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315 lines
18 KiB
Plaintext
Episode: 90
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Title: HPR0090: Ironman
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Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr0090/hpr0090.mp3
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Transcribed: 2025-10-07 11:22:55
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---
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Welcome back to another thrilling, exciting episode of Hacker Public Radio.
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I'm Peter Nicolitis, and joining me is my good friend and host of the Fresh Ubuntu
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podcast, Harlem.
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How are you doing?
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Good.
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Good, Peter.
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All right.
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Thanks for joining me today.
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Hey, no problem.
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I heard you were talking about Iron Man, and since Iron Man is coming out, I wanted
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to participate as well.
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That's awesome.
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Yes.
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As Harlem said, by the time you're listening to this, today is the debut of the brand new
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Iron Man live-action movie starring Robert Downey Jr.
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And I thought that it would be appropriate to just have a little chat about Iron Man.
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So for those of you who are listening to HPR, who are geeky enough to listen to it,
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but not know who Iron Man is, shame on you.
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Now that I've got that out of the way, though, we're going to take a little time and educate
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you as to who and or what Iron Man is, and why I like him so much.
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Iron Man has always been one of my favorite superheroes, and I just thought he was really
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cool.
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He's really powerful.
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He's definitely one of them.
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I don't know if he's one of the most powerful, but he's rather powerful in the Marvel universe.
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He was a Marvel comic book.
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And he was a founding member of the Avengers, who are, you know, what, Earth's mightiest
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heroes.
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I think that's their tagline.
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But Iron Man is, his secret identity is Anthony Edward Stark, he goes by Tony, Tony Stark,
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who is a multi-billionaire, and he owns and operates this mega-conglomerate corporation
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called Stark Enterprises.
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Right.
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So, I've rambled a little bit, oh, Stark Industries, Interesting Industries, thank you, thank
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you.
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So, I've rambled a little bit about him.
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Why don't you just take over, tell us a little bit about Iron Man, Harlem, anything
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you like?
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Well, what particularly drew me to Iron Man is that this guy is just an ordinary guy.
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He doesn't have any special powers, he's not ultra-fast or anything like that.
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He's just a smart guy, and on top of that, he's got some pretty good business sense.
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So, that's what draws, I think a lot of the folks is that they can, they as ordinary
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people, and at least this is what I was thinking, is that technology can make us better, you
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know what I mean?
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Yeah.
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That's what sort of drew me to this guy, so, I love the, I also love the way his suit of
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armor has evolved from the very beginnings back in the, you know, the very early days
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where it was just this big dark gray piece of metal, not very well form fitting, to what
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it is now, a nicely designed, it looks like a some really strange type of alloy, and
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that can move with your skin and that kind of stuff, so, I love the evolution of that
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kind of thing.
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Absolutely.
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Can I jump in for a second there?
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The Iron Man first appeared, he was created by like so many other Marvel Comics characters
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created by Stan Lee in 19, actually I shouldn't say not just Stan Lee, but also Stan Lee, Larry
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Lieber, and artists by Don Heck and also with Jack Kirby, so they all collaborated and
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made Iron Man in 1963, so, you know, Iron Man's been around for 45 years now, so, a long
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time.
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And interesting, you think about that, but it's about time that they made a movie of him,
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you know, I mean, it's absolutely, you know, you keep herring it about it, you know,
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I've heard that they were going to do an Iron Man movie 10 years ago, and I keep waiting
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and waiting and waiting, and I thought, finally, we have finally done it, so, anyway, just
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my two cents in.
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Yeah.
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Oh, absolutely.
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Continue where you were going.
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I just wanted to get that origin little tidbit in there.
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Yeah.
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So, for years and years, I've been waiting for, you know, a real good Iron Man movie, and
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you hear about it for years and years and years from Hollywood, and I'm hoping this
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movie doesn't disappoint, doesn't disappoint me.
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Yeah.
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I've been disappointed by a lot of these franchise superhero movies, most notably Batman.
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The first one was pretty good, the very first one with Michael Keaton.
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In 1989.
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Right.
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And then afterwards, you know, the rest of them just got worse and worse and worse, and
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then-
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Absolutely.
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And not to get off topic here, but it's since gotten much better with Christian
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Bale.
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Absolutely.
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I was going to say that Batman begins stuff, but that's relevant though, because actually,
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I was going to bring in Batman into this discussion, because I think Batman and Iron Man actually
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have a lot of things in common, and, you know, they both are, well, for starters, they're
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both, you know, multi-billionaire defense contractors, right?
