lironmiron--disqus
lironmiron
lironmiron--disqus

Depends on the hospital. I've seen it happen.

Or, at least, that's how he knew she would take that answer. Although, it's still possible that he answered like that instead of giving her a direct answer because her powers are evil but it's not her fault and they need her to use them in these desperate times…

Well, it kind of interacts with the electromagnetic spectrum by producing gravitational lensing

The series is based on the stories of a record-breaking chain smoker. I think we should have expected that it wouldn't be the go-to series for the soundest healthy-lifestyle examples to follow.

But it has been clearly established that, in their Universe, all magic has a cost. So clearly, if their divine being wanted you to have visions, those visions would have a cost. If you removed the cost, the magic would also be removed.

They actually addressed the bullet issue. Kane told Bellamy that they had found a barrel with nothing but bullets, where the rifles had been found.

Nothing clears and opens your lungs better than cold steel.

Captain Officer Detective Lance did not surrender the Glades. That was an order from the Mayor.

Or 4. Call the Flash. :)

Yeah, on the non-aging point… is it really something to brag about to everyone you meet that you're heir to an immortal?
Isn't it sort of an oxymoron?

I thought they would surely choose Eliza Taylor for Supergirl, but I'm glad she's staying on this show.

I think what she means is that cosmic radiation is so strong in space that it "engineered" them into becoming super resistant to radiation, over the generations, not that an actual human planner engineered them.

I especially liked the elevator scene and how Maya's quick thinking made an impossible save.

I think it was also a play on words, since two of the three major "nations" had coup d'états in the episode.

They grew up in a space station. I imagine that they were much less exposed to foul language than big city modern Earthers are, so it may not come as naturally.

I think the word you're looking for is xenophobe. The grounders are the same race and grounder leaders are the same class as him. They're just a different nationality with a different (in some ways, although it's also xenophobic) culture.

Well, Clarke has not done anything that would make her look like an expert rider. Staying on top of the horse and letting it travel in a group is not unbelievable. I was much more intrigued at how Kane became such a good marksman, considering that even testing a projectile weapon in the ark would have killed everyone.

It did play like a classic TV betrayal, but the difference is that "you are getting out of here tonight" was not a coincidence; it was a direct and well established trigger for the betrayal.

What bothers me is how insistent the grounders are on pointing out how weak the Sky People are, after a handful of their children defeated their entire freaking army.

To be fair, when you're surrounded by hostile. genocidal, fascist tribes, it's easy to stop seeing them as people after a time.