I've ever read.
Speaker ASo, yeah, there's some analogies there in terms of how we go.
Speaker BYeah, yeah, apologize to everyone.
Speaker BThe dog's about to be loud.
Speaker BBut, you know, that's what happened.
Speaker BWe're podcasters in the real world, as Ron likes to say.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker BWhat's fun, though, my first connection with Mr.
Speaker BPurple that I wanted to bring up, because I don't know if you guys have any.
Speaker BLike, Nick kind of mentioned his first introduction was kind of through the show.
Speaker BAnd I'm sure when Will gets to, like, her connection to other Marvel heroes, we'll hear about his history helping Stan Lee come up with the idea for Mr.
Speaker BPurple or something.
Speaker BBut I, my first was really random.
Speaker BIt was playing the role playing game Champions, which is like D and D but for superheroes.
Speaker BAnd everybody had to, you had to have a weakness and you had to choose your own nemesis.
Speaker BLike who was your nemesis.
Speaker BAnd you know, most people like create their own thing, but there are places on the Internet where you can like find like Spider Man's champions paper or you know, whatever.
Speaker BAnd one of the people, one of the guys I played with, he decided his weakness was literally the color Purple and made his nemesis Mr.
Speaker BPurple.
Speaker BAnd that's why I think early on I was like, oh, what a silly bad guy.
Speaker BOh, he could control minds, but it's like, ooh, purple.
Speaker BAnd now I'm like, oh no, that was just him being silly.
Speaker BThat is not the character necessarily being a silly character.
Speaker BBut yeah.
Speaker BSo we mentioned Spider man connection.
Speaker BI have like Captain America above me been drinking my coffee out of a Captain America cup, all that good stuff.
Speaker BSo for me, one of the big connections obviously is she discovers Captain America's identity.
Speaker BBecause this was back before it was like widely known.
Speaker BI guess that part was still weird to me, but whatever.
Speaker BShe dates Scott Lang, AKA Ant Man.
Speaker BWe see this reference to Spider man here, but as you mentioned, first was daredevil was Mr.
Speaker BPurple is where he was first seen.
Speaker BAnd then later we see him like X Men.
Speaker BDifferent stuff like that will fill us in on all the gaps.
Speaker BMe and Nick touched everything.
Speaker BWe can fill in the gaps.
Speaker BWhat are the connections to The Jessica Jones, Mr.
Speaker BPurple and the rest of the Marvel stuff?
Speaker AYeah, I mean, I think, you know, when, when a creator is trying to figure out, write their own story, there's, there's some big stories with the big time superheroes and villains.
Speaker ABut then if you want to, you know, if you're going to get creative as a writer, what's going to give you passion and, and, and the creative juices to keep going?
Speaker AYou might pick a deep cut villain and run with it.
Speaker ASo business, you know, ran with, with Purple man and, and Killgrave and mind control and she's a detective, she's a great detector.
Speaker AShe can figure things out.
Speaker AShe has her own problems, drinking problems and you know, it's a noir storytelling.
Speaker AYou know, you come into her office and she's got to figure out the crime and figure out, you know, private investigating.
Speaker ABut one thing I found discovered through leading up to this pod is that, oh, there was a graphic novel called Emperor Doom where Doom harnesses the power of Mr.
Speaker APurple, Kilgrave, so that he can take over my control whoever he wants and whoever he's around in the entire world.
Speaker AAnd so if we think the present day comic book, one World Under Doom, where he has.
Speaker AHe's the Sorcerer supreme and he's taking over the world because he's a sorcerer.
Speaker AWell, this has been done before in emperor doom in 1987.
Speaker ASo I didn't know of this until I've been starting reading it.
Speaker AAnd basically this thing we're seeing here is that he's revealing to Namor in this picture that he has one hair from Kilgrave and put it in this psycho prism.
Speaker AAnd.
Speaker AAnd he can now control those around him and those around the world.
Speaker ASo it's pretty fun.
Speaker ALike the opening scene to this graphic novel is Mr.
Speaker APurple basically feet up on a beach on vacation.
Speaker AAnd the people around him, I'm serving him because he could control them, make them do whatever he wants.
Speaker ABut then some dark figure snatches him, kidnaps him.
Speaker AHe's like, no, not you.
Speaker AWell, it's probably Dr.
Speaker ADoom.
Speaker AAnd then how he's using him, manipulating him so that he can use and manipulate other people as well.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker BWhich also, because that's a fun reference that reminds me of this is like, well, after Alias and all that.
Speaker BBut like a couple years ago, there was a comic that I think the new Daredevil series is building off of Devil's Reign.
Speaker BAnd it's revealed in that part of how Kingpin becomes the mayor in the comics.
Speaker BI don't know if this could be a spoiler.
