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I suppose.
This is more or less what I countI suppose.
If you're wondering how Austin Powers connects, the Dr Evil spinoff movie apparently had one of the Get Smart villains show up. Get Smart being connected to The Man from UNCLE through THRUSHThis is more or less what I count
You don't count Lost in Space but you count serveral other appearances that aren't fully licensed.This is more or less what I count
If it's tv cameos I'll usually count them because I feel they're a bit different than just drawing a character in a comic as a cameo. Otherwise you have to count Earth 616 and Earth Prime for a Jay and Silent Bob timelineYou don't count Lost in Space but you count serveral other appearances that aren't fully licensed.
I suppose that's true.If it's tv cameos I'll usually count them because I feel they're a bit different than just drawing a character in a comic as a cameo. Otherwise you have to count Earth 616 and Earth Prime for a Jay and Silent Bob timeline
Dont forget The lone rangerAdventures of Superman (1952-1958)
The Avengers (1961-1969)
The Addams Family (1964-1966)
The Man from U.N.C.L.E. (1964-1968)
Lost in Space (1965-1968)
Hogan's Heroes (1965-1971)
Batman (1966-1968)
The Green Hornet (1966-1967)
The Felony Squad (1966-1969)
The Girl from U.N.C.L.E. (1966-1967)
Judd, for the Defense (1967-1969)
The Six Million Dollar Man (1973-1978)
Wonder Woman (1975-1979)
The Bionic Woman (1976-1978)
Charlie's Angels (1976-1981)
The New Avengers (1976-1977)
Legends of the Superheroes (1978)
James Bond (1962-2002 film series) [maybe]
Charlie's Angels (2000-2019 film series)
Doctor Who, unfortunately, is arguably connected as well. I'm going to say that either the cameo was completely unrelated (meaning, not actually the Doctor in the '66 comics), the Doctor was travelling the multiverse, James Bond is actually an unofficial variant known as JB in this continuity (The Return of the Man from U.N.C.L.E.), and/or Sylvia Trench is a Whoniverse variant.
Only the Lone Ranger radio show would count, the TV series is a distinct version. The TV version also connects to a wide Wild West Shared Universe due to a lot of those old shows crossing over or doing wanted poster cameos. They're too numerous to mention and I don't remember a lot of them but it does connect to at least Gunsmoke, The Gambler, Blazing Saddles, and like 20 others I don't remember the names ofDont forget The lone ranger
If it is not a licensed crossover and not integral to the stories or continuity, IMO we are stretching too far.Should the Robot Chicken 3rd DC comics special count? It's a multiverse story where they do end up bringing 66 Batman to their universe using the cosmic treadmill. It's an officially licensed DC crossover and they even said in an interview the Robot Chicken earth is canon to DC because of it as Earth-RC iirc. Earth-66 Batman even gets to fight the Arkhamverse villains in a scene as they also got brought to the RC universe in the special. It's pretty neat
It is a licensed crossover, the Robot Chicken DC comics specials are fully licensedIf it is not a licensed crossover and not integral to the stories or continuity, IMO we are stretching too far.
Then we get Tommy Westphal again.
They literally say it's even the same interpretation of the character because they respected it and wanted them involved in the Multiverse event