ReportWire

Tag: echo

  • ‘Daredevil: Born Again’ Almost Had an Echo/Punisher Teamup

    The first season of Daredevil: Born Again was partially built off the bones of an old version. One idea which didn’t survive the changeover? Apparently, a one-off episode focused on the Punisher (Jon Bernthal) and Echo (Alaqua Cox).

    In a recent interview with IGN, writer Jesse Wigutow—who wrote two of season one’s nine episodes—mentioned a “bottle episode” that was planned featuring Frank and Maya that he’d have written. When this was being concepted “two, three years ago,” the two antiheroes would’ve “shared an interesting night together. Not romantically, but narratively, said Wigutow. He conceded that it could resurface in Born Again’s future, but called its original development “crooked” and said might need a slight rework.

    While Echo’s a more recent MCU addition and only had one run-in with Daredevil, her and Punisher hanging out could be fun. The closest thing Born Again had to a one-off was its bank heist halfway through the season, which seemed to be generally liked that season. If the show’s got the space for bottle episodes that can highlight its supporting street heroes who don’t have the time or space for a full spinoff of their own, this is a good way to work within the system.

    As for Punisher, he’s got a solo special that’ll have him doing what he does best. That’s due sometime in 2026, presumably before Daredevil: Born Again returns for season two. And sometime after that, we’ll get more of Matt and whoever else in season three.

    Want more io9 news? Check out when to expect the latest Marvel, Star Wars, and Star Trek releases, what’s next for the DC Universe on film and TV, and everything you need to know about the future of Doctor Who.

    Justin Carter

    Source link

  • ‘Echo’ Reactions and Armchair CEO: ‘Daredevil’ Edition

    ‘Echo’ Reactions and Armchair CEO: ‘Daredevil’ Edition

    The boys are here to give you their thoughts on the first event of Echo, along with their Midnight Meter rating of the full first season (13:030). Later, they try their hand at being in the big chair for a round of Armchair CEO to see what they would do with the new Daredevil TV show (70:20).

    Hosts: Charles Holmes, Van Lathan, Jomi Adeniran, and Steve Ahlman
    Senior Producer: Steve Ahlman
    Additional Production Support: Arjuna Ramgopal
    Social: Jomi Adeniran

    Subscribe: Spotify / Apple Podcasts

    Charles Holmes

    Source link

  • ‘Echo’ Deep Dive

    ‘Echo’ Deep Dive

    It’s time to join Mal and Jo for the first Marvel endeavor of 2024 in the form of Echo (10:13). They take on the entire season drop and get into what made the show work and not work for them (28:32). Later, they break down easter eggs and much more.

    Hosts: Mallory Rubin and Joanna Robinson
    Senior Producer: Steve Ahlman
    Additional Production: Arjuna Ramgopal
    Social: Jomi Adenira

    Subscribe: Spotify / Apple Podcasts / Stitcher / Pandora / Google Podcasts

    Mallory Rubin

    Source link

  • ‘Echo’ Is Another Marvel TV Miss. Plus, ‘White Lotus’ Season 3 Casting and the ‘Mandalorian’ Movie.

    ‘Echo’ Is Another Marvel TV Miss. Plus, ‘White Lotus’ Season 3 Casting and the ‘Mandalorian’ Movie.

    Chris and Andy talk about the news that, among others, Carrie Coon and Parker Posey have been cast in the next season of White Lotus (1:00). Then they talk about the news that there will be a Mandalorian movie and what that means for a potential Season 4 of the show (23:36). Finally, they discuss the newest Marvel TV show, Echo, and how—like many other Marvel shows before it—it struggles to strike the right tone (34:51).