Speaker BI doubt it's gonna be a spoiler for the show, but plug your ears if you want.
Speaker BPart of how it works, though, is kingpin has Mr.
Speaker BPurple in a contraption and is using it to control, like, all of New York.
Speaker BAnd you're like, oh, so it's fun watching this because I'm like, oh, Daredevil originally was.
Speaker BMr.
Speaker BPurple was Daredevil.
Speaker BAnd here we have Kingpin controlling New York being mayor.
Speaker BAnd it's because he captured Mr.
Speaker BPurple.
Speaker BAnd now I'm like, man, all these characters making it to the mcu.
Speaker BI gotta say, I highly doubt this happens.
Speaker BBut if I see David Tennant in a cage somewhere in, like, Kingpin's office in one of these episodes, I will lose my ever loving mind.
Speaker ARight, right.
Speaker BThat would be so.
Speaker BLike, that would be too, too cool.
Speaker BThey can't do that.
Speaker BIt would be too cool.
Speaker BMy heart would get out and everyone would be sad.
Speaker BBut okay, so as Far as, like, the comics go.
Speaker BYeah, we mentioned some of the connections and stuff that it has.
Speaker BAre there any, like, specific panels or anything that, like, parts of this story that stood out from the comics that really.
Speaker BSome of the themes that we're talking about here for you guys, you know, control, abuse, mental health, even.
Speaker BWhat stands out.
Speaker BNick, you go first.
Speaker BWe've done so much talking.
Speaker BNick needs to talk.
Speaker CI think, really the way that the watching part that he makes her do in the comics, like you said in the story in the TV show, it's more explicit, how perverted he is.
Speaker CGuess it's just easier to interpret.
Speaker CWhereas in the Alias stuff is just.
Speaker CIt's just very.
Speaker CJust like any written material, you have to, like, put the pieces together.
Speaker CAnd the way.
Speaker CHow dark it is.
Speaker CI feel like the.
Speaker CThat panel specifically explaining that was, like, dark, dude.
Speaker CLike, I was like, this is dark.
Speaker CAnd I had no idea what the Max comic run was.
Speaker CI just picked up Alias and then did research later, and I was like, okay, that's why it's so freaking dark.
Speaker CAnd I.
Speaker CI don't think it's translated as.
Speaker CI don't think the darkness is translated in the same way in the TV show because they're still trying to keep, like, the kind of quippy, fun MCU type of banter in there and the vibes.
Speaker CBut.
Speaker BYeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
Speaker BIt's weird how, like, the rape itself is less explicit in the comic, and yet it's darker.
Speaker BI think a lot of it has to do with, like, the coloring, because, like, in comics, you could see, like, the one guy manipulates hers on the golf course.
Speaker BIt's all, like, the brighter colors.
Speaker BAnd you're like, okay, this is like, you know, that prep boy, you know, he was definitely in a fraternity.
Speaker BNow he's in, like, a golf club.
Speaker BAnd you're like, okay, this is that kind of person.
Speaker BAnd then, like, you see the really dark colors here, whereas in a show you're filming, you know, like, you can't.
Speaker BYou can do some stuff to make it darker, but you don't have as much control over coloring in a film situation, I think, as you do, literally, if you're just drawing it.
Speaker BSo I think that's all that kind of.
Speaker BThat's for me, that's why I thought that.
Speaker BBut I definitely agree, like, it's definitely darker and yet somehow less explicit.
Speaker BYou're like, huh?
Speaker BYeah, yeah, yeah.
Speaker AI mean, I think when you're translating from book to film, you're like, oh, why they leave that part out of the film?
Speaker AThat's my favorite part of the book, you know, and the same way with, like, graphic novels, you have the storyboard already ready for it.
Speaker AYou to kind of go off and go.
Speaker ABut I think how, you know, the use of art and shadows and just the darkness of the art using dark colors and shadows, it really is kind of where Bendis thrives.
Speaker AYou know, the talking, the panel to panel, the turning the page, the cliffhangers.
Speaker AAnd there wasn't one specific panel that kind of stood out for me other than just kind of.
Speaker AYou see their facial expressions, you feel the emotion coming out of the page, and.
Speaker AAnd, yeah, this is serious stuff.
Speaker AAnd you kind of feel sorry for Kilgrave because he's looking for something.
Speaker ADoes he know whether people really like him for who he is or not?
Speaker AOr he's just controlling them?
Speaker AHe's looking for authentic love and connection, but he can't resist using his power to control others, to get what he really wants.
Speaker AAnd it's a vicious cycle.
Speaker AAnd that's kind of what's at the heart of.
Speaker ABehind this entire episode, that we're talking about what we're all longing for and wishing we could have.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker BAnd I think that's part of what's interesting, too, I think in comics and in the show.
