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While it s easy to assume
WandaVision could be a figment of Wanda Maximoff s imagination, it sounds like that might not be the case after all, and things may actually be a lot more real than they seem.
KingPatel |
1/25/2021
Even though
WandaVision starts off like any ordinary sitcom, it doesn t take long for a few cracks to start showing, and by the end of the premiere, it becomes abundantly clear that something is seriously off about Westview, the mysterious town that both Wanda Maximoff (Elizabeth Olsen) and The Vision (Paul Bettany) find themselves currently living in.
Our first indicator that all was not what it seemed came about midway through episode one when Wanda and Vision are hosting the latter s boss Arthur Hart (Fred Melamed) and his wife (Debra Jo Rupp) for dinner. Things take a dark turn when Arthur starts choking mere moments after he begins questioning Wanda, while Mrs. Hart seemingly begs Wanda to
The future of
WandaVision is as wild and uncertain as the show itself. But is there any chance that Marvel might continue the story of everyone s favourite Avengers beyond season one?
Marvel boss Kevin Feige has been characteristically vague about a potential second season of
WandaVision or, in fact, any of the new superhero shows heading to Disney+. Marvel StudiosDisney
However, during a chat with There are some shows that have been built to further expand our storytelling and then go into features. We ve already announced [Elizabeth] Olsen being a part of
WandaVision s Monica Rambeau actress] Teyonah Parris being part of
Boise to Chinese settlers: We love your gardens. We need your labor. We don t want you David Staats, The Idaho Statesman
Boise historian Arthur Hart, who died Tuesday, Dec. 8, 2020, at age 99, was the principal source for this brief story, which was first published on May 30, 2014, as part of a Statesman series on the newspaper’s Top 50 stories in its then 150-year history. Hart had a special interest in the history of Boise’s Chinese settlers. His books included “Chinatown: Boise, Idaho, 1870-1970.”
The few remaining Idaho descendants of the state’s 19th century Chinese immigrants can take pride in their forefathers. But the treatment of those immigrants by white Idahoans is nothing to be proud of.
Idaho Statesman
BOISE â Itâs fair to say that no Idahoan has been more associated with Gem State history than Arthur Hart.
In fact, âheâs known as Mr. History,â said Jody Ochoa, now-retired director of the Idaho State Historical Museum.
Hart, an Idaho State Historical Society director emeritus who authored at least 20 books on Ada County and Idaho, died Tuesday afternoon. He was 99.
âDr. Hart was at home with his wife of 78 years and his youngest daughter,â Tobin Hope, Hartâs son-in-law, wrote in an email to the Statesman.
Hart, who would have turned 100 in February, shared his love of Gem State history with Idaho Statesman readers from 1970 until this fall in one of the paperâs longest-running columns. His last piece was published in October.