    Hosts: Chris Ryan and Andy Greenwald
    Producer: Kaya McMullen

    Subscribe: Spotify / Apple Podcasts / Stitcher / RSS

    Chris Ryan

    Source link

  • 'Echo's Place on the MCU Timeline Is Mercifully Straightforward

    'Echo's Place on the MCU Timeline Is Mercifully Straightforward

    (Disney)

    All five episodes of Echo are now streaming on Disney+ and Hulu, continuing the story of Maya Lopez (Alaqua Cox). But, with the Marvel Cinematic Universe’s timeline constantly getting bigger and more convoluted, you might be wondering when exactly Echo takes place. Is it before or after the Blip? Is that giant dude from Eternals sticking out of the ocean yet? Has that multiversal war happened!?

    Don’t worry, the timing of Echo is actually pretty straightforward. Here’s when Echo takes place in the MCU!

    Echo follows Maya Lopez during the aftermath of attempt to kill Kingpin (Vincent D’Onofrio). When she heads home to Oklahoma to try and strike back against Kingpin’s remaining forces, she’s forced to confront the family she left behind—especially since Kingpin survived her attack, and he’s coming for her.

    Echo takes place after Hawkeye, and probably before Daredevil: Born Again

    We first meet Maya in Hawkeye, in which Clint Barton (Jeremy Renner) passes the torch … uh, bow and quiver to Kate Bishop (Hailee Stanfield). In Hawkeye, Maya is one of Kingpin’s lieutenants, but she turns on him when Barton tells her that Kingpin ordered her father killed. At the end of Hawkeye, Maya shoots Kingpin in the face.

    Episode 1 of Echo recaps the events of Hawkeye, then catches up with Maya five months later. Thanks to that timing—and the fact that Hawkeye takes place during Christmas—we know that Echo takes place in May, after the events of Hawkeye.

    But when is that? According to the official MCU timeline, Hawkeye takes place in December 2025, which puts Echo in May 2025. The Blip, the period in which half the universe is erased from existence, goes from 2018 to 2023 in the MCU. That means that Echo takes place about two years after the events of Avengers: Endgame. The major events of Echo span only a few days.

    What about the end of Echo? I’m avoiding spoilers in this article, so I won’t say too much, but it definitely seems to set up Daredevil: Born Again. Will we see more of Maya in the future? I hope so.

    (featured image: Disney+)

    Have a tip we should know? [email protected]

    Julia Glassman

    Source link

  • All the Echo season 2 news we’ve heard so far

    All the Echo season 2 news we’ve heard so far

    Echo season 1 ends with a bang, with Echo (Alaqua Cox) going up against Kingpin (Vincent D’Onofrio) again after confronting him in Hawkeye. Along the way, she reconnected with her roots, her family, and her sense of self, putting her on the track to becoming a hero.

    It’s enough to make you wonder where Echo might show up next. So far, Echo has only appeared in Hawkeye and Echo, but with the MCU branching farther than ever, it seems like there are a lot of places a hothead superhero could pop up — including, potentially, a second season of her own show?

    Here’s everything we know about Marvel’s future plans for Echo and Echo:

    Is there going to be an Echo season 2?

    As of this writing, Disney hasn’t confirmed if there will be a season 2 of Echo. For now, the show is being billed as a miniseries, just like Hawkeye before it. But that doesn’t necessarily mean that the show won’t be coming back.

    When will Echo show up next in the MCU?

    So far, neither Alaqua Cox nor Echo have been confirmed to show up anywhere else in the MCU. But there is a Daredevil show in the works (and in the reworks) that seems like an opportunity for her; after all, they had a pretty great fight in Echo.

    And if Hawkeye is any indication, this doesn’t have to be the end for Cox’s Maya Lopez. Hailee Steinfeld’s Kate Bishop showed up in a teaser scene at the end of The Marvels as Hawkeye’s heir apparent, meaning Echo could find an analogous slot somewhere in the MCU. (Even if, for now, it’s still unclear what Kate will be doing as part of Kamala’s team.)

    When might Echo season 2 debut on Disney Plus (or Hulu)?

