logo
‘Daredevil: Born Again' Might've Just Dropped Another Young Avengers Hint

‘Daredevil: Born Again' Might've Just Dropped Another Young Avengers Hint

Yahoo26-03-2025

Marvel has been slowly but steadily lining up potential members of the Young Avengers, and finally gave it a near explicit mention in 'The Marvels.' Now, thanks to the latest episode of 'Daredevil: Born Again,' we might have gotten a new update.
In the fifth episode of the season, now streaming on Disney+, we get a surprise appearance from Yusuf Khan (Mohan Kapoor), as the assistant manager of the bank that Matt Murdock (Charlie Cox) is hoping to get a loan from. As they chat, Yusuf boasts about his daughter Kamala Khan, better known to some as Ms. Marvel.
In that conversation, Yusuf mentions that Kamala isn't in Jersey City right now because she's off in Los Angeles with her friends. It's a quick aside, and Yusuf even admits he doesn't know what she's doing out there. But fans might.
After all, there's a whole comic story arc centered on the 'West Coast Avengers.'
The team first appeared in a 1984 run written by Roger Stern and drawn by Bob Hall and Brett Breeding. There's been various iterations of them over the years, but in 2018's 'Fresh Start,' the team consists of Hawkeye, Kate Bishop and America Chavez, among others.
Kate Bishop and America Chavez are newer additions to the MCU, played by Hailee Steinfeld and Xochitl Gomez, respectively. Both are also members of the Young Avengers in the comics. So, could Marvel be combining the Young Avengers and the West Coast Avengers for the MCU?
It may be a stretch, considering they're truly two different teams, but it's worth recalling that, in the final minutes of 'The Marvels,' Kamala Khan does track down Kate Bishop to recruit her, Nick Fury-style, to a team she's putting together. As the scene ends, Kamala coyly asks Kate, 'Did you know Ant-Man had a daughter?'
That daughter is Cassie Lang, played by Kathryn Newton in the MCU. She's also a member of the Young Avengers in the comics, as are Wiccan, Eli Bradley, Kid Loki and Speed, all of whom have been introduced across the Marvel television series.
It's impossible to say for sure at this point, we're really just theorizing. But it's not hard to imagine a world (especially considering the multiverse is real), where the friends that Kamala is with in L.A. are the new members of her team.
'Daredevil: Born Again' is now streaming on Disney+.
The post 'Daredevil: Born Again' Might've Just Dropped Another Young Avengers Hint appeared first on TheWrap.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

How Disney's original Snow White changed cinema forever
How Disney's original Snow White changed cinema forever

Yahoo

timean hour ago

  • Yahoo

How Disney's original Snow White changed cinema forever

Disney probably thought the decision to remake Snow White was as safe a bet as it's possible for there to be in Hollywood. When the film was announced in 2016, the likes of Alice in Wonderland and The Jungle Book had become massive cash cows — with Beauty and the Beast and Aladdin coming down the pipeline. But, in the years since then, attitudes to Disney's live-action remakes have curdled and Snow White has become a lightning rod for controversy. But none of this was even a flicker in anybody's eye almost 90 years ago when Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs first arrived in cinemas, revolutionising the art form of cinema. It was the first full feature to use cel animation and the first animated feature film made in the United States. Nowadays, it's the first in the series of Disney Animated Classics. In the 1930s, Walt Disney achieved success with the Silly Symphony series of short films, which included the Oscar-winning 1933 take on Three Little Pigs — a short that earned more than 10 times its production budget. Disney, though, was determined to embrace the financial potential offered by a fully animated feature, considering classic tales like Alice in Wonderland, Babes in Toyland, Bambi, and Rip Van Winkle for adaptation. Disney introduced the idea of Snow White to his staff in 1934, inspired by the silent film version of the story he'd seen as a teenager. Some staff referred to the project as "Disney's Folly", unsure that the storytelling style that worked in Silly Symphonies could be sustained to feature-length. But the determined boss began to hold story meetings with writers, mainly to avoid us having dwarfs with names like Biggo-Ego, Burpy, and Baldy. A very close escape. The dwarfs were initially envisaged as the main draw by Disney, who thought they had more comedic potential than any of the other characters. But eventually, the concept drilled down to focusing on the relationship between Snow White and the Queen. Sorry, Biggo-Ego. Visually, the film was influenced by other major studio movies of the time, as well as the darker and more shadowy edges of German expressionist classics like Nosferatu and The Cabinet of Dr Caligari. It's an amusing contrast given how far apart the 2025 adaptations of Snow White and Nosferatu have turned out to be — assuming there's not a secret deleted scene from the new Snow White in which Rachel Zegler bites the head off a pigeon. Disney's animation team was largely made up of newspaper cartoonists, but one of the few animators with more relevant experience was Grim Natwick — responsible for drawing Betty Boop. Natwick was put in charge of animating Snow White herself, with accomplished dancer Marge Champion brought in to film live-action footage as a reference point. At one stage, the animation team encouraged her to dance wearing an American football helmet to simulate the larger heads of animated characters. She nearly fainted as a result. The process of the animation itself was long and laborious. One cartoonist, Helen Ogger, was tasked with dabbing a red dye on to each individual cel in order to add colour to the characters' faces — a method never used to the same extent again, partly because only Ogger had the skill for it. With all of this effort and expense, the film was an enormous risk. Disney mortgaged his home and also managed to secure a $250,000 (£193,000) loan. Fortunately for all involved, Snow White quickly became the most successful sound movie of all time — until it was unseated by Gone With the Wind two years later — and earned a substantial profit at the box office. Snow White's impact was swiftly recognised. Disney was awarded an honorary Oscar — including seven tiny statuettes — as a result of what the Academy felt was "a significant screen innovation which has charmed millions and pioneered a great new entertainment field". Cinematic pioneer Sergei Eisenstein called it the greatest film of all time. Snow White remains the only Disney Princess to have her own star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame. But most crucially, Snow White fired the starting pistol on Disney's dominance as a cultural force. The profits from the movie allowed for the development of The Walt Disney Studios location in Burbank, as well as opening the door for a production line of animated features. In the next decade alone, Disney made eight further animated movies, including Pinocchio, Bambi, and Dumbo. It's no exaggeration to say that cinema would be completely different today without Snow White — one of the most influential creative risks ever taken. It could have easily been a poison apple, but Disney's film ended up as the fairest of them all. Snow White is streaming on Disney+.