Speaker BLike, he doesn't necessarily say, okay, now I'm using my power to control you, and now I'm just talking to you and not using it.
Speaker BIt's like, no, no, no.
Speaker BIf he words us into a certain way, you just have to do it.
Speaker BAnd, like, for him, he's always having to think about it.
Speaker BAnd I think that gets brought out a little bit more in the show, so I'll talk more about that later.
Speaker BBut one of the things that stood out with me, the comic rereading it this time, I don't think I noticed it the first time, but having gone through some deconstruction and met a lot of people who've been hurt by the church, I'm reading this going, holy shit.
Speaker BThis is what people go through.
Speaker BYou see pastors who manipulated you.
Speaker BAnd sometimes even there are situations where it was raped, but it wasn't forced upon you.
Speaker BBecause their control, their position of power, all this kind of stuff happened.
Speaker BAnd you feel like you should do these things.
Speaker BAnd you're like, oh.
Speaker BLooking back on it, you're like, oh, that's what happened to me.
Speaker BEven myself, nothing explicit like that happened to me.
Speaker BBut I look back and I'm like, I taught stuff I didn't agree with.
Speaker BI did certain Things that I'm, like, not really proud of.
Speaker BAnd it's because, like, I looked back and I was like, because people who are my pastor told me that that was okay and that's what we should be doing, right?
Speaker BAnd then, like, I'm like, looking back on it going, oh, I was being controlled but didn't know it because they.
Speaker BTheir position of authority.
Speaker BAnd you see some really clear parallels with that.
Speaker BI don't think that's what the intention was with the comic.
Speaker BLike, I don't think Bendis has any religious trauma that I'm aware of.
Speaker BBut it's hard not reading this and not seeing that in our current world, like, reading it through the lens of the world we live in.
Speaker BAnd then, like, all of her, like, not, like, it's not like she despises superheroes, but, like, that trauma makes her not wanting to connect with these other superhero groups, to not be part of the Avengers and other storylines, all this other kind of stuff.
Speaker BAnd I'm looking at it going, oh, no.
Speaker BI get that, like, sometimes it is, like, if it wasn't for, like, how different the Lutheran Church feels, I'm not sure I would want to go, you know, like theology, beer camp.
Speaker BThat something we're all a part of.
Speaker BLike, that's that for a lot of people.
Speaker BWe're like, we still want that community.
Speaker BBut going into a church is really hard for a lot of people because of some traumas and stuff like that.
Speaker BSo I think you see a lot more of that in the comic where she's just a lot more hesitant to approach superheroes because of some of the other stuff she's gone through.
Speaker BThe trauma that she holds with that.
Speaker AWell, it also mirrors thinking about when this debuted, the early 2000s, post 9 11, 2001.
Speaker AThere's a lot of distrust in institutions and authority and religion as a itself as being.
Speaker AOkay, there's a step back to say, all right, let's re examine what this is and let's deconstruct and reconstruct it.
Speaker AAnd the same thing has happened within superheroes and institutions.
Speaker ASo whether it's post Dark Knight Returns or Watchmen, then you have the early 2000s, and you have these deconstruction of superheroes, more gritty superhero stories about the institution of the team and what superheroes are experiencing.
Speaker AAnd who's the.
Speaker AYou have Civil War.
Speaker AWho's the villain?
Speaker AWho's the hero?
Speaker AWe don't know.
Speaker AIt's all blurred.
Speaker AAnd Bendis is tapping into that.
Speaker AThis kind of early 2000s deconstruction of all things.
Speaker AAnd so the church was a part of that.
Speaker AYou had the emergent church emerging around that time.
Speaker ABecause people are second guessing a lot of things that are just being taught to them with their kids.
Speaker AAnd so I think this goes right along.
Speaker AArt imitating life.
Speaker ALife imitating art is right there entangled with each other.
Speaker AIf you get to say.
Speaker AIf you get to say Kingdom hearts a lot.
Speaker AI can say entangled a lot.
Speaker AThey're entangled.
Speaker AWell.
Speaker BAnd if you want to know what this comic said, we talk about explicit.
Speaker BAnd I think if you.
Speaker BI don't swear.
Speaker BI feel like I don't swear a lot.
Speaker BBut one of the things I think that this comic.
Speaker BAnd it's one of those things you could just do in literature that it's harder to do in a show that it does really well.
Speaker BIt's like when you look at the kind of trauma she faced, not just sexual, but also with the superhero community, all this other stuff, the fact that the first volume, the very first word.
Speaker BAnd like, if you're doing it by graphic novel, that first, like, arc of the story, the last word of that first arc is the same as the first word.
Speaker BAnd it expresses perfectly.
Speaker BIt's just fuck.
