….
….
Has there been a more delightfully mismatched pair on screen than Dolph Lungren and Brian Benben?
See, I had known about her for a while. I saw this as less giving her a bullhorn, and more lifting up the the rock and showing people in the bubble what's crawling underneath.
On the third hand, if you're a straight, single male and a woman who looks like Peyton List shows up randomly in your life saying she's into you… you'd follow up on that.
I'd put her at a Kinsey 4.
Using Campbell as a method to outline your story is kind of like using your vehicle owner's manual to build a car.
It doesn't sound as deep to say every story is, "There's some dude, and he gets into some crazy shit, and it goes bad, but he gets out of it in a good place."
That's a long way to drive for a quart of milk, my friend.
Well, Thawne only exists as a timeline echo, since Eddie killed himself. My understanding— and I could be wrong— is that this is the Thawne who Barry had caged up during Flashpoint, who then went back with Barry to kill his mother AGAIN, and then brought Barry back and went off on his own. I presume he's taking…
Crossover ain't over yet.
Of course, in this very episode, there was clearly this conversation left off-screen.
Barry: We got something big, call everyone.
Cisco: Even Kendra and Carter? They're still—
Barry: No, not them. Never them.
The second time.
Which is actually tied to Barry. The whole reason Thawne is free to run around in time is because of Barry changing the timeline.
Umm… media bias?
The universe is 80% hydrogen, 20% helium. Anything else is margin of error.
I do think there was an element of actor problems/technical problems, but they were already locked into the arc-plot by the time they realized that. (There was one interview where the producers lamented not getting to shoot a pilot, where problems would have been noticed— though they didn't name the problems.)
He speaks of it in the past, and how their company saved the park, but he doesn't give a sense of time. It's vague if its a few months ago or thirty years.
She could have been worried about fulfilling a legacy. But, no.
Knit. She finds it tiresome and repetitive.
Listen a bit more carefully. He's at press conferences where he's asked a Yes or No question ("Is Donald Trump ready for the Presidency?") that he doesn't remotely answer "yes" but cannot answer with an honest "no" because that upsets the whole "peaceful transition" that's at the center of American politics. I mean,…