bluearcher
bluearcher
bluearcher

Same for Hans Olo :(

Maybe it’s like Poe’s jacket teleporting on and off Rey in The Force Awakens. And it’ll be a standard in JJ Abrams produced films, like people losing an arm in all Marvel Phase 2 movies.

From your original post, I was going to say that it seems like your favorite parts of the first two movies were the least “Star Trek” things about those movies.

So, she shows up in each show’s season finale, and resolves whatever problem they still have in her 5 minute appearance?

...and then a bear or lion gets infected, and we have zombie bears/lions to contend with, on top of the regular human zombies.

My headcanon connects Vision’s comments about more and more enhanced people showing up to the rise of Inhumans.

Flash name checked all of the regular heroes of the Arrowverse and Supergirl didn’t recognize any of the names. I’m assuming that Earth 3 only has Superman, Supergirl, and that other guy (might be a spoiler, so I’ll just leave it at that).

She appeared on both Arrow and Flash a week after her character died. Yep, not that hard.

Also could be the fact that they already have a bunch of these (spies, I mean) in TV land.

Lando looks like he’s getting ready for a Robot Chicken skit.

Who do I have to sell my soul to to have Nic Cage show up as Johnny Blaze, explaining that he had exorcised the spirit of the Rider, just before it possessed Robbie Reyes?

Because of cross-promotion with that other magical character coming to theaters soon?

Yes. That was the point :)

Can’t ripoff something you already own, though, can you?

Republic credits? Republic credits are no good out here.

a) Weak enough? According to what criteria? It has a critics rating of 96% and an audience rating of 87% on Rottentomatoes. It made $257M in the US and $211M internationally.

I beg your pardon, but what do you mean, ‘naked’?

But instead of missing an eye, he’s missing an arm.

Free marketing and inventory clearance advice:

You do include this in your explanation a bit, but I think an important distinction is that it is usually offensive to Asian-Americans due to American history. But for most Asians over here in Asia who did not experience those cultural underpinnings, “Oriental” merely denotes “from the East” (as opposed to