This series is going to evolve us all into pure energy, and we're going to transcend into a higher plane of existence, and FF is trying to pee on the parade over the release day. This is exactly what he's pulling in the SNW thread.
Ok so there’s an image floating around that is a potentially massive spoiler if true regarding characters that may appear in this series. It’s pretty huge so don’t click if you don’t want to know. I mean it Last chance
You're only partially correct. In the late 1970s and into the 1980s and early 1990s, Friday nights were when the networks aired their A-list stuff. The original concept of "death slot" meant that any other show that aired up against stuff like Miami Vice, the A-Team, etc. would get hammered in the ratings. It's like scheduling a movie premiere the same weekend as an MCU or Star Wars film. You know your box office is going suck. It was only until the 2000's when it took on the meaning you refer to. From Wikipedia: "The term possibly began as a reflection of certain programs' dominance of Friday night in the 1980s and 1990s, which resulted in decreased ratings for those scheduled opposite their competitors."
No, and given who it is, then this is likely a Force hallucination or memory on behalf of the other person, unless they are going to undo the excellent fate the first character already got.
Seems like it's from a fan cosplay thing, so never mind https://comicbook.com/tv-shows/news...aul-debunked-mandalorian-spinoff-disney-plus/
Rebels is 5 years after Obi-Wan. -Revenge Of The Sith- 20 years before ANH -Solo- 10 years after ROTS -Obi-Wan- ditto -Rebels- 5 years before ANH -Rogue One- A month to a second before ANH
It seemed like it was a pretty big deal at the time. I didn't even WATCH Rebels, and I knew about it.
I don't know about all that. Most of the episode was Ezra arguing with Chopper and wandering around Tatooine.
Obi Wan was and tried very hard to be a "true Jedi" - what he tried to teach Luke in the short time he was allowed - in that a Jedi doesn't "hate" or "need revenge" (why he was paired with a Master who believed otherwise, and a Padawan who could never be like him) was yet another tragedy in his life. Another example showing the council didn't always know what they were doing. Obi-Wan should have been paired with a much more scholarly Master. If he had, he'd have never been in the position of being responsible for Anakin, nor would he have been forced to live as a hermit with no purpose for 19 years. So, it was not so much a "noble and valiant foe", rather Obi Wan never really wanted to kill in the first place. He didn't want to kill Maul in The Phantom Menace and he didn't want to kill him in Rebels. Circumstances forced it on him and he was saddened by that.
would it be too much for you to look up the quote to understand it? (although, yeah... seems I paraphrased) anyways, here's the accurate version... "To the memory of Captain Boelcke, our brave and chivalrous opponent." Royal Flying Corps, 1916 otherwise, yeah.. that's my point. he's free of the revenge hang up so much that he can offer comfort and dignity to one of his greatest opponents as they die.
I'm not disputing the quote. I'm disputing it's relevance in the context of Maul's death and Obi Wan's feelings about it. I don't think he respected Maul at all. I think he was just sad about having to kill him.