Cover image of show EVA: The Entertainment Variance Authority

EVA: The Entertainment Variance Authority

Podcast by Nakware Howard & Jonathan McNamara

English

Culture & leisure

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About EVA: The Entertainment Variance Authority

Join Nakware Howard and Jonathan McNamara, two proud nerds with a love for entertainment, as they wield their time sticks to judge the fate of content in the nerd universe. Each month, The Entertainment Variance Authority (EVA) dives into a piece of media—be it a blockbuster film, binge-worthy series, or anticipated game. Expect sharp critiques, fiery debates, and hilarious takes as they dissect storytelling, execution, and cultural impact. Will it earn a place among the greats or be pruned like an alternate timeline? Tune in to find out! Curious to see if your favorite made the cut?

All episodes

10 episodes

episode EVA Draft: White Characters who SHOULD be Black. artwork

EVA Draft: White Characters who SHOULD be Black.

Welcome back to the Entertainment Variance Authority, where the Sacred Timeline isn’t just about what exists — it’s about what should have existed all along. In this special mini-pod, Agents Nakware and J-Mac step into the multiversal writers’ room for one of their wildest thought experiments yet: drafting teams of iconic white characters who, by all rights, should’ve been Black from the jump. Tasked by EVA leadership with assembling the ultimate super-team inspired by Black History Month, the agents go full variant mode as they debate who gets rewritten into canon and why. The result is part fantasy draft, part pop-culture roast, and part deeply unserious cultural analysis that somehow still makes way too much sense. No franchise is safe and no character escapes scrutiny. Along the way, the agents make the case for which heroes, villains, gods, and magic users have always had Black energy… even if Hollywood and comic-book history never caught up. Of course, it wouldn’t be EVA without the extra chaos: 🦸 Why Professor X might be one of the blackest-coded leaders in fiction. ⚡ Whether Cyclops was always destined to carry civil-rights metaphor on his back. 👑 And all the wildly different flavors of Black excellence the timeline has to offer. There’s also a hilarious side quest into dream casting, with names like Giancarlo Esposito, Idris Elba, Jay Ellis, and more getting thrown into the EVA casting chamber. By the end, the agents walk away with two fully assembled variant squads, a handful of elite casting choices, and one big question for the timeline: which team actually wins? So grab your variant badge, report to the draft room, and prepare for a level of nerd discourse that is equal parts hilarious, chaotic, and weirdly convincing. Tune in now… because once the EVA files the casting, canon may never recover.

30 Mar 2026 - 29 min
episode EVA Throwback: The Meteor Man (1993) — History, Impact, and Why It Still Matters. artwork

EVA Throwback: The Meteor Man (1993) — History, Impact, and Why It Still Matters.

Welcome back to the Entertainment Variance Authority, where the Sacred Timeline isn’t just about billion-dollar franchises — sometimes it’s built on cult classics, cultural milestones, and a whole lot of 90s chaos. This week, TVA leadership drops a directive straight from the archives: Agents Nakware and J-Mac must revisit a foundational (and wildly unconventional) superhero entry — The Meteor Man. Released in 1993 and powered by the creative vision of Robert Townsend, this film lands at the intersection of superhero origin story, community parable, and full-blown time capsule. But does its historic significance as the first Black-led superhero films secure its place on the Sacred Timeline… or do its campy execution, chaotic structure, and aggressively 90s sensibilities put it at risk of being pruned? From the jump, the agents break down everything: a mild-mannered teacher turned hero by a glowing meteor, a city overrun by the absurdly effective Golden Lords, and a power set so stacked it feels like someone checked every box on the superhero starter pack (yes, including book-speed-learning and weather control). Along the way, they uncover a film that’s less about powers — and more about people. Inside this TVA hearing: 🌆 Why The Meteor Man is as much about community resilience as it is about superheroics 🎭 How a legendary ensemble cast — including Don Cheadle, Sinbad, and James Earl Jones — elevates (and occasionally derails) the experience 🦸 The case for Meteor Man as both the most generic AND most human superhero ever put on screen 🐅 A deeply important investigation into why a gang needed a tiger… but only sometimes 📼 The unmistakable DNA of 90s filmmaking — vignette storytelling, wild tonal swings, and messages that hit harder than the plot cohesion ⚖️ And the complicated legacy questions surrounding cultural impact, representation, and problematic figures tied to the film. There’s also a full breakdown of the climactic “meteor fight” (including a surprise kung-fu download and an all-time great mid-battle runway showdown), a passionate defense of community-first storytelling, and a realization that maybe — just maybe — the real superpower was accountability all along. By the end, the agents reach a verdict that balances nostalgia, historical weight, and honest critique. Because sometimes the Sacred Timeline isn’t about perfection — it’s about significance. So dust off the VHS, grab your variant badge, and step into a version of superhero cinema that walked so others could fly. Tune in now… because once the TVA files the verdict, even the Meteor Man can’t rewrite history.