Speaker BAnd like, I feel like you feel it from the depths of her soul when you read that.
Speaker BAnd I'm like, yeah, that's just how so many people feel.
Speaker BAnd I think it was used well here.
Speaker BNick, you were gonna say something.
Speaker BI don't know what it was.
Speaker BI'm trying to transition into it, though.
Speaker CNo, I kind of just piggyback on what y'all said of just like the implicit skepticism of just authority in general as well.
Speaker CKind of talked about, but just more of like, how authority was generally identity based.
Speaker CRight?
Speaker CWhere it was like, oh, it didn't matter to a certain extent what the quality of the authority was for a long time, but what was the identity of it?
Speaker CAmerican authority, obviously is the best authority.
Speaker CThe church authority is the best authority.
Speaker CRight.
Speaker CLesser than, less than the actual quality behind it.
Speaker CAnd then what you were saying, Josh, too, about.
Speaker CI think the show does, like you said, there's less hesitancy towards, like, team up, I guess, maybe than in the comics.
Speaker CBut I think we really see in the show this hesitancy for Jessica to get into superhero work, because the main experience of power dynamics that she has is through abuse.
Speaker CAnd whenever she exercises her powers, she gets this close to hurting innocent people.
Speaker CAnd I think that's also part of the hesitancy where, like, power is generally patriarchal.
Speaker CRight.
Speaker CIn Our societies for the past forever.
Speaker CAnd now we're seeing power being explored through a woman character.
Speaker CAnd what does that look like?
Speaker BYeah, well, man, good stuff.
Speaker BI think we've talked some about the show already.
Speaker BWe're going to rehash some of this because I do want to focus a little bit on what is said in the show that's different.
Speaker BSo throw it to you guys.
Speaker BWhat differences did you guys notice in the show having watched it that maybe wasn't in the comic or wasn't.
Speaker BYou know, we talked some about already what was kind of emphasized differently.
Speaker BBut yeah, what do you guys think about the show?
Speaker CI think the death of Kilgrave in the show just seems to be more like.
Speaker CI don't know, you just.
Speaker CI feel.
Speaker CI felt like more excited about that, which obviously in the other comics and you know, for not split spoiling later stuff in the Devil's Reign or whatever, but, you know, what happens to go grave in the show is obviously different.
Speaker CAnd I think the overall vibes that we feel from the show are different too.
Speaker BYeah, well, and it's kind of cool as much as, you know, I kind of hope now that it's in the technically is in the mcu that maybe they'll, you know, do some.
Speaker BSome weird.
Speaker BLike this didn't really happen kind of stuff because I want more deep tendon in my life.
Speaker BBut what was cool about having him die in the show was in later seasons, you see him like, you see that post trauma, like what happens post trauma where like, even though he's dead, he's not really out of her life.
Speaker BSo I liked how they did that as well.
Speaker BWill, did you have any thoughts specifically on the show, part of this?
Speaker ANo, just as it's more compressed.
Speaker AI mean, I think you read the graphic novels, it takes you a while to get to Killgrave in that storyline.
Speaker ABut that's the first one they do in season one because that's the most.
Speaker AThe one that you can pull in most things.
Speaker AAnd as we talked about, like you had the mcu, but the Netflix before there was Disney plus and streaming, you had Netflix at these kind of street level.
Speaker AStreet level superheroes like Daredevil, Jessica Jones, Luke Cage, Iron Fist Defenders, they are on the street.
Speaker ANot this big cosmic battle.
Speaker AAnd so, yeah, I like that they took their time with her relationships and what she's investigating and what she's doing leading to her to that trauma.
Speaker AAnd, you know, if he.
Speaker AIf he can't learn the only.
Speaker AAnd there's a.
Speaker AThere's a trolley question right The.
Speaker AThe trolley problem is, is the only way you can stop him is killing him because he's going to keep manipulating and do it like the.
Speaker AIf you have to take him out, if you're against killing a life, but then what are you going to do?
Speaker AYou're faced with that question.
Speaker AJust.
Speaker AJust break his neck.
Speaker AStop.
Speaker AStop his mind.
Speaker AMind control over you.
Speaker AYou got it.
Speaker AYou got to take him out.
Speaker BYeah, yeah.
Speaker BNo, the show was deep.
Speaker BIt was hard.
Speaker BThe Netflix shows, all of them were very much like the Max comics.
Speaker BI feel like it's like we knew these were explicit.
Speaker BThat's kind of part of the point, was to tell these darker stories.
Speaker BAnd I think he did a really good job with that.
Speaker BOne thing I did notice, I mentioned how in the comics it kind of leaned more into her trauma around superhero teams and just team ups in general.
Speaker BThe show, I really feel like, leans further into her personal trauma, like how it personally affects her in her relationships, in her mind, and just like.
