Too addled to realize you're proving my point about the apathy of false equivalence.
Too addled to realize you're proving my point about the apathy of false equivalence.
"I'm not going to go suggesting responsibility…"
Given that this episode wasn't funny, you're not making much of an argument.
I'm not going to go suggesting responsibility, but this "Giant Douche/Turd Sandwich" crap that Trey and Matt have pushed (because haha all politicians are terrible) certainly hasn't helped. All it's done is suggest there's some equivalence between candidates and that they're all equally bad.
If you don't understand or appreciate what it means when Trump supporters burn down a black church in Mississippi, then just go away. I should not have to give American history lessons to a grown-ass man.
You make a very astute point, Bellomy. If there is a problem here, it is that we do not appreciate the subtle nuance of burning down a black church and spray-painting "Vote Trump" on the side.
You know, sometimes LoT can be just way too heavy-handed in how it approaches topics. Take tonight's cartoonish racist Southern villains. Who exactly do you think is on the other side of this argument, LoT? Do you really think someone out there is openly pining for a return to the good old days of the Confederacy?
Now you have me wanting the city to build a giant chalkboard sign that says "Welcome To Star City: ___ Days Since Our Last Assassination".
Oliver, holding his scotch as he gazes out the window: "Don't be ridiculous Lemon. Everyone knows there hasn't been a good non-arrow-based vigilante in over two hundred years."
"Of course not! Our security system was designed by Cisco Ramon."
THANK YOU. Someday, I hope the show addresses how often Star City cops are just straight up murdered by the dozens, and the effect that has on recruiting new officers. Yes, I know, blah blah superhero universe, but Jesus Christ. The first wave at D-Day had a higher chance of surviving than these poor bastards.
THANK YOU. Someday, I hope the show addresses how often Star City cops are just straight up murdered by the dozens, and the effect that has on recruiting new officers. Yes, I know, blah blah superhero universe, but Jesus Christ. The first wave at D-Day had a higher chance of surviving than these poor bastards.
So this essentially means that Uncle Eli is Molecule Man, right?
Not really begging for more angst, but I do wish the show would treat all of their characters like fully-formed human beings, not just Barry.
A fair point, but that reasoning doesn't really apply in this instance. A novelist like Stephen King has the luxury of writing until he figures out the story, and then going back and smoothing over the rough edges, before anyone lays an eye on it.
As answer to your question, I recommend the Next Generation series finale. It'll unpack it all for you.
Glad Captain Lance noticed that, along with that sweet computer setup, the Arrowcave obviously got its security system from STAR Labs.
I can only assume that the wigs were Plan B after the personality transplant failed. Similar to "that guy" we all know who always wears a porkpie hat. (Seriously, have you ever wondered how you would describe HexenBitsie to someone who'd never seen the show? "Um… she's… she can… that is… wigs? Yes. She wears wigs. And…
Very true. I haven't read the books, but from what I understand he's written as kind of a hulking brute. I imagine the TV show has also collapsed some of his timeline such that what seem like bad decisions made out of impatience might have been more drawn out in the books.
I know it's a beloved genre convention, but I laughed an absurd amount when Nick says "We're obviously not alone" and Meisner emerges from that tiny dark crevice just to say "No. You're not."