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They both use technology to enhance themselves, although Batman, you know, I guess, he's
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dependent on technology, I think, to a lesser degree, you know, because he also epitomizes
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or represents like the epitome of human potential, and, you know, like what a human can do,
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whereas, you know, and they're both really, really smart.
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I'm not sure, I've seen a ranking somewhere, but I'm pretty sure they're both in like
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the top, you know, four or five, as far as intelligence goes, and in their respective
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fictional universes, you know, on their worlds anyway.
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You know, because Batman is, you know, he's definitely outsmarted Lex Luthor before, and
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he's generally the smartest in, you know, in DC universe.
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And, you know, Iron Man, I think, you know, he's on Tony Stark, is in league with Reed
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Richards and Dr. Doom and Marvel Comics side, so.
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But, you know, the thing is different is Iron Man, you know, he, I think he utilizes the
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technology a lot more.
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I mean, he wears the thing, but he's also dependent on it.
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I don't know if this is true in the current scheme, because I, I, I, I haven't been buying
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Iron Man comics for several years now, but he originally created the armor to keep
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him alive, right?
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Yes, absolutely.
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And that, that's, yeah, and that was the whole, I think that's how it all came about,
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is that he went over to, because of his, well, you know, his job, he went over to a place
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and he got kidnapped, apparently, and, well, it was Vietnam, I think originally, wasn't
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it?
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Yeah, I think it was.
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You know, it was Vietnam originally, because that was the setting at the time they, the,
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the original comic was in, you know, in the 60s, and they wanted to play off of what was
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going on, which is kind of a neat little microcosm about, about comic books, is that it's
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sort of a, you know, it's a pop culture look at what's going on at the time.
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And that's the kind of neat thing about comic books.
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Yeah.
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Anyway.
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It is.
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And I guess in the movie, then what it, it starts out in, is an Iraq or Afghanistan, I think
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it's Afghanistan.
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Afghanistan now.
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Yeah.
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So it updated again to be Afghanistan, which is what it says in the wiki here in wiki
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pdf.
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And a lot of the, the, the factoids and facts that we're pulling out today were, we're,
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we're pulling out of the wiki pdf article on Iron Man, which is pretty cool.
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So he's, he's a multi billionaire.
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We've established that.
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Right.
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And he, so this is the movie is starting over, okay, so we're, it's the movie starting
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in Afghanistan.
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Right.
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That's, that's something that they definitely, they do with comics a lot because, I mean,
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you know, right now, I guess it's just who wants to read about a superhero who was formed
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in fiat non, right?
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That's just so pass A.
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Right.
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So they even, cliche, exactly.
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Right.
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So if, so they, they, they, they do things like that to keep things fresh.
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And I know like, they did that with Magneto when they did the, the first X-Men movie several
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years ago now, he was a child in the concentration camps in World War II.
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But I guess I forget how old he was when they originally introduced him in the comic book.
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I think, I don't remember if he was in, you know, like in his 20s or if he was, you
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know, or 30s or whatnot, but he was a lot older.
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So, you know, if they want to keep Magneto around, they're going to have to get rid of that
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whole thing.
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And unfortunately, that's a, you know, a lot of ties into his, his past and stuff.
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I'd be curious, I guess, you know, it's not, not so critical with Tony Stark, they can
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just take him out of one war and drop him into another.
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So, you know, I guess that's a little to the story of writers advantages, but, right.
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But so what are some of the things that the Iron Man armor, let's Iron Man do?
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Well, fly for one thing, and that's great.
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The, the, the first and foremost thing that pops out of my head is that the guy can fly.
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The coolest thing to me and other than, well, it's a suit of armor and it's strong
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and stuff and, and impenetrable, the thing that stands out the most is that the, the guy
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can fly and that's kind of cool.
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Yep.
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I think that's of any superpower, I would, I would think that flying would be probably
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one of the top two things that I would want to have.
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Yeah.
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It's up there.
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It's definitely up there.
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Actually, I just remember I got a little bit off topic.
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I wanted to also say that that the Iron Man suit, you know, was designed to keep him alive
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because he was over in the war.
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It was originally in Vietnam, but I forget exactly what happens, but he, you know, gets
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he's near an explosion and some shrapnel goes into his chest and starts like working
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its way to his heart, right?
