AoS was considered canon when Whedon was one the architects of the MCU, since he has a financial interest, thus the appearance of Sif.
Peggy obviously has connection to Cap and, of course, so does Howard as well as to Tiny Stank by paternal relationship.
However, you'll never see Cooper used in a theatrical movie as Tony's dad if they were ever going to do anything with him in the next few years, they will just age down the actor from Mad Man as they aged down RDJ for Civil War, or they will both be recast or Iron Manlet will be killed off or made so obsolete there's no need to show Howard as anything other than a photo of Mad Men Stark.
But all the Netflix crap? Not only are the all cancelled but they don't exist, by their own admission and the admission of the Marvel TV bosses, as part of CINEMATIC UNIVERSE.
And Daredevil and Coulson don't even pretend that the Runaways are even on the same planet as they are.
Logan Roberts
If it makes you feel better to think they are canon, knock yourself out. Just know that the movies will never show anything from the shows. They had the chance in AoU to show characters in the hellicarrier bridge when Fury appears. Just one second, no explanation needed. Did they? No. They did not.
Chase Thomas
>If it contradicts continuity from the movies like the shows do then they are non canon. It doesn't happen often enough for this to be an issue, specially when you can only mention one instance of it. >The Russos were just playing lip service. Aka "since it's not convenient for my narrative, I'll write it off as lip service." But do keep repeating "non canon" to hammer the point across, I'm sure it'll stick. >And Daredevil and Coulson don't even pretend that the Runaways are even on the same planet as they are. Well this is because Runaways happens in LA, while they're all the way on the East coast. Plus they're kids and vastly inconsequential. Though they did change the alien origins in Runaways for no reasons, but I'd blame Loeb for that decision.
Xavier Ross
I wish they are not. Just go with their own universe like what DC do with their current series (Doom Patrol, Flash, Young Justice). The bigger your universe, the bigger the inconsistencies and continuity errors like said.
Ethan Diaz
>since it's not convenient for my narrative, I'll write it off as lip service." But do keep repeating "non canon" to hammer the point across, I'm sure it'll stick. It's not a narrative. If you believe the TV characters will ever show up in a film then you are a idiot. Kevin Feige is making canon shows to the MCU and Captain Marvel already proved AoS is non canon but keep being a retard and saying the MCU shows are canon.
Cooper Hughes
It's like comics. Everything is sorta canon, until it isn't. But maybe it still is because of some nonsense. Only nerds care.
Jayden Bailey
I believe the shows are canon in the sense that its all set in the same universe otherwise then what the hell is "The Incident" that the Netflix shows keep referencing. It also works best if its a mostly self contained story (AOS was insufferable in its first season when it kept banging you over the head that it was in the MCU). Also, before Infinity War, one could have argued that Guardians had the same amount of connection to the MCU as the shows.
Jason Hill
in the shows, the movies are canon, but it’s entirely possible that a movie could decide to go against a show and make it non canon.
Nathaniel Brooks
There are continuity errors like this in the movies themselves too, you know. In Iron Man, SHIELD is presented as an organization so new they haven't even got a name. Evidently, that gets disproved in the latter MCU movies, where the canon is that SHIELD has been operatinal since post-WWII. So what, Iron Man is not canon now?
These two. I get the feeling it's mostly SW obsessed nerds who think everything must fit obsessively even though they're different mediums with production teams and writers that are pretty much separate from each other. The fact that even with these differences they still try and play with some synergy is pretty remarkable, when other shows from other companies would've just recast characters if they needed them.