WandaVision episode 6 features the show's creepiest commercial yet, in which a child starves to death while trying and failing to open a pot of "Yo-Magic" yogurt. While previous commercials have been straightforward references to suppressed trauma from Wand's past, the Yo-Magic commercial also seems to include some hints about her present life in Westview - and what the future could hold.

"All-New Halloween Spooktacular!" brings WandaVision's sitcom aesthetic forward into the 2000s, when there were plenty of weird commercials around. The chattering skeleton child is certainly in keeping with the episode's spooky Halloween theme. But while the Yo-Magic commercial's meaning may be more difficult to parse than WandaVision's previous ad breaks, it also may be the most insightful one yet.

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Just as WandaVision's setting has been moving forward in time, so too have the commercials been moving forward through Wanda's past - from the Stark ToastMate 2000 in the first episode (a reference to the Stark Industries bomb that killed her parents) through references to Hydra and Von Strucker. In episode 5 there was a grim nod to Scarlet Witch accidentally blowing up the side of a building in Lagos, which kicked off the main conflict of Captain America: Civil War. Though she's aware that she's controlling her new reality, Wanda has suppressed memories of her life before Westview, and cannot remember how the Hex was first created. If the Yo-Magic commercial is a manifestation of more recent memories, it could be a hint at what's really going on.

Yo-Magic Hints At Scarlet Witch's Mutant Gene Origin

 Scarlet Witch in the Captain America Winter Soldier Post Credits

Following Disney's acquisition of 20th Century Fox, the X-Men movie rights are now back with Marvel Studios and mutants are expected to be incorporated into the Marvel Cinematic Universe. When Scarlet Witch and Quicksilver made their MCU debut (first in Captain America: The Winter Soldier's post-credits scene, and then in Avengers: Age of Ultron), rights issues prevented them from being referred to as "mutants" or connected to their father from the comic books, Magneto. The twins' powers were instead explained by them volunteering for Hydra and Baron Von Strucker's experiments with the Mind Stone.

In addition to casting Evan Peters (who played Quicksilver in Fox's X-Men movies) in the role of Wanda's "recast" Pietro, WandaVision has also started to lay the groundwork for a retcon of Wanda's powers. Episode 3's Hydra Soak commercial featured the slogan "Find the goddess within!" - a suggestion that Hydra's experiments didn't give Wanda her powers, but instead simply unlocked the potential that was already inside her. The child in the Yo-Magic commercial being handed a pot of "Yo-Magic" and struggling to break the seal on it also fits with this theme. If the malevolent-looking shark represents Von Strucker, then the name of the product indicates that what Hydra gave to Wanda was actually her own latent magic.

Yo-Magic References Traumatic Deaths From Wanda's Past

Quicksilver is shot in Avengers: Age of Ultron

The dark ending of WandaVision's Yo-Magic commercial is also linked to the trauma of Wanda's past and the deaths of her loved ones. When Wanda and Pietro's childhood home was collapsed by a Stark Industries bomb, the twins were left trapped under the rubble for two days, staring death (in the form of a second, unexploded bomb) in the face. Though Wanda survived, she experienced the trauma of being stuck and helpless, without food or water. And even when she got her magic powers, which she hoped would ensure she'd never be so helpless again, she was unable to prevent Pietro's death at the end of Avengers: Age of Ultron.

Related: WandaVision: Billy & Tommy’s Powers Explained

Perhaps the most obvious parallel between the child trying and failing to open the seal on the yogurt, and dying as a result, is Vision's death in Avengers: Infinity War. This would be a natural place for WandaVision to progress to, after the last commercial referenced Captain America: Civil War. The climactic battle of Infinity War saw Wanda using all of her strength to destroy the Mind Stone in Vision's head while also holding back Thanos, to prevent the Mad Titan from completing the Infinity Gauntlet. Vision ultimately died twice: first when Wanda destroyed the Stone (and him along with it), and again when Thanos rewound time and forcibly ripped the Mind Stone from Vision's head. Despite being arguably the most powerful MCU hero, Wanda's magic hasn't been able to save the people she loved the most.

Yo-Magic Shows Wanda's Mental (and Magical) Instability

WandaVision Episode 5 - Wanda Attacks Drone

If Wanda constructing a fantasy world populated by people with enslaved minds wasn't enough to signal her current instability, the Yo-Magic commercial indicates that she is not fully in control of either her mind or her magic. She is unable to fully control Vision's mind, which in episode 6 led to him making a break for freedom. And while "Pietro's" origins and motives are still unclear, he too is aware that Westview is under Wanda's control and that Vision is actually dead. If the child in the commercial represents Wanda, then the character being stuck on  desert island alone, slowly dying, and unable to save themselves says ominous things about her current state of mind.

Yo-Magic's Shark Could Represent Mephisto

WandaVision Yo Magic Shark

WandaVision has been dropping plenty of hints that Mephisto, a devil-like supervillain from Marvel Comics who played a prominent role in the story arc that WandaVision is loosely based on, could secretly be the puppet master behind Westview. "All-New Halloween Spooktacular!" doubles down on these hints, with Pietro playfully calling the twins "demon spawn" (in the comics they were created from pieces of Mephisto's soul) and commenting that Westview is "charming as hell." Wanda herself has a gap in her memory regarding the birth of her version of Westview - as if that information has been deliberately blocked out.

The decidedly creepy-looking shark in the Yo-Magic commercial tells the starving child that he has survived by "snacking on Yo-Magic." This, combined with the disturbing image of the child withering away to a skeleton, suggests that something is drawing on Wanda's magic. The Hex may actually be a kind of giant magical battery, designed for Mephisto to siphon off Wanda's powers while also keeping her placated. If the other commercials are manifestations of Wanda's suppressed memories, the shark in the Yo-Magic commercial could be her mind's way of remembering the role Mephisto has played. With only three episodes left of WandaVision, the show is getting ever-closer to revealing what's really going on in Westview - and perhaps revealing the true villain behind it all.

More: WandaVision: Every MCU Easter Egg In Episode 6

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