Listen to the episode here!
         
   “Is this foreshadowing?” 
“Nah. Just a book recommendation.” 
“Because it really sounds like foreshadowing, Sam.” 
“Former X-Man, huh?” 
(X-Men/Alpha Flight vol. 1, #1) 
          
   Well, that escalated quickly. (X-Men/Alpha Flight vol. 1, #1) 
           
   Someone needs to sit Rachel Summers down for a long and serious conversation about proportional force. (X-Men/Alpha Flight vol. 1, #1) 
              
   WHOOPS. (X-Men/Alpha Flight vol. 1, #1) 
           
   “HOW MANY TIMES DO I HAVE TO TELL YOU: DO AS I SAY, NOT AS I DO!” (X-Men/Alpha Flight vol. 1, #1) 
           
   Those That Sit Above In Shadow. (X-Men/Alpha Flight vol. 1, #1) 
              
   Seriously, though, don’t do that shit. (X-Men/Alpha Flight vol. 1, #1) 
           
   “Think there’s a twist? “Nah.” (X-Men/Alpha Flight vol. 1, #1) 
           
   A) Scott looks like a doof without his glasses. B) I wonder if Marvel got a lot of pissed off letters about his eyes changing color in this issue. (X-Men/Alpha Flight vol. 1, #1) 
              
   “We all got superpowers, but the important part is the AMAZING OUTFITS.” (X-Men/Alpha Flight vol. 1, #1) 
           
   WELL THAT COULD BE LESS AWKWARD. (X-Men/Alpha Flight vol. 1, #1) 
           
   SUPER not cool, Xavier. Also: Remember when Scott’s eyes were blue like five pages ago? ‘CAUSE THE COLORIST DOESN’T! *rimshot* (X-Men/Alpha Flight vol. 1, #1) 
              
   I know they all gave the powers back at the end, but I really don’t see why Heather couldn’t have remade this outfit and then worn it ALL THE TIME, because it is awesome. (X-Men/Alpha Flight vol. 1, #1) 
           
   THAT CAT, THOUGH. (X-Men/Alpha Flight vol. 1, #2) 
           
   Aw, Snowbird. (X-Men/Alpha Flight vol. 1, #2) 
              
   There have been near-infinite variations on this gag, and they’re never not great. (X-Men/Alpha Flight vol. 1, #2) 
           
   Aw, Jean-Paul. Your team is kind of awful. I mean, so are you, but still. (X-Men/Alpha Flight vol. 1, #2) 
           
   COLD, Wolverine. (X-Men/Alpha Flight vol. 1, #2) 
              
   Well, shit. (X-Men/Alpha Flight vol. 1, #2) 
           
   OH, THAT EXPLAINS SOME THINGS. (X-Men/Alpha Flight vol. 1, #2) 
           
   This is about as close as the Summers family ever seems to come to healthy communication, so enjoy it while it lasts. (X-Men/Alpha Flight vol. 1, #2) 
              
   I don’t care if they’re not costumes. DRINK ANYWAY. (X-Men/Alpha Flight vol. 2, #1) 
           
   Throughout this story, Nightcrawler seems to be in a different genre than the rest of the cast. (X-Men/Alpha Flight vol. 2, #1) 
           
   Can’t you just picture John Cassady physically crossing this spread off his bucket list? (X-Men/Alpha Flight vol. 2, #2) 
              
   Also this panel. (X-Men/Alpha Flight vol. 2, #2) 
           
   Alberta, in case you were wondering–just a little south of Calgary. (X-Men/Alpha Flight vol. 2, #2) 
           
   NEXT WEEK: Asgardian Wars! 
        
Many thanks to Emergency Backup Co-Host and Alpha Flight X-Pert (is there an Alpha-Flight-appropriate portmanteau for that?) Elisabeth Allie! Go check out Elisabeth’s blog, and follower her on Twitter!
	
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For some reason that cat in the notebook really creeped me out as a kid.
I think an Alpha Flight maven would be an Eh-xpert.
That sounds more like something phonetically written for Moira or Banshee though.
I think a scholar of Moira & Banshee lore would be an Och’spert.
And a student of the Rasputin family would be a Tovarichpert?
I’m a big fan of Paul Smith as well and it took to about here for me to notice the influence Gil Kane had on his work. I think that’s because it was already a well-digested influence by the time I was aware of his work and his surface is so stylistically different. Also he eschewed (wisely, I think) the Kane nasal upshot.
I came all the way back to comment on this particular episode because I’m excited the next X-Men epic collection coming out is “Volume 12: The Gift” and features this story, along with “Uncanny” 189-198 & Annual 8. “X-Men/Alpha Flight” is literally the ONLY Claremont era X-Men story I’ve never read so I’m excited, even though the trade doesn’t ship until December.
I was confused to why all the regional gods had no influence in this story. Were they weakened just like Narya who is basically an Inuit demi-god. Was it because it was beyond their influence because there were Viking ruins? Or worse case scenario, is this a colonialism and race/power sentiment that we see throughout the Marvel Universe?