stealthfire13
Stealthfire
stealthfire13

Retconning "Savior" into some kind of special character class—like a Slayer or Jedi—is one of the weirder things this show has done. Aladdin's a Savior! Rumple's a Savior! Next week we'll find out Pongo's a Savior!

The Alicia/Kalinda friendship was one of the strongest parts of the first two seasons of The Good Wife, and I'm happy to see an echo of it here.

And as was pointed out in the episode—there are a lot of powerful people gunning for the Rindells. They'll use whatever they have to get at least one of them behind bars.

It's often used to mean over-the-top, which isn't too far from its original meaning.

I was thinking that at a certain point Yo-Yo would figure out that something went wrong and would try to pull Daisy and Simmons out—but then I realized there's no guarantee that time passes at the same rate in the Framework. Days in there could be minutes out in the real world.

He WAS a zombie, but his kid WASN'T a zombie—or actually his kid, because zombies can't have kids (except for Grace Park).

I cracked up when everyone was so worried about meeting their past selves and destroying time itself and then the Flash preview popped up and there was Barry, just chatting with his future self like no big deal.

It's a bit more complicated.

They could do something similar to the Angel and Faith relationship on Angel, which was one of my favorite storylines on that series.

I wanted to laugh at Guardian but I was too busy shouting at Kara that SHE CAN FLY DAMMIT.

Because it's hilariously overstuffed; in the first half of the season they started:

I kind of love that this show blew massive budget (by its standards, anyway) on a big showy battle between characters we cared nothing about.

This show has such a weird morality—it acted like putting the fairy in a coma was a bad thing because it "darkened Rumple's heart", not because the Blue Fairy is a person and hurting her is bad. So somehow Rumple hurting her is a less of a bad thing than Gideon doing it, because ???.

I wanted to enjoy Diane's takedown of fake Milo but it ignores the fact that even if he's just a child pissing in a corner of the room, everyone else in the room still has to smell it. It really felt like it was coming from someone who doesn't understand the unending deluge of vitriol harassment targets have to deal

I've found that even with the no commercials plan I can't play the episode with any ad blockers installed—I usually use incognito mode in Chrome (with all extensions turned off) and it works fine.

Because maybe they wanted to see if anyone here had the same problem and found a solution?

What the hell was up with those throwing knives? When has anyone ever killed anything with a throwing knife on this show? Like I get that they're short on guns but if you're trying to train an army on limited time, why use such an impractical weapon? They were better off gluing those things to sticks and making

A lot of the problem is that we knew it wouldn't amount to anything. Suspenseful storytelling is great as long as there's actual, you know, suspense. But as viewers we know there's no way in hell Sasha and Roshita get to kill Negan in a non-finale episode, so it was a bunch of waiting around for no payoff.

Yeah, the "no mask" excuse doesn't completely fly—Caity Lotz doesn't wear a mask on Legends of Tomorrow and still pulls off fairly impressive fights (I know the long hair lets them sub in a double a bit easier, but most shots it's pretty clearly her).

I kinda hope Tyler Hoechlin's Superman makes it to an Earth-1 crossover someday because Ray and him in the same room would be too much.