that podcast didn't *QUITE* put the Mothers at Uriel's level - just that they are closer to him than they are to Mab/Titania. He said closer to. Or allows for a big power band. Like "The best hockey players are in the NHL" but Uriel is Connor Mc David - he's generally acknowledged best-of-the-best. (OK, relax, KHL fans, there is overlap between the two leagues, just being simple)
How about a more FUN reason for the wrestlers? They are bored, and want to feed their egos. TWG lets them come thru, but at only a certain percentage of their power. But if they get more fans, they gain power in the Never-never. So they want human devotees. They get the idea of joining the WWE for over-the-top stunts and acting. Flash, showmanship, and competition. Some gain power up to the limit, so they "retire" their persona, and there is no more regular Hulkamania, and Thor goes to play football. Maybe runs into Irwin Pounder? Maybe they have been doing this for decades - in the 60s, as rock stars. 40s and 50s, movie stars. Maybe in the 20s, Hercules and his huge club were in The Bronx swinging a notably huge bat as Babe Ruth? Drinking too many beers, eating too much, engaging with women of low repute... Ruth supposedly did them all - so did the Greek gods....
Gods and angels do not seem to be averse to entertainment either - Uriel is a Star Wars fan, or at least the music and simpler black and white good and evil. Something like wrestling faces and heels?
So I think both you and CT are forgetting the context in which the reply Jim gave was in. Jim had just been asked about whether Uriel existed in multiple realities or whether there were multiple Uriels running around. He at first seemed confused, but then answered and confirmed there is only one Uriel and he is everywhere as opposed to beings like Mab which there are alternate versions in each universe. Then he got asked about how the Mother's compare to him, right afterward, and said they are much closer to Uriel along with Zeus and the Native American gods and Hindu gods.
So it's not just him placing them together as peers, but he is also answering in context to whether the Mothers compare to a multiverse level being.
Of course they are not exactly as strong as Uriel, Uriel is one of the Creator's deputies, of which there are only FOUR others (one of which has turned traitor). And as Jim has pointed out before power isn't a straight line thing. So he isn't just talking about their magical muscle, he is talking about what kind of being they are. And he is saying they are multiverse-straddling beings, like Uriel. That's what he is implying.
I don't really see how it's so strange to think that the only multiverse-spanning beings are the Archangels? Because all the Angels do, and not all of them are at that top level bandwidth.
Basically, any being that predates Creation i.e. the various gods and demons of Creation myths, some of the demons forgotten in the Oblivion War, the Outsiders and the Old Ones, the Angels and Fallen and Archangels are likely to be multiverse-spanning beings (although some may have diminished like Odin or been killed etc).
As for the wrestling reason, that certainly possible. I am sure some are bored. But as I said earlier, wrestling is relatively new. So what were they doing before that? But it's an interesting theory you have there.
I always got the impression that Uriel liked Star Wars because so many people like it, or that was what Dresden was hinting at in that conversation. Uriel is more subject to humanity's collective psyche than even he might notice.
I saw the podcast at the time it was released, and drew a different conclusion, with other WOJ. It doesn’t without further elaboration make the point you say is definitive “closer to” is not the same as “same as”, and I suspect it is deliberately vague to avoid spoiling Mirror Mirror plot points which will describe the Multiverse model Jim is using.
I think he is using a model with a single point of origin, pre Big Bang before linear time started when the White God, Archangels, Titans and God’s existed. The Big Bang imposed linear time and created the first unit of space time, a universe. Because linear time existed this led the universe to expand by branching, creating new time-lines and new universes.
The Mothers being a construct pegged to linear time cannot exist in every universe, because there would be branched timelines which branched before the Mantles were constructed and in some of those tome-lines the Mantles would never have been constructed or constituted differently, with different components.
Zeus like the big gods existed before linear time would have existed as every time-line branched, and therefore existed on each of those time-lines BUT there would be time-lines where Zeus failed to overthrow Chronos and was destroyed and further time-lines derived from that time-line where Zeus was destroyed, as the Multiverse expanded.
As a consequence there are likely whole groups of universes on related branches where the Mothers and Zeus simply do not exist, they either never existed or have ceased to exist before that universe branched last. The White God on the other hand is preeminent because they are the one being that has always existed without any interruption and he exists in every branched timeline of the Multiverse, along with his first creation, the Archangels. As soon as linear time existed this led to the Multiverse and imposed a degree of control over other originally non-linear beings contempories of the White God and the Archangels, but now not as powerful as them viewed at the level of the Multiverse, but viewed at the level of a universe they are
The Outsiders on the other hand were not part of the original creation of the Multiverse and as such never existed on any branched time-line unless let in. If they succeed in any time-line the White God ceases to be preeminent like with Zeus, and the whole Multiverse is in peril. I suspect rather than allow a time-line to fall the White God erases it maintaining his pre-eminence, but this also means erasing the time-lines born of it. Therefore if Mirror Mirror Harry’s time-line is erased, Harry Prime’s time-line would survive as both were born out of the same event in Grave Peril, but if Harry loses all the universes born from Harry Primes Universe will also be erased. If the Outsiders win however they can attack linear time making every universe vulnerable unravelling the Multiverse.
