Because it is what happens after the revelation that is important, not the revelation itself.
Because it is what happens after the revelation that is important, not the revelation itself.
You're a parent?
You may be taking this movie a bit too seriously.
It's just a guess, but it makes as much sense as any other theory.
Theory: the vault is empty.
The others were fully digested.
Fun fact: The house used in this episode is next door to Wester Drumlins, the house where Sally Sparrow discovered Weeping Angels.
I got the impression that regeneration is at the forefront of the Doctor's mind for some reason.
It's so great that twelve-year-old boys are into iZombie!
If Supergirl were to use the full extent of her powers each episode would be about two minutes long. Given that the writers have a choice, they can power down Supergirl, but a lesser-powered Supergirl isn't actually Supergirl, or they can conveniently forget some of her powers some of the time.
We don't have to be.
That's true of Hank as well. Given the utter incompetency of the DEO he should have been fired ages ago.
Sure, but the 'Supergirl defense' doesn't make any sense and no case is going to be thrown out because Supergirl hurt someone. I mean, what is the argument there because "my client had his arm broken while robbing a bank, therefore he is not guilty" doesn't make a lick of sense.
It's also because Kara is rarely at CatCo anymore. Almost all of her time is spent with the DEO where there is no need to make a distinction between Kara and Supergirl.
I love Mon-El just hanging out at the DEO, making smart with the quips, and nobody in the top secret organization giving a care.
In your first comment you came across as a fan of Capaldi's Doctor until they added the sonic sunglasses and the guitar. Yet you also implied that you didn't know how long Capaldi had been playing the Doctor. He's only been on the show for two seasons, the guitar/glasses arrived in his second season so you must have…
The first word of your reply is the answer. Ronnie's gone, Julian didn't honor her wishes, it's all Barry's fault. Caitlin, however, implicitly trusts herself.
"I'm not sure how many seasons and episodes ago that was"
Alasdair's words are more interesting that the letter grade he assigns to an episode.
Rule No. 1, the Doctor lies.