Seeing him hug and express affection for someone incapable of human emotion was just so heartbreaking. Unless they use Janet's rebooting as an opportunity to introduce human emotion into her programming.
Seeing him hug and express affection for someone incapable of human emotion was just so heartbreaking. Unless they use Janet's rebooting as an opportunity to introduce human emotion into her programming.
The real Jianyu might have decided his vow of silence didn't apply in the afterlife, though. That was a decision Jason made in order to keep his secret.
First off, I disagree with the whole concept of people DESERVING punishment. As I see it, punishment is only ever, at best, a grim necessity needed to deter people from taking bad actions, which doesn't even apply in this case since the Good Place and the Bad Place seemingly make no effort to let the living know about…
She said "segue". It's pronounced the same, but means something different.
There's also the fact that holiday themed movies start filling up a lot of the schedule come Winter.
It's debateable how many of those technically count as superheroes.
Though, I don't think Jews ever came up when Legends did episodes about the Nazis, despite Stein being right there.
In this episode, though, the arrived in the slave-era South as a war was being fought to end slavery, so their actions have a demonstratable effect on whether that works out. In the Japan episode, there's nothing like that going on.
Mick's room looks exactly perfectly right for his character.
The Jax storyline didn't entirely work for me. Legends is a very broad and unsubtle show, which is great when it's just trying to have fun, but when handling a serious topic . . . well, having everyone launch into an inspirational song was a tad too much for me.
I'm not sure he has the resources to rebuild the suit. Though, if they were willing to abuse time travel a little, he could probably get what he needs.
Makes you wonder why a zombie bothered trying to eat Mick.
My laugh-out-loud bit was when Nate says he's covered in zombie guts, and there's an audible squelching sound when Sara puts her hands on him. My tastes are simple that way.
Nah, I gotta go with National Lampoon's Christmas Vacation.
I like that we're at the point where guys like Church's henchman or the Human Target can just show up and don't really need much explanation. It's just taken as a given that these sorts of people will exist in a superhero universe.
I don't know if I'd call Ra's al Ghul a bowslinger. He used a bow, sure, but it wasn't really his main weapon.
Impeach Oliver and have Deputy Mayor Lance take over?
As I recall, in Season 1 Oliver proved he was Bratva by showing another Bratva member one of his tattoos. Maybe Susan will find out Russian mobsters have those sorts of tattoos, and will seduce Oliver just so she can see him shirtless and tell if he has one.
Even if you don't call it gentrification, any efforts that reduce crime and improve standards of living within a city are going to have the same effect: more people with more cash are going to want to move there, and the real estate market will adjust their prices accordingly.
And since Oliver's a mayor dealing with a corrupt police force, difficulty recruiting new officers would fit perfectly into the plot.