Well, of course it did. And the season also ended with a mystery pod. Two seasons in and they're running out of ideas. Great.
Well, of course it did. And the season also ended with a mystery pod. Two seasons in and they're running out of ideas. Great.
Kara told Winn in the Pilot. James and Alex already knew, and so did Hank/J'onn. That's all. Nobody else.
The "stable" isotopes of lead have theoretical half lives of 10^29 years or longer, long enough that lead has never been observed to decay. That's not short enough to qualify as "radioactive" by any reasonable definition. Pb 211 and 214 have a half lives measurable in minutes but they only exist in trace amounts: https…
They did do the "You just missed her" thing back in Episode 5 of this season at Lena's fundraiser.
They have no idea how to handle secret identities. That was clear when the Pilot had Alex yelling through Kara's door about telling her not to use her powers. Are her neighbors deaf? It was clear when Kara and Clark were having a conversation on a public street about being superheroes and when James and Winn did the…
I doubt Calista is coming back which means they'll need to find a way to walk it back next season. Or they could just pretend it never happened like with Max Lord and Lucy Lane.
The show also tends to borrow Superman villains (Bizarro, Brainiac, Metallo, etc.) which might mean Doomsday rather than Reign.
Chris Wood even said there was a suit last year but I predicted a few weeks ago we'd never see it. I was hoping to be wrong but alas…
In the comics Daxamites were affected by "lead radiation" despite lead not being radioactive. The show put a different spin on it. I'm not sure if Daxamites can fly. When he made his debut as "Mike the intern," Mon-El wondered out loud why humans used elevators instead of flying but since then we've seen him making…
In the comics Daxamites were affected by "lead radiation" despite lead not being radioactive. This take on it actually makes far more sense although Rhea disintegrating was pretty bad.
The timeline is a mess but Clark should be 38 or so. He was an adult when Kara arrived at age 12. At the beginning of Season 1 she was 24, which means she's 25 or so now. If he was out of college (Metropolis U. in the comics) he would have been at least 22 or 23. With all the times 12 years has been tossed around I…
I suspect he ended up in the 30th century with the Legion. Maybe by then the lead in Earth's atmosphere has dissipated.
There have also been references to him being stronger, notably the Legion of Superheroes during Jim Shooter's term writing it.
Except this version of Superman CAN'T CRACK THE MOON IN TWO. This isn't Superman from the comics, especially the Silver Age when he could move the Earth with his super breath. This is a Superman who is extremely powerful but not a god among men.
That bugged me too. I mean, sorry but he's got to be stronger than her and he's had more experience. No way she could beat him "fighting at full strength."
She says she's seen him without his glasses so maybe, maybe not? And Superman has green eyes?
As usual, a few random thoughts. First, silver kryptonite? Reminds me of the Silver Age with its myriad varieties
In 1964 there was an episode of The Alfred Hitchcock Hour called "Consider Her Ways" that showed a society that was composed of only women. There was a line about learning to have babies without men: http://www.imdb.com/title/t… That's the earliest occurrence on TV that I know of.
I don't remember him saying that; which episode? Was it around the time Alex and Maggie became a couple? You're right, though, if sex wasn't necessary to make babies then the genders of the parents shouldn't have mattered so same sex couples could have been possible if not common.
LOL. Seriously, it's a "particle beam weapon" regardless of what it shoots. Normally the particle has a charge, which is what allows it to be accelerated and fired. Electrons and protons were used back in the 1980's but it's theoretically possible to use atomic nuclei. From Wikipedia: "A particle-beam weapon is a…