It would be funny if it were Henry Allen, because this episode established that Robert Queen became "the Hood" on Earth-2 when his son died . . .
It would be funny if it were Henry Allen, because this episode established that Robert Queen became "the Hood" on Earth-2 when his son died . . .
I actually had an older Gen X sister from my mother's first marriage; she was born in 1968, while I was born in 1980. As a teenager, at least towards the end of my teenage years, I connected to the Gen X filmmakers and musicians that were coming to prominence at the time. Remember when Kevin Smith was best known for Cl…
Recall that he wouldn't hug Jill in the diner, claiming he was sick. I think it's real.
> Where the hell was Jay?
It's also possibly a joke about when they film the show versus when it airs?
They used to call him Terry Titties.
Alternate timelines are: the best.
Were those girl scout uniforms? I read them as school uniforms. But I'm not American.
I had the same thought.
It's possible, even probable that it was Earth-2 we saw at the end there, but you'd think Jay Garrick would have asked about what happened to Harrison Wells if the super-famous and idolised version we saw at the end there was from his earth. I'm hoping that was an Earth-3 . . .
That wasn't a founding of SHIELD scene.
I didn't realise that the cast was defaulting to black until I realised about halfway through that Gaiman was only specifying when characters weren't black - usually, if they were white.
Chilton was Peking Ducked without the sauce.
Ellen Page would be good, but also amusing to cast another gay woman as Clarice.
And half the women on Tinder seem to have put a line in their profile expressing their disgust at seeing men photographed with drugged-up tigers, too.
Personally, while I think In-n-Out has good food, I'm not a fan of a) thick-cut fries b) made from unpeeled potatoes. They're by no means inedible, but they don't match up to a real shoestring.
I like Jack-in-the-Box shakes, when I'm in the US.
I used to have that, but between Dexter, True Blood, and Sons of Anarchy (so far), I seem to have broken myself of it.
I definitely agree with that. Pregnancy is one of those things that gets wrapped up with social control of women; you gotta get pregnant, then you gotta do all these things we tell you and NOT do all these things we tell you not to, et cetera.
You know, I considered that, but on the balance of probabilities I tend to think doctors are more risk-averse than other people. Yes, you may well know it's not a big deal, but you also know what can go wrong more clearly than other people.