tenpens
Ten Pens
tenpens

First we need to save the farms—and then the whales. (So that big cylinder thing in Star Trek 4 doesn't come evaporate all the oceans looking for them, and such. Ya know.)

What is this sneak peak of which you speak, and where can I find it?

I think someone did a really good job of explaining this earlier, but I can't remember who, so I'll just try to summarize. Eddie shot himself as a result of everything that happened with Reverse Flash. He would never have done that if it hadn't been for RF, so RF had to have impacted that timeline up to the point he

I have to say, Michael Thompson, I think your comment was very well formulated. Kudos.

I think they already introduced him—Jay, I mean. If I'm not mistaken, he's the one who explained the whole F.I.R.E.S.T.O.R.M. project to Caitlin earlier in the season.

I keep thinking that Eddie might have just shot the Reverse Flash a few times, since he was standing there monologue-ing.

All the feels…

Gotcha. I appreciate your taking the time to clarify.

Also, may I just add: these series aren't exactly sticking to the comics on everything, as far as I can tell. If I'm not mistaken, villains have already crossed over from Arrow to The Flash, including the Clock King and Deathbolt.

Well, since we're all stating our opinions here, I will respectfully disagree with at least part of yours. I never felt that Iris sucked. Did the writers do a poor job of writing her sometimes? Sure. Has she ever annoyed me as much as Skye on Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D or Laurel*? No, never. Does Felicity deserve to get

That says a lot about how grim Arrow is when one of the only moments of comedy comes from a character from an entirely different show and it's considered funny when a hero's secret identity is revealed in front of a villain. Note to self: Maybe I should stay away from Arrow, even when Barry makes an appearance.

I don't know about all that. Just saying that Felicity appears to have gotten off easy, whereas Iris would not, and that seems to me like an unfair double standard.

Quick question: when Diggle and Thea were standing by the infected assassin and were exposed to the virus, shouldn't they have passed out again (like everyone did in the dungeon)?

How is this possible? I'm actually interested in checking all three of these new shows out. The Legends of Tomorrow preview seemed equal parts cheesy and interesting—right up until ATOM did his shrinking bit. That looked dumb to me; not exactly a thrilling high note on which to end, but oh, well. I'll still give it a

I guess what I mean is that Panabaker mentioned a character arc, as if viewers would see the path Caitlin takes from being geeky scientist getting beat up by Peekaboo to being a crazy villain. If Caitlin suddenly becomes Killer Frost in the season finale, it will seem less to me like a character arc and more like

Thank you for sparing me. :) But was it a crossover I missed? (I don't know how he ended up in the pipeline with the other meta-humans.)

There was a panel on which Danielle Panabaker said something about her character arc leading up to Caitlin becoming Killer Frost and seemed to imply that it would happen this season. Does that mean they're going to cram it into the season finale? If so, <sigh> again.

"Rogue Air, you have failed this viewer!"

I think it may have had to do with the fact that once they knew about Grodd, he had already been using Eiling to shoot people, blow things up, and steal gold bars. One could argue that all those factors demonstrated that he was more dangerous than cuddly/in need of some TLC. Good point about the device going under the

I give this episode a "B" grade, mainly because I wasn't ever truly scared for the characters, and this after I felt terrified for the characters in the previous episode. I am not a nail-biter, but if I was, my fingers would have been bloody after last week's ep. Maybe it's because I don't read the comics and don't