@quakesjohnscn
New leadership with the Panel was an incredibly important story, and amazingly, Daisy Johnson had agreed to an interview with the Daily Bulletin, and Karen directly, regarding her new position. When the Accords first emerged, she hadn’t been sure whether ‘accountability’ would be positive in the light that Orse was framing it. In the end, her concerns had been warranted, and Orse painted a horrific picture of superheroes. With the change in leadership, especially the most recent, Karen was slowly growing more confident that the Panel’s intentions were good. They wanted to protect heroes’ rights, including their right to privacy, and civilians’ safety. That was the ideal that everyone had been striving for. If Karen could aid the women running the Panel by writing an honest, complimentary story on their changes, it was her honour.
Karen met Daisy Johnson in her office, a quaint space, but she had personalized it in a tasteful way. They each had coffees in front of them, and Karen had her phone recording anything they might say as well as a notebook to make any specific notes about angles she was hoping to take during their conversation. “Thank you so much for letting me be here,” Karen told Daisy. “I’ve always been hoping to run a story about the Panel, but I never found that fit until I heard that Daisy Johnson was helping to lead it. How does it feel?” A promotion like that had to be exciting, but also Karen understood that with public opinion so rapidly changing about superheroes and their liberties, running the Panel would also be incredibly stressful.