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Right.
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Exactly.
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That's what, that's exactly what happens.
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Some shrapnel is in there and then, um, uh, well, well, there's, there's conflicting
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things that I'm thinking of.
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It's been a long time since I've read the origin, but, um, apparently he's got so long to,
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to make this, this, uh, uh, uh, pacemaker, I suppose you can call it and, um, uh, or, or
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a weapon and he chooses to, to live and make a pacemaker and, um, and a weapon and a weapon
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makes himself into the weapon.
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That's right.
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But, yeah, um, so, yeah, he's got, like you said, the first off, he can fly, he's in
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a big suit of armor.
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And that's another thing too, is if you've never, have you ever worn any sort of armor?
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I mean, any sort of like padding or anything like that?
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Uh, like a, like football padding, yes.
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Yeah, okay.
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I mean, you, you think about it, it's kind of cool.
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If you've never put on any sort of armor, like, you know, for martial arts sparring or
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just, you know, mountain biking gear or football, it's kind of cool.
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Try it out sometime.
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It immediately, you know, you feel tougher, you know, you feel less vulnerable when, like,
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you can take more.
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I know I do it when I'm mountain bike.
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Um, you know, if I go out with my padding on, I am a lot more comfortable, you know,
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with like the risks that I take mountain biking than I am without it, you know, right.
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And let me add, the coolest thing to is the helmet, yeah, and it could be any old
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helmet, you know, football players wear the helmet, but like my kids, we'll see guys
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on motorcycles with these fancy helmets on and, and they will automatically think that
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those guys are superheroes, you know, and it's really, it's, it's pretty cool, though.
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Yeah, but you're right, you feel in, you know, almost invulnerable in one of those things.
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And, and just imagine what it would be like if you were wearing the Ironman suit, though.
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Exactly.
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So, I mean, it makes him pretty much invulnerable to, you know, unless he's dealing with some
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other super high tech villain or, you know, super powered, super, super powered villain, Ironman's
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pretty darn tough.
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Yep.
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And, uh, he's it, he is.
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He's super strong, right?
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The, the power armor gives him super strength.
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That's right.
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Um, and he's, his famous attack is the repulsar race, you know, that shoot out of the,
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out of his gauntlets.
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And, um, I get what I think the, the chest beam, though, had a different, it wasn't that,
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like, the uni beam, I think that was what it used to be called.
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But he has a, another, you know, like laser type thing out of his chest also.
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Yeah, I'm not entirely sure about that.
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I thought it was about the same as the, the pulse bolts.
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Oh, pulse bolts, those came later.
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Pulse bolts, pulse bolts came around in the, uh, the white and red armor, I believe.
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Oh, okay.
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And that was right around the time when he was, uh, after he had lost stark
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industries to Obadaya stain and, you know, stain industries that basically became.
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And, uh, so he built the new armor.
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And that's one of the things you've mentioned that, you know, it started out as this big clunky,
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he basically looked like a walking potbelly stove.
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Right.
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That's how I think of him.
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And, yeah, you know, and then, um, somebody, uh, I, I, I've read the early, uh, Iron Man comics.
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And, um, you know, someone, I guess he was talking to his girlfriend or wife or whatever.
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And they said, oh, you know, you know, he, he's a good guy, but he looks so scary.
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And, you know, if he, if only he was like a shining night.
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So he goes and he paints his armor gold.
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Right.
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And it was a still stain, you know, giant.
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So he looked like a big giant yellow potbelly stove.
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Walking around and then over time, you know, like you said, it slimmed down, you know,
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the, the armor got thinner and, uh, you know, nowadays, he doesn't look much bigger.
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Depending on like what, what timeline you're reading or what continuity it is, uh, you know,
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sometimes the armor doesn't look much larger than a man at all.
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It looks like it's paper thin, you know.
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Right.
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Exactly.
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But, um, he's gone through various incarnations.
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And, uh, when he, uh, he basically added red to the, uh, the suit after a while.
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So he went from like gold, uh, I'm sorry, like, you know, steel, gray steel,
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to gold, to gold and red.
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And that was the color scheme that he stuck with for the longest time.
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And then I forget when it was, but, um, it's sometimes, uh, during the, the storyline involved,
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involving Obadiastane, who was the bad guy in the movie, the iron monger.
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Uh, he changed it and turned it to, um, white and red.