27 Mar 2026 - 54 min
episode The Fate of 2026 TV & Video Games: What Makes the Sacred Timeline? | EVA Podcast artwork

The Fate of 2026 TV & Video Games: What Makes the Sacred Timeline? | EVA Podcast

Welcome back to the Entertainment Variance Authority, where the Sacred Timeline doesn’t stop at the box office — it stretches across streaming queues and controller batteries too. This week, EVA leadership has issued a new directive: Agents Nakware and J-Mac must turn their predictive powers toward television and video games in 2026. Which releases deserve canon status? Which ones are headed straight for pruning and which ones might not even survive development long enough to face judgment? From capes and pirates to survival horror and open-world chaos, the agents break down the year ahead including Daredevil: Born Again Season 2, the live-action return of One Piece, the final ride for The Boys, and honorable mentions like Lanterns, Star Trek: Starfleet Academy, A Knight of the Seven Kingdoms, and Wonder Man. On the gaming side, the EVA case files are stacked with heavy hitters from survival horror hopeful Resident Evil Requiem to globe-trotting adventure Tomb Raider, spy thriller 007 First Light, and Marvel’s ambitious projects Marvel 1943: Rise of Hydra and Marvel’s Wolverine. And yes, the agents also wrestle with the cultural juggernaut that is Grand Theft Auto VI. Along the way, the TVA debates: 🎮 Whether modern AAA games still remember they’re supposed to be fun first. 📺 If Marvel can recapture the gritty magic of its street-level storytelling. 🏴‍☠️ Why pirate adventures, devil fruits, and found family might be TV’s safest bet. 🧟 How survival horror reclaimed its throne after years of action bloat. 📉 And the uncomfortable reality that industry layoffs may decide what gets released before audiences ever do. There’s also a passionate defense of ridiculous video-game mechanics, a surprisingly deep dive into anime adaptation success, and at least one existential monologue about whether Rockstar makes masterpieces… or forgets it’s making games at all. By the end, the agents reach a cautious verdict: 2026 could be a huge year for games, a swing year for television, and a reminder that sometimes the Sacred Timeline isn’t decided by quality — it’s decided by whether something actually ships. So grab your variant badge, charge your controller, and clear your watchlist. The EVA has logged its predictions and the timeline is already branching. Tune in now… because once the verdict is filed, there’s no respawn.

