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When Sava called out the show in episode 2 for bringing Simmons back too early, I stated that it was likely the show would not leave us on the dark about what happened to her, and they didn't: I am one of those here who has had faith with the writers, at least until now, because unlike with what happened with Simmons,

I like Hunter as well, but I am annoyed at the fact that the entire sequence of him shooting Banks and then him pointing out the possible effectiveness of a blood test is predicated on:
Hunter failing to remember that he was with Banks, and Coulson and Rosalind on a DC Metro Train at the same time Lash was attacking

Wow, second week in a row in which Sava grades the episode higher than I would have: its a frightening pattern which I hope changes soon.

We have not been told diddly about Lash's motivations - how would anything mesh with stuff we haven't been informed about?

The panels would hardly be producing much energy with low energy light sources. Not all photons pack the same punch.

The choices aren't arbitrary at all:
For this show or the whole MCU to work, period, one has to abandon certain realities because otherwise you can't have Hellicarriers, Quinjets, Inhumans, Super secret non-governmental spy agencies with budgets that would need to run into the tens of billions to manage the assets they

The point is that "proper knowledge of those topics" is basically irrelevant once you accept this is a completely fantastical series that by necessity divorces itself from realism in a number of areas, one of those being martial arts. We aren't arguing real martial arts, nor real procurement issues, but instead a

But there is a difference, whether its fair or not. I could spend hours complaining about all the inherent political, organizational, and financial plot holes in this show, including say the procurement and deployment timeline of a new aircraft system like Zephyr one. What I shouldn't expect is for anyone to take the

I don't agree with your last point. No one here is saying that your opinion on the realism of that fight is less valid than the common person's one - instead that since this is a fantastical action story, expecting realism in this field is like expecting realism from this show when it comes to the sciences, and yes,

How would Jemma know how to explain to Will what Fitz did?

Nitpicking on a show because it shows things that from your own personal experience feel wrong is not a winning argument whatsoever. This show starts of as fantasy, and as far as fantasy goes, it is relatively well developed internally, so that in this fantastical setting we have, her ability to fight Agent 33 by

Really? The whole of the cast was in 'Turn, Turn, Turn', and in 'One Door Closes'

The more you read commentary on TV shows online, the more you will see that people don't seem to actually watch TV shows with any sort of attention to detail.

Suddenly?

Actually, I believe what Jemma said is that the only reason they were even going to get to see a few second of daylight was because they were near the pole, not the other way around.

This show has had several great episodes, including the mid season finale last year, episode 15, and Turn, Turn, Turn in season one.

Not nearly as excited by this episode as Sava was, but seeing that the people who regularly hate on this show seem to be showing some enthusiasm for it as well, I guess I should not be surprised.

I strongly disagree.

The equalizer or trump card is training, which is why the MCU Black Widow (who seemingly lacks the enhanced physical abilities she has in the comic books) is shown as such a dangerous opponent. Weapons allow hose without skills to take on an enemy, but extensive training allows someone even without weapons to take out

False, from beginning to end. Not only false, but a massive case of projections.