darsim--disqus
Darsim
darsim--disqus

Show me someone who uses dude-bro as a term to dismiss people who don't perfectly agree with all of their beliefs and I'll show you a mirror. If you don't want people referring to you dismissively, don't refer to others dismissively. By the way Social Justice Warrior was first brought forward by feminists. before

Except you dismissively referred to people who disagree with you as bro-dudes, or is what is good for the goose not good for the gander?

Also that protagonist is voiced by Ashley Johnson! (Ellie from The Last Of Us, and also Critical Role and Blindspot).

There's also supposed to be a miniseries or two (the first ne is called Islands), which might not count towards those episode counts.

They may have season 3 of Young Justice (although fingers crossed it'll be on Netflix, so we know creative control won't be influenced by toy companies).

It's not really Barry being incompetent, it's his self doubt and guilt that slow him down.

No, I got that Jay Garrick/Hunter Zoloman was Zoom, but that didn't mean that all versions of him are evil, Zoom could have been some time warped doppelganger, or an Evil version from the Arrowverse's Crime Syndicate universe, or maybe the man in the mask was the Hunter Zoloman from the Crime Syndicate universe.

Well, SJWs are annoying (at least they aren't kind of terrifying like the far right is though), but Steven Universe does put out feminist ideas in a way that isn't super intrusive and in your face.

They did bring in a latina lady to be Alex's new love interest when her previous love interest was a white guy. It's not like these shows are conservative with their relationship choices, the characters all tend to have variety in their love interests.

I don't think Alchemy has killed anyone yet. Savitar was the one who actually killed Clariss/The Rival and he was pretty shaken up when he almost killed that kid.

The man in the iron mask being John Wesley Shipp as Jay Garrick rather than Teddy Sears was surprising.

Also, unlike Homer, he actually does well in his job and got done in an hour what other people took a day to do. It's kind of weird for a regular police detective to be mad at a lab tech who gets his work done and back to them super quick. I mean unless the guy is always up in the crime lab watching the technicians,

He doesn't seem to be a willing conspirator with Savitar, so he may end up being more of an Anti-Villain or Anti-Hero due to his strong feeling about what he believes is Justice (kind of like Vigilante on Arrow, or that guy/Barrage on Supergirl).

They have mentioned though that Barry could be faster, he just doesn't generally reach his top speed.

I think RF was probably not really affected by Flashpoint since he was erased from the timeline before Flashpoint happened. When it comes to timeline stuff, it's generally best not to think about it too hard, especially because the Arrowverse's rules on time seem to be a bit loose and have some stretching room (it's

Yeah, but they fought with John Diggle Jr. at their side which, means they were affected by Flashpoint before it happened (maybe). Lets just say their time travel is constantly doing things to timelines, although they generally fix the problems before they effect too much.

I dunno, he seems to be the one to suggest the practical solution while everyone is trying to think up a complex solution.

Exactly, I was picturing Mick as O'Hagen, and Ray and Nate as Mac and Foster. I'm not sure who the Farva is though.

Flashpoint! (Although Citizen Cold was definitely an Anti-Villain/Hero.)

It will be great if Nate and Ray become best buds, just to see Mick's reactions to their shenanigans.