    If there is an Echo season 2, it might be a while before it actually comes out. Echo was first announced in November 2021, right after Cox showed up as Echo in Hawkeye. With the show only getting released some two years later, the earliest we’re likely to see Echo season 2 would be 2026.

    What does this mean for the Marvel Spotlight?

    Photo: Chuck Zlotnick/Marvel Studios

    Echo was a unique release for Marvel, not just because it was the first one to drop on Hulu (and in full) instead of Disney Plus. It was also the first entry in the new Marvel Spotlight umbrella, something Echo producer Richie Palmer says Echo was the right show at the right time to be.

    “I think it was us saying, You know what? Echo wants to be its own thing. So let’s allow it to be,” Palmer tells Polygon. “We wanted to figure out, when we were bringing Maya Lopez to life, how do we honor that aspect of the comics? How do we keep it dark and gritty and separated from everything else that was going on?”

    “And then Kevin [Feige] came in, as we were editing the show, and we were seeing how dark we were pushing it. And he was saying, Don’t hold back on the violence, don’t hold back on the grit and this grounded tone, it’s what’s making this show so unique and special. So Marvel Spotlight kind of came from Kevin.”

    With Spotlight offerings being framed as an opportunity for more casual viewing, even sans any other MCU knowledge, it’s unclear if shows like Echo are being designed (or promised, or even considered for) a second season.

    Zosha Millman

    Source link

  • Amazon’s new Echo Frames can’t touch the Ray-Ban Meta | TechCrunch

    Amazon’s new Echo Frames can’t touch the Ray-Ban Meta | TechCrunch

    This April marked the 10th anniversary since Google released the first generation of Glass. It may be difficult to believe with a decade of hindsight, but the limited release “Explorer’s Edition” were coveted objects. For a little while, at least, they felt like the future.

    The last 10 years of smartglasses has, however, been an extremely mixed bag. There have been more misses than hits, and it feels like we’re still years out from reaching any sort of consensus on form and functionality.

    Google Glass never reached the kind of critical mass required to launch a commercial product, though the company seems content to give things another shot every couple of years.

    The success of AR, meanwhile, has largely been confined to smartphone screens — though not for lack of trying. Magic Leap, Microsoft and Meta have all launched AR products with varying degrees of success, and next year’s Apple Vision Pro release is sure to move the needle on…something. But technical limitations have confined these solutions to significantly larger form factors.

    Shrinking that sort of technology down to regular glasses size is a nice goal, but one that is a ways off. It’s telling that Meta’s recent hardware event saw the release of two head-worn devices. The first was the Quest 3, a VR headset that offers an AR experience courtesy of passthrough technology. The other, the Ray-Ban Meta, has no pretense of offering augmented reality, but it does manage to fit things into the standard glasses form factor.

    Image Credits: Brian Heater

    Like the Snapchat Spectacles before them, the Ray-Ban Meta are all about content capture. A camera built into the frame lets the wearer shoot quick videos and livestream for social media. As far as content consumption goes, speakers are built into the temples, directing music or podcast audio toward the wearer’s ear.

    Unlike the Ray-Bans, however, Amazon’s Echo Frames 3 don’t do video capture (you can practically hear the collective sigh of relief from privacy advocates across the globe). They do, however, offer a similar audio set up. The speakers are located in the temples, just ahead of the temple tips. The company has opted against bone conduction here, which is probably for the best (while neat, the technology is generally passable, at best).

    Unlike most headphones and earbuds, they don’t cover the entrance to the ear canal. That’s great for situational awareness and less than great for immersive sound. If you want to stay focused on the world around you while you walk down the street or ride a bike listening to music, it’s not a bad option.

    Image Credits: Brian Heater

    Given their proximity to the ear, they get plenty loud, and due to their directional nature, they’re hard to hear if you’re not wearing them (though not totally silent to others). The actual audio quality, on the other hand, leaves much to be desired. They do in a pinch for music, but I’d rather not rely on them as a daily driver of any sort.

