After another week, I don't know if you have watched the third episode of "Wanda Vision"? This time, with the colorization of television, the sitcoms they promote are related to the works of the 60s and 70s, so today's article will take a look at it, and attach an Easter egg and analysis related to Marvel.

The opening line, "The Mary Tyler Moore Show," premiered in 1970, tells the story of Mary Richards, a single woman who recently broke off her marriage, who has now moved to Minnesota's largest city, Minneapolis, to work as a television star, making friends with colleagues, neighbors, and writing many interesting stories.
The film ends with a tribute to "Off-Line Family," which aired in 1969 and tells the story of a single father with three sons and a mother remarried with three daughters, as a way to explore the topic of reshuffling the family. Strikingly, Wanda and Vision's house and courtyard layout in episode three are the same as those of the protagonist in "Off-Line Family", especially the courtyard decoration is almost the same.
The Paint Jar reads: The Simser is an artist who pays homage to the story, Jeremy Simser, who recently worked on the Marvel Universe films Wanda Visions and Hulk, as well as Doctor Strange 2.
The visions, which name their children Billy, begin with a monologue quoting Shakespeare's As You Like It: All the world's a stage, All the men and women, merely players, using the stage metaphor for the world and life for the drama, suggesting that the illusion is the actor in the play, in the stage world where the Crimson Witch rewrites reality.
The doll that The illusion uses to practice wrapping diapers is very similar to the little girl character Cindy in "Off-line Family", interestingly, she often holds this doll in the play, haha.
We see the commercial that appears in the third episode as a Hydra Soak Hydra-headed snake brand bath powder, and it is worth mentioning here that in the fourth season of Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D., in the world controlled by Hydra, Coulson mentioned that Hydra has a blue soap that can implant false memories and make people believe in false reality.
This is a homage to the characters in the comics, when Vision mentions wishing Billy would be like his mother, since in the original, Billy was a mage like the Crimson Witch.
The advertisement that appears in the third episode, in which a woman bathes with Hydra bath powder, is advertised with the slogan: "Escape to a world all your own, where your problems float away", which implies that the Crimson Witch is changing reality, escaping from life's problems, and as for what she is escaping, the TV series will decrypt them for everyone.
In the movie, Wanda uses a thick coat, fruit basket and a basket of flowers to cover up the fact that she is pregnant, which is the practice of camouflaging pregnant actresses in previous TV series, not only sitcoms, horror movies and police films will also be imitated, but now many works have changed to the setting of the heroine's pregnancy, so as to solve the problem of actress pregnancy, such as pretending to be pregnant undercover, single mother, so that you can explore the various problems encountered by women in society.
In the third episode, there are many scenes that hint that the world is about to collapse, in which when Wanda gives birth to a pair of twins, when she recalls that she has a twin brother, she remembers the tragedy of Ultron killing Quicksilver, which leads to a collapse, and the Crimson Witch in the comics is because of the thought of a pair of twin sons collapsing, so Monica Rambeau jumps out of the world and meets the people of Excalibur.
The twins, named Billy and Tommy, are one of the reincarnations of Wanda's dead twin sons: Wiccan and Speed, two characters who have just been mentioned.
In the past 2 episodes, Crimson Witch's magical mentor has always been considered to be the character of Agnes, and Agatha Harkness appeared in the historical event of the Witch Trial, and the necklace worn by the character of Agnes in this episode looks very similar to the necklace worn by Agatha Harkness in the comic, which further establishes the previous judgment.
The Naughty Boys' Choir's Daydream Believer becomes the ending song for the third episode, perfectly corresponding to crimson witches still escaping reality, continuing to hide in the reality of their own creation.
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