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    I imagine she was quite curious herself…

    I've never read the comics but I have the same view on it as Officer Meow Meow Fuzzyface. I just don't relate to such horrible people as Jesse. Nor am entertained by nihilism. I don't know what the comic books were like but the show feels to me like some very dated "ooh, the world's so dark" edgy crap.

    Well now he just sounds like a gay fetish artist.

    THANK YOU!!!

    It creates conflict in me. Specifically, it makes me laugh whenever he is mentioned by name and when they announce "Slipknot" in that airbase scene I keep picturing Slipknot the band emerging from the van and giggling. And I know I'm not the only one.

    Luke could easily have been a threat to Jessica without super-strength. He's still a big guy and invulnerable. So far as I know JJ isn't immune to damage, just strong and recovers a bit faster than most.

    That's not remotely what the poster was saying.

    I think it's so we can see their expressions, actually.

    I have that with any TV show where people enter a room and don't close the door behind them. Especially if they then start having a secret conversation or making out or something. Doctor Who was a nightmare. Nearly every episode found me at one point obsessively reassuring myself: "The TARDIS doors must close

    The suggestion is that making it hyper-competitive to win an Oscar for most impressive stunts would cause people to attempt ever riskier stunts. And I think it probably would.

    I appreciate the sentiment, but many (all?) careers have risk. Do you equally not drive a car because people have died in car factories, or use a mobile phone because someone committed suicide at the factory? It's good to mitigate risk by bringing some financial pressure. But risk is always present and I'm sure she

    Yeah, well. A Harley is a different category all of its own:

    I'm less baffled by the lack of laws, and more baffled that some people actually choose not to wear a helmet.

    In that case, he did a very good job. I've had far more than that to prepare for even simple stage-fighting.

    The poor guy saw his parents die in front of him when he was ten years old and then spent the subsequent fifteen years in a remote Himalyan village being beaten by old men with sticks.

    I think the intent was good. I think it's important that Danny Rand fights in a different way to Murdoch (gritty MMA-boxer), JJ (enthusiastic amateur) and LC (methodical demolition machine). Danny should be fluid, elegant and never where people expect him to be. Murdoch takes a punch and keeps on battling. Danny steps

    I have an odd thing that I disliked about Luke Cage. I expect it's very much a minority (though I'd love to know others felt the same), but it's to do with his powers. One thing I have liked very much about the Marvel movies is that, barring a couple of aberrations with Captain America, they've been extremely good

    Can't speak for them, but I felt the same (thought the Punisher stuff was solid but hate the character) so I'll answer for me: I consider him a violent nutjob that I neither respect nor like. Daredevil already gets dangerously close to the edge for me with things like him torturing that Russian mobster in S1. So

    I sit corrected! Okay then, in that case I now don't get why the script-writers didn't change his name so as not to conflict with the band.

    This is largely my point. Everything you've just listed is cultural, rather than genetic. The person I am disputing with has been trying to claim that you should hire people of the character's ethnicity for voice work independent of accent and upbringing because people of different races are audibly different for