22 Feb 2026 - 46 min
episode The Fate of 2026 Movies: What Makes the Sacred Timeline? | EVA Podcast artwork

The Fate of 2026 Movies: What Makes the Sacred Timeline? | EVA Podcast

Welcome back to the Entertainment Variance Authority, where the Sacred Timeline doesn’t wait for release dates — it demands predictions. And this week, TVA leadership has issued a new directive: Agents Nakware and J-Mac must gaze into the chaotic multiversal fog of 2026 and decide which upcoming blockbusters are destined for canon… and which are headed straight for pruning. From galaxy-spanning epics to tournament fighters and franchise Hail Marys, the agents dig into the year ahead including Avengers: Doomsday, Dune: Messiah, Spider-Man: Brand New Day, The Mandalorian & Grogu, Supergirl, Masters of the Universe, Mortal Kombat 2, Street Fighter, and the next animated chaos engine from The Super Mario Bros. Movie. Some verdicts come easy. Others spark heated TVA hearings. And at least one agent spirals into a deeply scientific theory about whether the quality of Star Wars projects correlates directly with the number of cool spaceship dogfights. Along the way, the TVA debates: 🎬 Whether Marvel can still be trusted to juggle multiversal stakes without collapsing under its own lore 🦸 Why James Gunn might be DC’s best hope — and why the Super-family still makes one agent nervous 🎮 Why leaning into absurdity could save Street Fighter but doom Mortal Kombat 👶 Whether too many villains can sink a Spider-Man story before it even swings into theaters 📉 And the growing TVA concern that studios are chasing financial timelines instead of narrative ones There’s also a passionate plea for movies to stop explaining things that don’t need explaining, a surprisingly heartfelt defense of tournament-arc storytelling, and a reminder that sometimes the difference between Sacred Timeline and pruning comes down to one simple question: Did they go hard enough? By the end, the agents land on a split decision year — one where a few franchises feel poised for redemption, others feel dangerously overstuffed, and at least one cinematic universe may be approaching its final iteration whether it admits it or not. So grab your variant badge, check the release calendar, and join us as we predict the fate of 2026’s biggest swings — before the timeline locks in. Tune in now… because once the TVA files the verdict, there’s no post-credit appeal.

20 Feb 2026 - 49 min
episode The 2025 Entertainment Roundup | Final Rankings and Reactions artwork

The 2025 Entertainment Roundup | Final Rankings and Reactions

Welcome back to the Entertainment Variance Authority, where the Sacred Timeline isn’t just for new releases — it’s for accountability. And this week, TVA management has opened an internal review: Agents Nakware and J-Mac must revisit their 2025 rulings and determine whether their judgments still hold… or whether they accidentally let a few timeline anomalies slip through. From superhero swings to kart-racing chaos, we reopen the case files on last year’s biggest reviews — including Thunderbolts, Superman, Daredevil: Born Again, Captain America: Brave New World, Fantastic Four, Eyes of Wakanda, and even the lone gaming entry, Mario Kart World. Some rankings shift. Some hot takes harden. And at least one agent undergoes a spiritual awakening after witnessing the depths of Venom: The Last Dance. Along the way, we debate: 🎬 Whether Thunderbolts truly earned its crown as the TVA’s top 2025 entry 🦸‍♂️ Why one agent believes the least interesting character in Superman… might be Superman 🎮 Mario Kart’s eternal power as both party game and friendship destroyer 📉 Whether Daredevil’s brilliance survives its pacing sins and plot chaos 📊 And the emerging TVA doctrine: should pruning be based on math… or just vibes? But as always, the timeline doesn’t stay tidy for long. We spiral into philosophical TVA policy debates, the dangers of arguing on Facebook, the economics of food delivery fees, and a surprisingly intense discussion about what foods actually survive the journey to your front door. (Spoiler: dumplings thrive. Fries do not.) There’s also love for Austin favorites like Via 313 and Nervous Charlie's, proving that sometimes the Sacred Timeline is just good pizza, solid bagels, and fewer platform fees. By the end, the agents agree on one thing: their 2025 reviews weren’t wrong… but the bar for survival in the TVA might need to rise. Because in 2026, “fine” may no longer be enough to escape pruning. So clock in, grab your variant badge, and join us as we audit the past, argue about vibes, and decide which pieces of pop culture truly deserve to exist. Tune in now — before the TVA recalibrates the timeline.

18 Feb 2026 - 45 min
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