nobodybasically--disqus
nobodybasically
nobodybasically--disqus

…but again, they wouldn't allow Ted Kord when they were simply CONSIDERING the idea of a Booster Gold film, so the idea that Superman is okay just so long as they're not using him "right now" in the films is silly.

Your logic seems to be based around the idea that the embargo only involved characters that make major appearances in whatever the newest movie is, which is nonsensical since it blocked Arrow from using Ted Kord when they were even just CONSIDERING a Booster Gold movie.

Meanwhile all the characters they wrote off before (Amanda Waller, Deadshot and Katana) got to make one-off appearances again, and Supergirl has Superman in it every once in a while (plus Zod now).

They literally just had Superman and Zod introduced in Supergirl this season. It seems the whole movie character embargo has been lifted.

..to represent the fact that we're now seeing a computer simulation instead of the real world?

Thematic transition effects?

I don't see any reason to believe we were supposed to think the whole episode was what the Doctor saw in the recording at the end. If that were true it would have been in first-person from the Doctor's perspective.

So who was the Gordon Tipple/CG Worm/Eric Roberts Master?

The show never really had a chance to bring two Masters together before. Roger Delgado's death was what led to them recasting the Master in the first place, so he was gone before there was ever even a second Master.

I mean, he's not. This character had absolutely NOTHING in common with the Music Meister from Batman: The Brave and the Bold. (He was from a cartoon, not the comics).

So is anyone else really confused about why he was even called the Music Meister? He outright admitted the only reason their dream world was a musical is because Barry and Kara were both thinking about musicals, and it could have been any genre of non-musical film.

The timing of what the other agents were doing was off. Fitz and Simmons heard the explosion and caught up with the other members of the team at contradictory times based on the others' accounts of what they were doing.

So why exactly did their Christmas party at the end have paper crowns and Christmas crackers? None of the characters are from any country that celebrates like that.

It was Robert who said Bran would be better off dead, and Joffrey likely sent the assassin as an attempt to make his "father" proud. That was Tyrion's theory.

Did Clayface!Gordon remind anyone else of Plastic Tim Allen from whichever Santa Clause movie he was in?