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CS Clark
avclub-0220922634b6650e23c431eb31d9f352--disqus

Can Supergirl outrun The Flash?

See, anyone else I would just assume they were making a joke. But with Scott Adams that doesn't seem very likely.

I… uh… ok. If he doesn't believe in gravity then he wins. And there was me thinking he was just a shallow misogynist.

2 Broke Gorillas

Do they believe the earth's landmasses fit together so well not because of continental drift but because the earth is actually expanding in size?

He'll have to go to the bottom, 'cause nobody is dislodging Neal Adams.

BATS AREN'T BUGS!

And before that Sinestro Corps War - Sodom Yat is basically Superman with a ring and an unfortunate first name.

Wait what? I remember Green Arrow had troubles in Rebirth, but not that he tied it to any particular political philosophy. And, y'know, Rayner.

If they introduced the Phantom Lady (and the rest of the Freedom Fighters I suppose) I might just bump it to 'must watch' from its current position of 'eh'.

Well you should start again, because this series of Arrow is the fun one of the two.

I could live with a Guy Gardner, especially if they have that 'family of cops' background thing going. The best Lantern/Arrow stories were always the ones that got that it wasn't so much about politics as the fact that Green Arrow is a vigilante and Green Lantern is a police.

Earth-3 is canonically the evil Earth.

When are they going to get to the Green Lantern factory?

For me it was steak braciole.

Well, then I'll just reserve that from the library. Aaaannnd… done.

I don't remember if I did, and if I did I don't remember the bit about his own writiing (wow, that's a weirdly Trumpian disavowal) but is it much different from Belbo's ambivalence in Foucault's Pendulum?

Today's, however, was the sort of thing that you definitely won't find in the New Yorker.

I've literally just picked up the new Umberto Eco, Numero Zero and have yet to turn the first page, but am looking forward to it, and to seeing if the Umberto Eco Curse of every odd-numbered book (except the first one) of his being crap has been well and truly broken.

I just finished Moby-Dick the other day, and I have to say it's a lot funnier than I imagined. But that's 19th Century literature for you - they didn't mind going from nudge-nudge, wink-wink humour to orphan death at the drop of a harpoon. Didn't even see it as a problem.