inherently
nothing special
inherently

She didn’t fly because she can’t actually fly on the show. So there’s that.
Throwing Trish across the street to another roof is the exception that proves the rule: they talked about her powers a lot, but there’s barely any examples shown and those that do exist are really weak. Like having Jessica drop off a roof or

I’ve been a big fan of his Cap series since the first issue, much more than Black Panther which I found (early on at least) so bluntly didactic as to completely interfere with the narrative. It’s not that I disagree with his points, they just felt told in an immature manner (which, coming from a first-time writer of

I thought as much. You got nothing.

Probably because people love to talk about him. He draws attention. I don’t say that as a fan.

I asked a very simple question that goes to the heart of your blanket assertion that Disco in its first season violated the principles of ST by showing bad things as good.

I’d take that more seriously if you actually tried showing examples of what you said. No snark. Please list examples of the unethical principles which Season 1 presented in the light of “bring right” as opposed to something that a character presented as morally suspect did.

Ah, ok. So you’re just being dishonest about Season 1. Gotcha.

This did not start well.

Among the issues that I had with Discovery Season 1 was that it wasn’t just that characters did things which were bad, but that those actions were framed by the show itself as the right thing to do.

This viewer not so much.

It really felt like this season went very much out of its way to downplay the idea of powers or genius whatsoever. Jessica gets stabbed at the beginning and can’t really do much for a while (actually she doesn’t do much in the way of powers throughout aside from kicking trash cans and snapping hand tools... I mean she

I thought of that, but in the context of a Marvel show my first thought was the villain Killer Shrike.

Future Man/Rome (my #1 vote for series continuation)
Pushing Daisies/Happy

I think for economy’s sake we should begin mashing up future seasons of series that were canceled too soon: HBO’s The Tick vs Hannibal.

I never read that scene at the Endgame as being about asking Bucky permission. More that they’ve become a crew, and he’s just seeing what Bucky thinks. As a peer, as a friend, as family.

Understood. I didn’t realize it was as recent as 2017.

Dire Wraiths are firmly part of the Marvel Universe and one of the races of Universal Inhumans. Their Queen is one of Black Bolt’s wives.

Finn Wolfheard? If it isn’t Corey Wolfheart I don’t want to see it.

I feel your pain, and let me tell you that these are the answe: