Well, she was named Sara in honor of Sara Lance, who had just died. Now that Sara's alive again, John and Lyla were probably thinking, "Are we still stuck calling our kid that? I mean, who spells 'Sara' without an 'h' on the end, seriously?"
Well, she was named Sara in honor of Sara Lance, who had just died. Now that Sara's alive again, John and Lyla were probably thinking, "Are we still stuck calling our kid that? I mean, who spells 'Sara' without an 'h' on the end, seriously?"
He still has the Flash's go-to emergency backup plan:
Yeah, can't we just assume everyone has seen at least ONE time travel movie in their lives?
I loved that Eleanor assumed the dishes just got done by magic, because that is both a very childish outlook in keeping with her character, while also being a 100% logical conclusion based on where they are.
No, he explains that EVERY neighborhood has frozen yogurt because everyone seems to love it. He doesn't understand it, either.
I agree, though I think that the Bad Place is real, it's just that it's not a bad place by design. It's simply that, if you put a hundred people like Eleanor in the same neighborhood, then you're gonna get the kind of disastrous sinkholes and giant shrimp attacks we've seen so far, only a hundred times worse.
We already know that the Good Place can erase people's memories if it thinks that will make them happier (hence why Eleanor doesn't remember her embarrassing death). Maybe it erases the memories of loved ones left behind, too.
Just them repeating the full phrase "Category 55 Emergency Doomsday Crisis" so many times in quick succession got the biggest laugh of the night from me.
I doubt we'll get a Michael backstory, since it's implied that, prior to the construction of this neighborhood, he didn't have a human form.
Chidi was a professor, though, so I'm assuming he also taught classes on ethics. If his lectures inspired other people to be more ethical, then theoretically he could receive partial credit for every good deed those people do for the rest of their lives.
Make it 20 years so he can accidentally hit on his twenty-something daughter without knowing who she is.
My theory has always been that they're in the 70's, but all that super-advanced technology spies have has filtered out into the public, giving people cell phones and Internet connections way ahead of schedule.
It's difficult to tell from this vantage point whether they will consume the captive earth men or merely enslave them. One thing is for certain, there is no stopping them, the ants will soon be here.
Maybe we'll see him get the hacking arrow during the Russia flashbacks this season.
You can also just go to the CW's website.
And thanks to Hollywood accounting, "working for a percentage of the profits" is really just code for "will work for free".
Vandal Savage's ashes, but otherwise, yeah, agree.
"You know the pangs of terror you felt whenever Bill and Ted were onscreen? Director Jon Turteltaub (later to make the underrated National Treasure films) finally harnessed that raw danger."
I am pretty positive about this premiere, though I am kinda concerned about the villains introduced in this episode being the start of a story arc. Not that Tobias Church wasn't awesome, but part of the problem with last season was they made the season long story arc the focus of too many episodes, when doing more…
It's not like it's the first time Oliver has used that trick, though.