Speaker BLike existing, you know, and like even questioning her own choices.
Speaker BLike, am I doing this because he's telling me?
Speaker BAm I doing this because I want it?
Speaker BLike.
Speaker BLike all that kind of stuff is a little bit more prevalent in the show and I feel like it makes it harder to watch in some places.
Speaker CLike.
Speaker BLike, this is not a bingeable series, I feel like, for me, anyway.
Speaker CYeah, it's heavy.
Speaker CIt's existentially very heavy.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker BOh, yeah, for sure.
Speaker BWell, I want to talk about specific scenes in this that stood out to us.
Speaker BAnd this is part of what made me think this would be great for the omnipotence.
Speaker BAnd I want to give you guys a chance if any theme stood out to you.
Speaker BBut for me, the one that stood out to me was the one episode where he basically sends out an invitation and Jessica Jones was like, okay.
Speaker BAnd she goes to stay with him in the house.
Speaker BAnd he's trying to prove that he can be better, that he's not what she thinks he is.
Speaker BAll this kind of stuff.
Speaker BAnd he does kind of a terrible job at it because what's revealed is like, he literally doesn't know, like, if people are doing stuff because he's telling them or because they want to do it, because he doesn't really have control over his ability to control.
Speaker BAnd so you have that little bit of a paradox there in what happens to his own mind, like how warped that makes your mentality when you never know if someone actually loves you or not, and how having that kind of control causes him to treat humans as, like, Just basically just stuff.
Speaker BBecause, like, for him, there's not really any ever true relationship.
Speaker BSo I think that just kind of dehumanizes everyone.
Speaker BAnd yeah, it makes you like, man, this guy is terrible.
Speaker BBut, like, is it his fault that he's terrible?
Speaker BThat episode for me really stood out.
Speaker BWas there anything for you guys in this first season that.
Speaker BWhere you were like, that's the scene.
Speaker BThat's the story that really stood out to me.
Speaker CLet's see the stuff that stood out.
Speaker CI don't know.
Speaker CI kind of just want to pick up where you put said Josh, just because that works too.
Speaker CHonestly, Kilgrave.
Speaker CI lack empathy or sympathy for Kilgrave in a lot of ways because like you said, there's this sort of like, if he's born this way, which he is, or he's been experimented on, I guess, you know, that sort of thing.
Speaker CLike, what point can you judge the.
Speaker CThe nature versus nurture sort of a thing?
Speaker CBut I think that there's.
Speaker CThere's not really any apologizing that happens.
Speaker CThere's just more of like, okay, here's these.
Speaker CThis here's Jessica, who's.
Speaker CI.
Speaker CI've abused.
Speaker CHow do I then, you know, almost forcefully, you know, to a certain extent, you know, make myself better.
Speaker CAnd it's not about actually healing.
Speaker CIt's about trying to make himself a better person at the expense of another.
Speaker CAnd I think that translates really well to like, maybe even thought experiments on can a God who has that ability?
Speaker CIs that.
Speaker CIs there like a.
Speaker CIs there an incompatibility with the way that a God that maybe has similar traits that a Killgrave does.
Speaker CCan they actually be compassionate if they don't know if they're controlling or not?
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker BYou wrote a lot of similar stuff in the Omnipotence article.
Speaker BI think everyone should get that book as well as in your own substack Tolkien Pop.
Speaker BI actually wrote recently comparing that kind of Calvinist version of God that you see to.
Speaker BI don't think I compared him to Kilgrave.
Speaker BI know I compared him to Sauron as well as the master of Masters in Kingdom Hearts.
Speaker BAnd I'm like, if your God makes me think of these characters, probably not a great sign.
Speaker BWill, do you have anything to add to this kind of parts of stuff or any scenes or anything that stood out from you, from the show that you want to bring up or maybe just fill us in with your wisdom?
Speaker BIs Kilgrave capable of love or redemption?
Speaker ANo.
Speaker AYeah, I think I.
Speaker AYou know, I think.
Speaker ALet's see.
Speaker AWhere am I looking for this anyway.
Speaker AI thought I created a banner anyway.
Speaker AI think, yeah, anybody.
Speaker AI'm of the mindset that anybody is redeemable and there's always an open door for God's grace.
Speaker AIn your outline, you said, is Kill Grace capable of love or redemption?
Speaker ASo there's even a typo.
Speaker AKill grave, Kill grace.
Speaker AHow is grace tied into all of this?
Speaker ARedeemable, sure.
Speaker ABut yeah, I think when we're talking about control manipulation and second guessing what is happening next in terms of how we use that, how we're stewards of that, I think there's a conversation for that.
Speaker AAnd creating villains where we're wrestling with those same questions, I think is important.
