Yes! I don't understand why that first one was dismissed so quickly. Bishop's screwed Cary over so badly, and FAL isn't representing him anymore. What does Cary have to lose?
Yes! I don't understand why that first one was dismissed so quickly. Bishop's screwed Cary over so badly, and FAL isn't representing him anymore. What does Cary have to lose?
Um…wasn't Dana Hispanic? I can't tell if you were being sarcastic there or not.
I saw that scene as the writers saying, "Hey, shippers who think like Diggle here? That Felicity shouldn't move on with her life because Oliver needs her? That's stupid." I wish Felicity had smacked Diggle down harder, but overall I think the show had Diggle say this only so that Felicity could refute him.
"You and everyone else, honey."
I can't blame RedScarab too much for forgetting this. I feel like I keep forgetting about race on this show, because my brain classifies all the actors as one race, the race of incomprehensibly attractive secretly superpowered people (who are extremely attractive)
Yeah, I almost felt like I was watching a clip show for parts of this episode. I think the writers severely underestimated our intelligence — I didn't need to see all the clips in sequence to understand what was going on, I pieced it together just fine over the course of the season. This episode would have been much…
I would definitely switch Annalise and Rebecca on here and then add Sam at the very bottom, but otherwise I completely agree. I'm surprised at how much I like Asher after this episode.
Jumping on here to say that the Chronicles of Prydain are the shit and I, a grown-ass adult with no children, recently bought the entire series for myself and I have no regrets about this decision.
Seriously, Taran and Eilonwy takes on a whole new dimension when you realize that Eilonwy is literally the only girl his age Taran has ever met.
But they did do that. I mean, Cooper made exactly that argument that you're making. They just decided that, at the very least, rescuing the scientist who'd landed on that planet was worth the year or so (a few minutes of planet time) that they thought it would take to grab her and her data and immediately relaunch. It…
I think the really sexist part of this episode wasn't even the "mother-in-law doesn't get along with wife" thing — it was that the thesis statement of the episode is, quite literally, "Women need to be placed on a pedestal and get upset when that doesn't happen." There were so many other things to take away from the…
I think the difference between black-ish's scene and the general idea of checking out attractive people (which I'm not against) is the element of it being in public, on the street. I wouldn't have had nearly as much of a problem with it if they were watching a movie at home and commenting on the actresses'…
I was always amazed that his Cylon-detecting blood test was real. Literally up until some of the climactic scenes in that episode, I had assumed he was just BS'ing his way through it so that no one would realize he was losing it, because there's no way the writers would be stupid enough to claim that a computer…
I just want to second everything said here — I never understood the AV Club's indifference to Warehouse 13 (which had an amazing third season in particular) and Claudia was really a three-dimensional, fully realized character who happened to be a girl who did tech stuff. She got her own arc and, let's not forget, she…
That's a really great way to phrase it — similar to how these characters are sometimes black (male or female) for the same reason.
Yeah, I was surprised by the article's assertion that Diggle and Roy have gotten more characterization than Felicity. I really don't think that's true at all.
To be fair, if she's going to sue him and get all his money, marrying her would be an easy way to get it back!
I've thought they had chemistry on a number of occasions, but their kiss tonight felt very wooden and weird to me.
Oh, I guess I completely missed that! Now I feel a bit silly.
I actually think there's an argument to be made that she wasn't trying to demean Ramona, but that she was demeaning Peter — implying that he's the kind of guy who gets off on being a powerful man who takes advantage of people who work for him. I'm not sure I'm prepared to fully make that argument, but I think it could…