WARNING: The following contains spoilers for Hawkeye Episode 5, "Ronin," as well as Spider-Man: No Way Home, now in theaters.

One of the most intriguing things the Hawkeye TV series has is the dynamic between Avengers veteran Clint Barton (Jeremy Renner) and new hero Kate Bishop (Hailee Steinfeld). Make no mistake, the rapport between both archers has been outstanding thus far, proving both generations are miscible. This further fuels the notion that the Marvel Cinematic Universe's young bloods can also help to make Marvel TV's most hated team even better, given recent bombshell cameos.

The cat's out the bag, as Wilson Fisk/Kingpin (Vincent D'Onofrio) is in the MCU after a quick shot in the last Hawkeye episode, as well as Matt Murdock/Daredevil (Charlie Cox), who was Peter Parker's lawyer in Spider-Man: No Way Home. This means the Defenders could be canon as well, even after their team-up versus Madame Gao and the Hand didn't resonate as well on Netflix, but as Marvel Studios is showing now, there is potential for redemption, and working with the younger generation could catalyze such.

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Having the Defenders realizing teens are risking their lives out there as untrained vigilantes can result in them finding the newbies, fixing their own flaws and mentoring the future. Fans can already see Daredevil working with Kate and Echo to bring Kingpin down if Fisk does start rebuilding his criminal empire. It could work the other way too, as Luke Cage, Harlem's new Kingpin, can be redeemed once he sees the young Victor Alvarez, who in the books is the son of Reina Alvarez and Shades, taking up his Power Man mantle.

Meanwhile, Jessica Jones, Misty Knight or Colleen Wing could teach Kate or even Kamala Khan how to work better in the city with such dangerous threats. As for Danny Rand, he can collaborate with Lin Lie, aka Sword Master, who looks set to be Marvel's new Iron Fist in the comics. This mentorship program will help to harness their rage, desire for justice and passions for social transformation. It'd also carve a brilliant story, bridging the gaps of eras in terms of culture, art and tech, with the new generation sure to teach the older heads a few things in their constantly advancing world.

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Thus, per Kate and Clint's bond, everyone can learn from and respect each other. What this does is also make the Defenders relevant to the wider MCU without needing to plug them in big budget films, where they may not get enough screen time or narrative tissue in mere cameos. More so, it balances both sides of the coin, mixing grounded street-level stories with science and mysticism.

In the process, it services the Netflix shows, while trimming the bad components and then moving these heroes forward with a key message: teamwork. This could ultimately shape the way for initiatives like Avengers Academy or Champions where the batons can officially be passed to somewhat experienced teens hoping to someday be the next Defenders, or even better, the new iteration of Earth's Mightiest Heroes.

The sixth and final episode of Hawkeye premieres Dec. 22 on Disney+, while Spider-Man: No Way Home is now in theaters.

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