    As their name implies, however, the real centerpiece here is Echo functionality. The Frames are yet another form factor for summoning Alexa. This makes enough sense on the face of it, a hands-free voice assistant you can take anywhere your phone gets a decent connection. You can play/pause, make calls and set reminders, for starters — all things you can do on a pair of earbuds with a connected voice assistant.

    Image Credits: Brian Heater

    There are five different styles: black square, black rectangle, blue round, brown cat eye and grey rectangle. Amazon sent the first, which look like your average pair of Buddy Holly/Elvis Costello glasses, albeit with a plasticky design and larger temples, owing to the electronics contained inside. They fit me well enough, and while they’re not exactly what I would have picked out at, say, Warby Parker, I don’t feel embarrassed wearing them publicly.

    You can further customize the Frames with prescription lenses, blue light filtering or go in for sunglasses. All nice options to have, certainly.

    The battery life is stated at 14 hours of “moderate” usage. With a standard amount of music listening, you should be able to get through a day on a single charge. That’s especially nice given that the charging dock is big and awkward relative to the glasses themselves. Included in the packaging are charging instructions (along with some short braille instructions — a nice touch on the accessibility front), which are necessary as the design isn’t intuitive.

    Image Credits: Brian Heater

    You fold the glasses and face the lenses up, so the charging points on the temples contact the charger. It’s a far cry from the Ray-Ban Meta’s extremely convenient and well-designed charging case. Amazon’s case, on the other hand, is collapsible. It’s not nice, but there’s definitely an added convenience in being able to fold it flat while wearing the glasses.

    My feelings about the latest Echo Frames may well have been different had I not recently tested the Ray-Ban Meta. At $270, they’re $30 cheaper than the Meta glasses. If you’re attempting to decide between the two, I would say bite the bullet and spend the extra $30. Of course, it’s also worth factoring in that — as I write this — Amazon is currently offering the new Echo Frames for a deeply discounted $200.

    Brian Heater

    Source link

  • Austin Pets Alive! | We Need Your Help Ending Needless Euthansia!

    Austin Pets Alive! | We Need Your Help Ending Needless Euthansia!

    Sep 27, 2022

    It’s so important to me to give every vulnerable animal the chance at life they deserve. That’s why APA!’s No Kill mission is at the heart of everything I do, even at home. When my own pup Echo came to APA! during Hurricane Harvey, she and her brother had distemper, a dangerous virus with symptoms like tremors, lethargy, and fever.

    Echo’s brother sadly passed away shortly after arriving at APA!, but
    Echo has been by my side ever since. If Echo had stayed much longer in
    another city without the resources to give her the round-the-clock care
    and mobility support she needed, she might not have grown up into the
    talkative companion she is today. Needless euthanasia is still an unfortunate reality for pets like Echo in cities that haven’t adopted No Kill yet.

    Without APA!’s experience and passion for saving pets like Echo,
    animals with severe illnesses or injuries might have nowhere to turn.
    Because of the lifesaving and innovative programs pioneered here
    (including for dogs with distemper!), vulnerable pets have a shot at
    recovery and the life they deserve. We can only save animals in need and give them the chance to thrive in loving homes because of the support of friends like you!

    I fostered Echo as she battled the virus, which left her paralyzed at just 8 weeks old. Echo
    was sick during her critical growth phases as a puppy and still lives
    with the lasting effects of her fight with distemper. Her front leg
    sticks out to the side but she can scoot around the yard faster than
    many dogs with 4 fully functioning legs! She has a cart that helps give
    her limbs a rest from being laid on. All this means that, despite her
    rough start to life, Echo’s routine just looks a little different than it might for other dogs!

    So many vulnerable animals like her just need some extra love and care
    to survive and thrive. When you support APA!’s lifesaving programs
    today, you’ll help pets like Echo survive tough battles with illness and injury.

    Will you join us to give more vulnerable animals like my beloved pup Echo the second chance at life they deserve?

    With gratitude,
    Ellen

    Source link