
Hello, Hello KlicKNettars. I'm feeling might good today, and I wish I could tell you why in the allotted time that we have right now. So let me break it all down one step at a time, starting with the 5-Day Rounder, which has returned from its little vacation over the past few weeks. You know, it's times like these that I wish I could take a vacation, maybe in the spring or summer, but right now I gotta do what I do best tell ya'll what's happening in the news.
Last Thursday, we meant to premiere a NEW episode of FakeTV Box on our YouTube channel, but we noticed that during editing, we put in the same voice over audio twice. So we had to delete the episode off the channel, and put the correct voice over in the right place. But because of this, rendering the episode again took for hours and hours and hours, however we managed to re-upload the episode on yesterday morning and it's safe to say that the premiere was a success. Through our perspective and this NEW FakeTV Box, feel free to learn about the Wizarding of Harry Potter - Ministry of Magic at Universal Orlando's Epic Universe, in a special Sneak Peek of the Week.
Our Inside Scoop this week continues our recap of the NEW Disney+ series: Marvel Television's Daredevil: Born Again. This show is off to one hell of a start, and in my opinion, the third episode serves a crucial point for Matt Murdock who has really put his skills a lawyer to the test, so let's go over the nitty–gritty right now. WARNING: This piece may contain spoilers, so if you have not seen Daredevil: Born Again Episodes Three on Disney Plus yet, then please stop reading now. But if you would like to continue at your risk, then be my guest.

It all starts with Matt Murdock visiting Hector Ayala in his prison cell, this after Matt got his hands dirty in the last episode when he got into it with Officer Powell and a few other corrupt cops who were looking to kill Nicky Torres, the man who was being beaten down in the subway by Powell and his partner until Hector came in and saved him. Let's not forget that Hector is also the vigilante White Tiger and stands accused of murdering Powell's partner who, in actuality, had tripped off the subway platform and got hit by an incoming train. Matt manages to find Nicky Torres and keep him hidden; we later find out that Nicky's a drug dealer and a police informant whom Powell has beef with. Through thick and thin, Cherry successfully brings Nicky to Hector's trial, but Nicky is scared to death by the police and chooses to commit perjury by testifying that he was never assaulted in the subway. One thing that I've heard during this episode which I didn't see it was playing out is that one of the NYPD cops who attended Hector's trial has a tattoo of the Punisher logo; more on that later.

The entire court battle was extremely well done, it makes you think as if you're watching an old episode of Law & Order on NBC. Things get shaken to the core when Matt Murdock questions Hector on the stand and pulls out the White Tiger mask, thus revealing Hector's secret to the entire world. Everybody in the court room is pissed off by this revelation, and understandably so, but Matt believes he is doing whatever is necessary save Hector's life. Sure enough, things begin to turn in favor of Matt and his client, new witnesses emphasize Ayala's good deeds as being heroic. Even NYPD officers have reported how the impact Hector has had on the New York community as a crime fighter has been for all good, and one of the officers' last name is Morales, which some believe could be the father of Miles Morales, who is well known for taking on the mantle of a certain friendly neighborhood hero in and red and blue tights. All and all, Hector Ayala is acquitted of all charges, thus making him a free man in the eyes of the legal system despite being outed as White Tiger.

Lemme tell you how Mayor Wilson Fisk was doing while the trial was taking place, and to put it into two words: Absolutely Horrible. He thinks it's outrageous that not only Hector got so much praises and sympathy after he was revealed to being White Tiger, but Hector is now allowed to roam the streets, and he wants BB Urich to write another story covering his thoughts on the trial. It doesn't end there, Fisk has been ignoring his criminal colleagues, understandably because he's spending so much time as Mayor of NYC. They take advantage of his absence by mounting a gang war over his territories, but Fisk's right-hand man is sent by his wife Vanessa to ease tensions between the gangs, though Fisk believes that they can just kill each other all he cares. Pretty cold if you ask me, but that is nothing compared to ending of this episode, it has one shocking moment that we do not get the chance to process in our minds for even a few minutes, because it becomes overshadowed by a moment twice as shocking as the last.

While Mayor Fisk is talking to BB in his office about how he'll uphold his stance on anti-vigilantism, we meet up with Hector who is suiting up as White Tiger again, despite the fact that everyone knows who he is. His duty to protect New York really means everything to him, and I must confess what I think he looks really sexy with mask and amulet on. But as soon as Hector is walking down the streets looking for trouble, he is shot in the head by a man whose face we cannot see. But believe it or not, he's wearing a bullet-proof vest which has The Punisher's skull logo on it. So it all begs the question: Was that really Frank Castle who killed Hector Ayala or was that an imposter? One thing that is for certain that we might see return of Frank Castle in the MCU, sooner than all of us imagined. Daredevil: Born Again has been off to a great start and it will be a sight to see where this series goes next once the next NEW episode comes out this Wednesday on Disney Plus.

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