raven-wilder
Raven Wilder
raven-wilder

And that episode (if I remember right) had Alex being the one who loved Valentine’s Day while Maggie hated. Now Alex is the one who hates Valentine’s.

As this episode demonstrates, Alex takes up most of the space that a romantic partner would in Kara’s life (and vice-versa). J’onn trying to get the two working together is even referred to as matchmaking.

I don’t get why Lena’s research NOT being shared with the government was ever an option. As soon as someone comes up with a formula to give people superpowers and starts putting it to use, they government is going to DEMAND to know exactly how it works. Heck, I’m pretty sure the FDA requires it.

I think they’re going with battle precognition for Nia: she knows exactly what her opponent is going to do before they do it, so she can make the perfect moves to counter them.

Plus, realistically, adoption proceedings can take years even if you’re NOT dragging your feet on the paperwork.

Also, she’s a West. Keeping pointless secrets is in her blood.

That’s easy: 2012.

He never said he married seven different women. He married five different women, but got married seven times. Which one(s) he re-married post-divorce is unclear.

She’s sort of the default Holmes love interest, for those versions that feel compelled to give the lead character a love interest, but don’t want Holmes and Watson to go full gay.

Though it had to have been sometime since the Season 6 finale, since Sara references her father’s death.

At first I thought maybe they were only dropping out of the documentary format briefly because after the first commercial break is when they have their opening credits play across the bottom of the screen, and it’s be hard to explain why a documentary included credits for Stephen Amell or Caity Lotz.

What’d be neat is a historical documentary by fringe historians pointing to evidence of bizarre figures called “Legends” appearing throughout history, with Nate appearing as a historian trying (half-heartedly) to debunk such outrageous claims.

It’s not clear whether Argus actually has the authority to interfere in criminal investigations on U.S. soil (both the CIA and the military are forbidden from doing so, for example). We see them doing that sort of thing a lot, of course, but Argus does tons of stuff that’s completely illegal, and only gets away with

Well, vigilante or not, after finding an injured person they HAVE to bring them to a hospital, where a certain level of discretion is required by doctors’ oaths, and Emiko slipped away before anyone could ask her any questions.

I dunno, I think it’d be funny if we got to hear what the Legends say while on a mission, but with no context to make sense of it all. Imagine what, say, their unicorn encounter would sound like presented that way.

Season 3 of Legends opened with her, temporarily kicked off the Waverider, having trouble finding a decent job because being declared dead twice doesn’t make you look very dependable.

Is them working for the SCPD officially THAT different from, say, Seasons 3-5 when the police were cooperating with them pretty openly, just without any of ‘em (outside Quentin) knowing their identities?

I suspect they’ll be officially working with the police for a while, then there will be some sort of No Man’s Land style disaster that will leave the city with no police or government, rendering the issue moot.

You wouldn’t necessarily even need a documentary crew; just make an episode comprised entirely of Gideon’s omnipresent security footage of inside the Waverider (including her documented ability to see people’s dreams), with audio-only for when characters are out in the field.

No, but if dreaming powers are a common thing on their planet, then you couldn’t really use them to become a Supergirl like figure (what Nia’s grandmother was explicitly compared to). When everyone’s super, no one will be, and all that.