swbarnes2--disqus
swbarnes2
swbarnes2--disqus

But killing her like that was so dumb. What does that make her character arc? She dreamed of the rainbow vortex through her life, people tell her she has a special destiny, she finds the rainbow vortex, throws herself in, the end? Who writes a story like that?

Well, no it's not a measure of a person's worth, except in the small circle that the characters run in, and in the contest, in which these characters are the elites.

Yeah…neither the character, nor the author ever read Gibson. Or anything. It shows in the writing.

I think I picked that up at the MacFarlane booth at Comic-con many years ago. Yes, a very good book.

It's not fictional, but the Algonquin Table with Dorothy Parker was probably pretty fun. Probably any party with Dorothy Parker and lots of booze would be highly entertaining

And then "every image of an angel can become an angel". Which means every postcard with a pic of the Statue of Liberty should be turning into an angel.

We had Clue as a kid…we never played it, we just watched it like it was a normal, kind of deranged movie.

But on the other hand, that worked with Killer Frost. She stopped being a threat, not because they did anything violent to her, but because Cisco treated her like a person who was capable of choosing to walk away from being evil. There was a chance that Savitar could have allowed himself to be healed, to atone for

They were save-the-dates..but you really shouldn't send those out until you've reserved your venues.

Cisco REALLY needs to learn how to make a breach under someone, and whisk them off to safety (or cell). He and Gypsy were doing stuff like that during their fight

I assumed that the speed force would make more as long as there was an anomaly that needed killing, and that all Caitlin needed to do was buy him a few minutes.

No, what turned her was Cisco giving her a choice. Him putting the cure in her hands and telling her to do what she thought was best for her. That snapped her out of being evil.

" Savitar decides to simply trust that he’s done what he was asked to do, which is silly, because of course he didn’t."

I think in the minds of the characters, and probably the author, elites are gonna elite. You can't keep 'em grubbin' in the dirt for long.

But it doesn't have to be black and white. It can be true that Kara, being only 13 when she lived on Krypton, didn't really understand all the nuances of what was going on around her, and might not have understood all the shared history between the two planets. The Daxamites might have a point about Krypton treating

The premise could have worked with just a few tweaks. Have the reapers be a conglomerate of refugee species, fleeing from multiple galaxies where organics lost out to AIs. Then it makes more sense; they are personally afraid, and they have multiple examples of AIs wiping out organics, and they are desperate to stop

I thought it was "magical" creeps, because of the Myxylplx guy from a few weeks ago.

The point of Hamilton is that America belongs to all Americans, not just white ones. If urban liberals get that, and flyover white people don't, that's a failing on the part of the red stater's not liberals.

The stereotypical high pitched "AHHH!" when someone falls. It's apparently a thing that there's one in every Star Wars movie.

On the other hand, it makes much more sense that the Rebels were able to find a weakness in something the size of a moon so fast…they knew what they were looking for. They knew what kind of flaw was there.