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Loopychew
avclub-ed050d63932389c336ff5076c0c63341--disqus

Also: while I love Blake Neely's Arrowverse score contributions, it seems here that he took Berlanti's suggestion of "half Friday Night Lights, half Veronica Mars" overly literally and basically has a switch between Snuffy Walden's and Josh Kramon's scores for their respective shows. I get that it's easier for

The thing I'm finding to be weird is the fact that they explicitly show time and again that Ne'eraldine's a predator over the course of these four episodes, and even end her run here with a shot that basically confirms that this is a thing she does.

There's something about the phrase "knitted beanie crown aesthetic" that just flows beautifully (I think part of it is the steady trochaic-accented pairing), so upvoted.

"Okay, we're going to need forty thousand Bluetooth antennae…"

I heard "hair models of the damned," which I think makes more sense.

I melted at "Flours."

I didn't realize Vanessa Hudgens was half Philadelphian until watching this episode.

She already is.

"White Knight" is usually the knight in shining armor, the hero of the day (you'll note it's also the derogatory term of choice whenever someone thinks someone else is trying to defend a woman on the internet because they suspect that someone else wants to have sex with said woman).

Time Juno: Being pregnant and smartalecky in any decade.

All three of those sentences, I was like, "Whom. Whom. Whom."

They showed her using a white knight to play the winning move, suggesting that no matter what, Lena will come out on top, most likely by manipulating Supergirl. Doesn't mean she intends to be evil or anti-alien, but she's still a Luthor at heart.

You may have misinterpreted the italicized "fine." I meant like, and please note that use of the following sentence is relatively out of character for me, "damn, that woman fiiiiiiiiiiine!"

Betty Cooper? More like Bettie Page.

It's the other way around: they had an alternate ending in case it was a series finale rather than a season finale. You can tell exactly where the season finale ended and the series finale began, because the "alternate ending" effectively slapped an "and they all lived happily ever after" onto the "And they all lived

Would it have killed you to use "There goes the General!" somewhere in the review?

An extra point would have been awarded if Agnes attempted to play Aida for at least a scene.

You didn't put italics on the word "fine;" I'm assuming that's a typo.

One recurring character dies in the final season. Another character lives longer than you might expect.

Mad props to Brett Dier, Gina Rodriguez, and JSU for making this feel like such a punch in the gut.