The battle against the Outsiders is therefore a constant pruning of time-lines eliminating groups of universes, the constant fear is that someone like Harry would allow the Outsiders to win just the once. A timeline must have become vulnerable at some point to the Outsiders and it is this time-line and it’s branches which are subject to attacks and the Starborn/Destroyer are birthed on.
Listen said that there were not many Starborn left running around, and I take this as not only a reference to the Starborn of Harry Primes Universe, but all their variants in other universes as quite a few of these other universes may have already been sterilised by the White God. It may be if Harry wins the Multiverse is safe for another 600 odd years (depending on Harry’s age) and the vulnerable Multiverse can keep expanding. If he loses he risks destroying the entire Multiverse not just the vulnerable time-lines. For all we know Harry Prime may be the only Starborn left on the vulnerable timelines with a chance of defeating the Outsiders and locking them out for the rest of the cycle.
I get why you see it the other way. I don't know that we will ever convince each other unless new information comes out, ideally clear and very solid. As I said above to Ed0517, I think the context of the conversation implies what he meant and along with other WOJ about how old Angels are and the level they operate at, and how old the various gods are and why all the Creation myths clash, I would say Jim is separating these beings into the category of multiverse-spanning beings.
What I am curious about is why you think it's so unlikely that any other being than an Archangel spans the multiverse?
The only multiverse model that I have heard Jim refer to is a variant on the old bubble universe idea, but he basically has straight-up said he ripped his multiverse model from the Chronicles of Amber by Roger Zelazny. That one is a spectrum that has two poles, absolute order to absolute chaos and all the universes in between are combinations of both. Jim also seems to be going with the Stargate model that each choice rolls off a different universe, although I know not everyone likes the idea of that.
So I get what you're saying about the single point of origin, and I agree that Jim seems to be using that. I am not so sure the universe immediately started branching though, as at that point there were no mortals, and apart from TWG himself, I don't believe anyone else has or can create alternate timelines. So up until mortals came along, there might have only been the one universe for all we know. That being said, I don't think that is exactly right because of what we know about how you can get to any universe through the Never never including the Star Wars one or one of Spider-Man's ones, or Alera for that matter (and presumably his steam-punk world) - and some of these universes would clearly predate humanity. This is where linear time becomes a bit annoying.
The Mother's are the remnants or creation of Hecate, along with likely power given from multiple other pantheons (given other hints from the books and WOJ). The Queens of Faerie are implied to be Hecate in Skin Game, and Jim has said if you read Skin Game he tells readers who the Queens of Faerie really are. This is what I mean about linear time being annoying. Yes, Hecate becoming the Queens of Faerie would have happened in a timeline in the universe BUT considering the being(s) involved, I suspect it was similar to how Merlin constructed Demonreach in several times at once i.e. it was a multiverse-spanning event. An event that changed EVERY timeline all at once. Or to put it another way, there was no timeline where Hecate failed to become the Queens of Faerie because Hecate no longer existed as herself in the multiverse. She changed herself in every universe, in every time, all at once.
The equivalent would be if Uriel died or had Fallen. Then in every universe across the multiverse, Uriel would be a changed (dead or Fallen respectively). He doesn't just die in one timeline and survive in another because he is beyond time, what happens in one place happens can affect him everywhere, and he would be aware of it. What's really interesting is whether when he gave Michael his Grace did all Uriel basically vanish from the multiverse effectively, with only his mortal body existing in Dresden's universe and his power in Michael? Or did he only do it in one universe and all his other avatars were running around in other universes? There are very good arguments for both scenarios. I tend to believe the former happened, which effectively means he believed what was happening it was so important that reality could survive without him being everywhere for a bit. But it would have given his opposition a huge opportunity.
So, to your other points about other timelines, I am not so sure that there are universes where Cronus won. Either you win everywhere or nowhere. The only way for there to be timelines where Zeus lost as well as ones where he won, is it isn't Zeus losing on the whole, only an avatar of him losing or winning. A fraction of his power. Unless of course Zeus started shrinking himself down so he could just be in one universe...but that seems unlikely with Zeus at least. Odin on the other hand...
I think you're probably right about the Outsider's strategy. Some universes would be more important than others, the closer they are to the original one the more parallel off-shoots should die. I don't know how the Spider-man and other IP universes factor in though. I have a sneaking suspicion that Dresden's universe is the original one, or one of the original ones. In the Chronicles of Amber, Amber is the original universe (basically Heaven) and normal Earth is one of the first ones from that. Jim could have gone either way.
Hmm I don't know about there not being many in the other universes. I think that would be a case by case thing. Not to mention, that's a very linear perspective. Outsiders and such beings see things from a broader picture. They could see the universe they are attacking as full or empty of starborn, depending on what point in a timeline they enter. But here's the thing: once they attack somewhere they become part of events, and therefore subject to what happens in them. It's more dangerous for them in some ways. They risk creating more universes with each assault as well.
I suspect all universes that Jim has made, i.e. his main characters are starborn, and possibly others. Jim has hinted once that all the stories are connected, and I think he is building up to a big multiverse-level event in the Dresedn Files.