Speaker CSo, yeah, anyway, yeah, I think that's true.
Speaker CThe difference is that Kilgrave obviously isn't a deity in the show.
Speaker CLike, Kilgrave is a human being, actually.
Speaker CI don't know if he's like extraterrestrial or not.
Speaker CIsn't there, like, isn't there?
Speaker CI don't remember.
Speaker CHe's a human.
Speaker CRight.
Speaker CBut he, you know, there's room for that, that he can be redeemed and can do things that are better.
Speaker CBut I feel like, especially in the show, it is clear that it's that he.
Speaker CThey've at least with Jessica, that it's better that he isn't given the opportunity to, because he won't.
Speaker CNow, the comics are different.
Speaker CWhat happens to Kilgrave in the comics?
Speaker CI think there's actually some empathy because then there's a power dynamic where he himself is being controlled, you know?
Speaker BYeah, yeah, yeah.
Speaker BAnd that's.
Speaker BWell, and that gets interesting too with the comics.
Speaker BAnd that's going to get into some of our last questions here.
Speaker BEven outside of just like the Alias story arc.
Speaker BYou mentioned Will, with Dr.
Speaker BDoom using him.
Speaker BI mentioned Kingpin uses him.
Speaker BI think you see a similar thing when we're transitioning to this.
Speaker BLike, how does love interact with his ability to control?
Speaker BAnd can there be a controlling all loving God?
Speaker BAnd we're also looking at can a character who has the ability to control, is he capable of love?
Speaker BAll these questions, I think, are entangled.
Speaker BAnd I think what's.
Speaker BWhat's interesting is when you see something that can control others, other people try to control or to use that.
Speaker BSo we see Kingpin and Dr.
Speaker BDoom that do the Killgrave in our real world.
Speaker BI think we see pastors and political figures try to use God to control others.
Speaker BSo I think that's an interesting little bit of a parallel as well.
Speaker AYeah, I said in My sermon this past Sunday, I literally just talked to my congregation, said, I don't care if you believe in God or not, but I do care what kind of God God you believe in and who you worship.
Speaker AAnd then I don't care if you believe in Christ, but I do care how you classify or define what messiahship looks like.
Speaker AAnd I kind of took people back.
Speaker AIt's like there's a difference.
Speaker AYou can just say you believe in God, believe in Christ, but what do you mean by that?
Speaker AAnd how do you use it, manipulate it or commodify it?
Speaker AAnd I think where it was entangled with Kilgrave is that he has his power and how is he using it?
Speaker AAnd then he's even confused.
Speaker AThere is some sympathy, sympathy for the devil here that like, oh, you know, these TV shows set up the, the angst within you, who you support and whether you pull, who you, who you pull forward, who you pull against.
Speaker AAnd, and so they want you to have a little bit of sympathy for this feeling and you feel a little bit of it.
Speaker ABut, you know, we're all longing for authentic connection and love.
Speaker AAnd then, you know, we just can't control ourselves to manipulate others because we're selfish and those in that nature.
Speaker ASo I think, I think if we personify God and put our own junk on top of how we understand God, then that will express how we preach about God, talk about God, write about God, because we're creating our own.
Speaker AWe create God in our own image.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker BWell, I'm going to say something that Tom Ord's going to push back on in that follow up episode.
Speaker BBut when I think about all this stuff, for me, I can bring in everyone as the same side good guys when it comes to certain things, when we're thinking about the ability to control, when we're talking about God.
Speaker BSo I think Kilgravis is a good lens to look through.
Speaker BBut what we're really talking about is can love be controlling?
Speaker BAnd I would say no, because that's not a real relationship.
Speaker BWhat I think though is interesting is Nick and Tom would say no, God can't control.
Speaker BGod doesn't have the ability to control people.
Speaker BLike Christian Ashley, who's part of systematic ecology, good friend of all of ours.
Speaker BHe would say God has the ability to.
Speaker BBut God will not control people.
Speaker BI think that's what he would say.
Speaker BAnd I kind of fall into this, like, weird where I'm like, yes, God doesn't have that type of power.
Speaker BHe is a different type of power.
Speaker BAnd love is his character.
Speaker BLove is not his power.
Speaker BHis power is in relationships and how we choose to relate.
Speaker BAnd that's not always loving, I don't think.
Speaker BBut I think God is love.
Speaker BIt's weird.
Speaker BIt gets into some of that weird, like Levinas kind of.
Speaker BWe aren't us, we are defined by our relationships.
Speaker BI would say the same thing's true of God.
Speaker BGod is not just something out there.
Speaker BHe is defined by relationships.
Speaker BSo I think we're thinking of, type, kind, whatever.
Speaker BI don't think it matters.
Speaker BI think the good guys are the ones on the side that say God is not controlling people.
