"Time to hop to the 32nd century for a quick rejuv treatment!"
"Time to hop to the 32nd century for a quick rejuv treatment!"
No problem— he just has to return it to 17th century Japan after he's done with it.
I love my Surface, but it's a compromise: it's a great laptop and it's awesome to have full Windows, but as a tablet it's a little clunky. (Too many Windows apps aren't super touch-friendly, and the onscreen keyboard is just bad.) That said, I don't draw, so the pen interface isn't an issue for me. (The pen's been…
When I was in college I was the only person in any of my classes taking notes on a laptop: a thirdhand Tandy Model 100 with 32K of RAM, 40x8 character screen, which ran for a month on 4 AA batteries. It was the first time in my life I could actually read the notes I'd taken at the end of the term.
But you can use your regular 3.5" headphones, since Apple's courageous reclaiming of a couple of cubic millimeters to make room for a critical barometer port wasn't extended to the MBP line for some reason.
That's where my money would be if Ray had kept the katana and armor.
I'd be just as happy if they said that Mick's memories of being Chronos have been fading since they destroyed the Time Masters.
While I liked the idea of Rip, he never really gelled last season: his entire reason for existence was to tell the Legends not to do anything interesting, and to be a blatant hypocrite about changing history. I'm sure the actor can do better with a better script to work with, and I hope he does. But honestly at this…
I get that. But it doesn't seem as if it's a viable long-term development on a superhero show where the badass normal slot is already filled a couple of times over. (And Ray is never going to plausibly be in the class of someone like Sara or Oliver.) An episode or so to establish the hero within, maybe, but…
My money's on the suit explosion giving Ray the shrinking as an inherent power.
Was “meathead” common slang in the ’40s? Amaya using it to describe Mick feels strange.
It might be tougher in the CWverse if they want to stay cagey about whether there's a Batman or not. Granted, the cartoon got away with being mostly oblique.
Though less so since the actual stabbling.
Or just handwave it the way no one cares that Harrison Wells murdered a dude in cold blood last season on "Flash".
I think there's absolutely a place for episodic stories. One key to that is that the characters don't routinely "experience major life-changing events". E.g., the typical detective story: the detective's presence signals major events in the lives of the guest characters (one of them is usually murdered, another goes…
We are not going to go back to the days of purely episodic TV where nothing that happens in one episode has any consequences for subsequent episodes, and that's a good thing.
I'm hopeful of at least a guest appearance. I suspect that an ongoing would be really hard to do well on a TV budget, but hope springs eternal.
Or just swap in the Huntress.
Though by the time Arrow ends, none of them will be particularly young. ("Twentysomething Justice?" "TwenTitans"?)
Maybe he's noticed that the trusted lieutenant always winds up either failing or turning on the boss.