Shocked parent discovers how Disney World subtly checks kids for lice: ‘That's a creative way to disguise it'
Shocked parent discovers how Disney World subtly checks kids for lice: ‘That's a creative way to disguise it'

Yahoo

time3 hours ago

  • Yahoo

Shocked parent discovers how Disney World subtly checks kids for lice: ‘That's a creative way to disguise it'

One of parents' worst nightmares is their kid getting lice — but you suspect it in your little ones' head and don't want to do the checking yourself, head over to Disney World where the staff will do the work for you. One Disney parent posted in a now-viral TikTok how those who are staffed by the land of Mickey and Minnie Mouse cleverly go about checking kids' heads for the tiny, wingless insects. The mom captioned her video, 'I didn't even realize what they were doing until I rewatched the video. Literally making every moment magical even while checking for lice at bippity boppity boutique.' In the video, the staffer dressed in character as a fairy Godmother kneels behind an adorable little girl and begins parting her hair to check for any signs of the nasty insects. While doing so, the employee is chatting with the toddler, who is oblivious that her head is being inspected, about Rapunzel's hair. Something that Disney is known for offering to young guests is the ability to get a princess — or knight —makeover, which includes getting hair and makeup done at the Bibbidi Bobbidi Boutique at Magic Kingdom The parent who posted the video isn't the only one pleasantly surprised by this service. 'You know what, I'd rather them check for lice than a surprise after vacation!' one commenter wrote. 'Hopefully no parent takes offense to this because it's not only protecting other children, it's protecting your child from getting it, too,' pointed out someone else. 'That's a sweet and creative way to disguise it,' another person agreed. 'It's not just checking for lice — it's also checking for any rashes, skin issues, cuts/broken skin. Anything that could react to whatever they're putting on ur head. It's for their safety and yours!' a commenter explained. Although Disney didn't confirm the lice checking to be true, one could assume that staff at the amusement park use this opportunity to make sure little guests' heads are clean before transforming them into a Disney princess or knight. Go on vacation, get a free lice check. Which doesn't sound like a bad idea, considering an estimated 6 to 12 million US kids between the ages of 3 and 11 years old get lice every year, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention And if your kid becomes a statistic, olive oil can actually help smother, kill and remove lice eggs from a child's head, according to Northwell Health pediatrician Dr. Lauren Adler Keep in mind that the CDC states that it 'does not have clear scientific evidence' — but if the food product does the trick, more power to it.

Disney & Comcast Finally Settle on a Price for Hulu
Disney & Comcast Finally Settle on a Price for Hulu

Business Insider

time4 hours ago

  • Business Insider

Disney & Comcast Finally Settle on a Price for Hulu

Disney (DIS) and Comcast's (CMCSA) NBC Universal have reached an agreement for Hulu. NBC Universal has exercised its put/call agreement that requires Disney to acquire its remaining 33% stake in Hulu, which is something Disney already wanted. Confident Investing Starts Here: Disney already paid NBC Universal $8.6 billion for its Hulu stake. Following three appraisals of the remaining value it owes for the Hulu stake, it will pay another $438.7 million to NBC Universal. This agreement is expected to close by July 24, 2025. Disney is expected to exclude the Hulu payment from its adjusted earnings per share, meaning it won't affect the company's current guidance. It will also list the payment as Net income attributable to noncontrolling interests, which will reduce its Net income attributable to Disney in its fiscal third quarter. What This Means for Hulu With this deal, Disney will take full ownership of Hulu. The streaming service was previously split three ways between Disney, Comcast, and Fox. However, Disney boosted its Hulu stake to roughly two-thirds with its $71.3 billion purchase of Twenty-First Century Fox in 2019. It then announced plans in 2023 to take full control of Hulu through a deal with Comcast. After Disney obtains Hulu, it will generate profits from all 50 million of the streaming service's subscribers. This will bring its total subscriber count to 180.7 million, including Disney+ and ESPN+. Disney will also gain the ability to freely integrate Hulu into its streaming services. DIS stock was down slightly on Tuesday while shares of CMCSA scored a slight increase. Turning to the TipRanks comparison tool, traders will see which stock analysts prefer. Disney has the better consensus rating at Strong Buy, compared to Comcast's Moderate Buy. Even so, its price target of $124.53 only offers a potential 7.67% upside, compared to CMCSA's $40.86 and 18.09% upside.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store