Speaker BWhether it's because you think he can't or because he won't doesn't matter so much to me.
Speaker BI think where you get into those dangerous territories, like what Will was talking about is when we have pastors or political figures, we're talking about a God who is going to control you.
Speaker BIt has all this kind of stuff and use that to manipulate other people, that it becomes harmful.
Speaker BSo I want to ask you guys, if it's actually harmful to have a doctrine of this controlling God in our churches.
Speaker BHow do we interact with people who do believe in that version of God?
Speaker BWhat do we do with that?
Speaker BWe can't just kill Killgrave in this instance because we would be going to a bunch of churches and burning them down.
Speaker BAnd I don't think that's right.
Speaker BWhere are we at though?
Speaker AYeah, it's hard to be a pacifist and anti violence on top of those things.
Speaker AAnd how do you stop it?
Speaker AResist.
Speaker ABut, but I just counter that narrative.
Speaker AShare a different story of how we understand God to be or do.
Speaker AYeah, yeah, you can disagree.
Speaker AYeah, yeah.
Speaker AHow do you counterbalance or counterbalance that narrative or share a different story?
Speaker AHow do you tell a different story whether your life or deeds or in the communities that you're entrusted with?
Speaker BYeah, well, let's take a step back.
Speaker BDo y'all agree with me though?
Speaker BLike the idea that pushing that narrative of a controlling God is in fact harmful in our churches?
Speaker CFor, for me it is, it is.
Speaker CAnd like, like Will was saying, like how do we then implement that or try to influence without ourselves becoming the domineering power we're trying to, you know, maybe, maybe stop being present.
Speaker CBut I think so.
Speaker CIn, in Tom's book he talks about the political implications for promoting a God that's omnipotent and where there is the possibility that this kind of top down relationship is, like I said, more identity based rather than qualitatively based.
Speaker CWhere oh, it's God.
Speaker CSo God is.
Speaker CIt's God.
Speaker CSo no matter what happens, it's right.
Speaker CRight.
Speaker CGod ordained this to happen.
Speaker CTherefore, whatever, what political leader does is therefore ordained and good.
Speaker CAnd so I would say through the method that Will was talking about is how do we then create these counter narratives, promote them so that we can say that that sort of articulation of God is not in our best interests.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker BSo for me, how I'm going to answer my own question.
Speaker BI'm going to take more of a Taoist approach.
Speaker BAnd it's one of those things that I think Tom and I have disagreed on about a few times on Whole Church podcast.
Speaker BBut not like a strong disagreement, just kind of like a emphasis disagreement, I guess.
Speaker BIn the Tao Te Ching, Lao Tzu writes and he says not to respect the clever.
Speaker BAnd what he talks about is like, we put so much emphasis on knowledge and like building this stuff up that sometimes we confuse ourselves.
Speaker BWe just make it all about all this stuff and instead like just be, just exist.
Speaker BSo how I would answer this is like, I think the problem is we have all this top down nonsense, right?
Speaker BWe have all these pastors saying, this is the will of God, this is what he says, and do this.
Speaker BAnd then to fight against that narrative, we have a lot of other pastors on the other side going, that's not what God said.
Speaker BGod said, do this.
Speaker BAnd I'm like, well, I think all of that stuff is missing the point.
Speaker BAnd actually God exists in relationships same way all of us do, and just start making relationships, just start loving people.
Speaker BIt doesn't have to be like, I'm going to build a new theology, just build those relationships.
Speaker BAnd since God exists in relationship, God will change it if God is real.
Speaker BAnd if God's not real, you're wasting your time anyway.
Speaker BSo who cares?
Speaker BThat's where I'm at.
Speaker BY'all want to push back against that?
Speaker BAnything else before we wrap this up?
Speaker CYou know, I think it's just like this.
Speaker CI think that even if God didn't exist, it would matter because it still affects the real life.
Speaker CYou know, if affects the real practical lives of people where if God doesn't exist, then it just depends on like consensus or wherever someone kind of decides to put their trust.
Speaker CAs far as authority goes, where they're like, I like Trump.
Speaker CSo whatever Trump decides to do, you know, to trans people, like, then therefore it's fine.
Speaker CSo anyway, but I think there.
Speaker CHa.
Speaker CYeah, that's, that's the only thing I'll say.
Speaker CBut I Like I do like the Taoist that connects to like Zen Buddhist kind of approach of like, instead of just creating systems which don't necessarily have lasting power anyway, that to just actually enact the love that exists in the world or the universe.
Speaker BYeah, yeah.
Speaker BAnd also I think Tom does is great at both of those.
Speaker BNot just because he's gonna listen to this, like genuinely seeing his pictures of nature and just how he reacts with me, even when I do disagree.