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And added a bunch of new weapons at that time.
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And that's where the pulse bolts came in.
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So, you know, the repulsor rays are basically jacked up a notch or two.
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And, uh, you know, he became even more powerful.
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And that was one of the interesting things that I think Iron Man represents an interesting,
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um, escalation, you know, in, in power, in the power struggle between the villains and heroes.
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And again, with Batman, you know, you sort of saw this when, um, when Bruce Wayne had his
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back broken and, uh, asriel became Batman for a while in the Batman continuity.
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Right.
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Uh, he was so much more powerful, you know, just physical power because of the, the armor
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that that guy wore, that, um, you know, for the first few episodes or first few issues,
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he's just walking around Gotham City, cleaning house, you know, because nobody could lift a
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finger to him because he was just so much tougher. But then the bad guy started to get tougher too,
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you know, right, right.
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But, uh, but anyway, so Iron Man, you know, got stronger and more powerful.
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And, uh, he also evolved into a gray and white suit at one point called the war machine.
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And then, uh, I forget exactly what happened, but he ended up giving that armor to his sidekick,
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Jim Rhodes.
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Uh, do you remember Rody?
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Yes, I do.
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So Rody became a war machine and I guess they had a falling out at one point.
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And, um, you know, he kept the armor and they split off.
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And I forget who went where, but, uh, I think that he went and stayed with the West Coast
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Avengers for a while. I don't remember the West Coast Avengers period of Marvel comics was kind
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of a low point for me. So, but, uh, but Jim Rhodes, um, you know, he was what he starts pilot,
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chauffeur, bodyguard, confidante, yeah, all of those things. And, uh, he plays, he's in the role in
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the, um, in the movie as well, along with a couple of other, um, you know, characters from the,
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from the, uh, the comics. So, um, you know, that's, that's, that's pretty much it in a nutshell.
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Do you have anything else we should talk about to, you know, give folks an idea of who Iron Man is?
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I think the, the best thing is really to go see the movie and get, again, get reacquainted with,
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with, uh, Iron Man and the whole comic book universe. Um, other than that, all I remember is
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that Tony Stark was kind of a jerk. I was just, yes. And also an alcoholic. Yeah. Oh, yeah.
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That's right. You're right. He was an alcoholic and a jerk. Yep. He was kind of a jerk. And
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they, the, the comic was one of the, you know, they did dive into that. They dealt a lot with
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substance abuse and alcoholism. Uh-huh. And that was an interesting thing, especially like in the
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70s and 80s and stuff where, um, you know, a lot of comics did that. Well, not a lot, but, but
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some did. They, you know, dived into real, you know, social issues at the time, human, human issues,
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human exactly. And, and that's, again, like you said, you know, underneath all that, you know,
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that golden yellow armor there, it's just a guy. Right. And that's perhaps that, that's what they
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were trying to go for. There's, there's this outer armor that we all have, you know, a mask,
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so to speak, but inside where are these human people with, with, uh, weaknesses and, uh,
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character flaws and that kind of stuff. So, yep. Perhaps that's where they, they wanted us to,
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to look at the dichotomy of the, uh, the human nature, you know. Well, we could have to get
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on like, yeah. But I think we did a good little overview of Iron Man. Again, the ultimate, uh,
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techie, um, you know, tech, tech hacker hero, in my opinion. So, yeah, I agree. And if you
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haven't seen the trailers there, out now, by the time you hear this episode, obviously, um,
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you know, the, the movie will be out now too. Yep. Um, but, um, I thought from, from the trailers
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that I've seen, they looked really good. Um, you know, Robert Downey Jr. is playing Tony Stark,
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and who's better to play an alcoholic than, you know, someone who's got substance abuse issues,
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right? That's right. You know, I think, I think it's going to work out really well.
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I think so too. I can't wait for the movie. And, um, I know my kids can't. My, uh, I got kids who
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already are begging me to see it. So we'll be out there. Well, Randy, uh, Randy knows,
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we're the, the knows, uh, from Fresh Ubuntu, Colley and Fame. And I will be, uh, connecting
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sometime on Saturday to talk about the movie. So, uh, I'll look for you too if you want to
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join in and we can, uh, you know, do a little roundtable discussion on it.
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Sounds good. All right. Take care, everybody. Thank you for listening to my
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National Public Radio. HBR is sponsored by Carol.net. So head on over to C-A-R-O dot N-E-C for all the
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