Speaker BLike, he's just an incredibly loving person.
Speaker BSo it's just.
Speaker BI think the emphasis should be less on creating these structures and more on just building those relationships.
Speaker BI think if we love people better, they'd be less likely to fall under Mr.
Speaker BOrange, as I like to call him, or, you know, President Orange, as it may be playing off Mr.
Speaker BPurple.
Speaker BBut yeah.
Speaker BWill, any last words before we wrap this one up?
Speaker ANo.
Speaker AI mean, I think that the dilemma that Jessica Jones has at the end of the season when Kilgrave is controlling all the people around him and they're like, how do you stop them from fighting amongst themselves?
Speaker AWe have to go to the source and stop that.
Speaker AAnd then, yeah, she kills him.
Speaker ABut I think of like, yes, it's one thing to say just, well, I think if just have more love in the world.
Speaker AWe love each other and have understanding, but man, there are some people that are taking control and manipulating people and people are fighting, they're creating harm with the community.
Speaker AHow do you stop that?
Speaker AThere's one thing just to ignore or nonviolent resistance, but then there's another like, how do you.
Speaker AIt's real big questions.
Speaker AIt's nuanced questions like, how do you stop this and what does that resistance looks like?
Speaker AIs it fight, take up arms or is it to resist?
Speaker AIs it mlk?
Speaker ANon violent sit ins, Nonviolent resistance.
Speaker ABut yeah, violence still breaks out when you're doing a peaceful march down the road because people unleash water hoses and dogs on you.
Speaker AIt's complicated, it's not easy.
Speaker ABut I think it's important us to continue to have these conversations about the character nature of God and what we understand by love and all those things too.
Speaker BWell, then I'm making a last pop culture tie in and an episode I hope to do at some point.
Speaker BThe politics of the Pixar film A Bug's Life, where they do overcome their version of Mr.
Speaker BOrange through relationship.
Speaker BThe ants learn that if they there's more of them, if they work in relationship, that numbers defeat, no matter how powerful the grasshoppers are.
Speaker BAnd It's a powerful political message that I think we need to talk about on, like, a primarily political episode or something one day.
Speaker BIt's a great movie, honestly, but that's not what we're here to talk about.
Speaker BWe're here wrapping up our Mr.
Speaker BPurple talk.
Speaker BThank you guys so much for joining us.
Speaker BThis was a lot of fun.
Speaker BI know it was a big homework assignment, reading and watching, but I think it was a fun, fun homework assignment.
Speaker BWe're gonna stay after a little bit to do an extra question for our patrons, which is just what would we do if we had Mr.
Speaker BPurple's power?
Speaker BSo that'd be a fun one.
Speaker BBut for now, though, we're gonna give a recommendation for everyone.
Speaker BIf you had to recommend a show, movie, comic book, literally anything.
Speaker BWill, what are you recommending for those listening or watching?
Speaker AGo find Emperor Doom on Marvel Unlimited or Amazon.
Speaker AI think a pretty expensive original copies.
Speaker ABut Emperor Doom, Doom's big right now.
Speaker AHe's hot.
Speaker AAnd then you have Mr.
Speaker APurple.
Speaker ASo see how Mr.
Speaker ADoom, Dr.
Speaker ADoom, manipulates Mr.
Speaker APurple for their own selfish reasons.
Speaker BYeah, mine's gonna be.
Speaker BIf you got the time, go to YouTube, find the videos for Kingdom Hearts Unchained or Kingdom Hearts X, and literally just watch the story.
Speaker BIt's not worth trying to play those games because they're mobile games.
Speaker BThe story, however, super worth it.
Speaker BIt's great.
Speaker BA lot of fun lore.
Speaker BNick, what about you?
Speaker BWhat's a recommendation leave for everybody?
Speaker CKeeping it with this kind of idea of power and things like that.
Speaker CYou know, the Buffy comics, the ones that are like the different seasons, you know, exploring what it means for Buffy to be free from the watchers.
Speaker CAnd there's this kind of interplay of, like, Buffy becoming an authority.
Speaker CLike, what does that mean?
Speaker CThis interplay of power and what determines what's good and what's not.
Speaker CSo, yeah, those.
Speaker CThe Buffy comics generally are pretty good past the show.
Speaker BWell, I'm cheating.
Speaker BGive another recommendation because you reminded me.
Speaker BSpeaking of comics, graphic novels, stuff like that, they are finally making reprints of the old Dead Space graphic novels.
Speaker BSo I just say, come in March.
Speaker BBy the time this releases, they probably will have the first reprint of volume one of the Dead Space Graphic novels.
Speaker BAnd those are great stories, so check them out.
Speaker BI'm really trying to get more people on our show to check out so I can do an episode about it because it's fun.
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