vandalcabbage--disqus
VandalCabbage
vandalcabbage--disqus

Just as a point of interest, why have you ranked S1 of ATLA as an A-?
Not arguing, just wondering.

Here are my personal ranks, best to worst.

These episodes had me giggling and laughing and clapping my hands like a madman at a few points (when Korra looked back and saw the lake, I bellowed DO IT! DO IT! over and over).

Please play Morrowind before deriding the Elder Scroll Series aesthetic as "boring".

Nice analysis!

I definitely think that it gets overrated because of its untimely demise. It had great moments, don't get me wrong, but compared to, say, the original Teen Titans it just couldn't manage its cast at all.

The singing was actually one of the weaker parts. It started out funny but dragged out just a leetle bit too long. Not bad, just weaker.

The spelling is Otaku (JK)

What impressed me about Book 4 was the slow boil they kept it on for so long. Maybe a bit too slow of a boil, but the choice of high concept over pure action helped tie the season -and the series - together. Not something you see a lot in the final season of a TV show, at least not successfully.

Not only was it a ballsy move, it worked too! Came off without a hitch. It moved the plot along without having to introduce new characters. Well, some like Kuvira and Bataar Jr became a lot more important, but they had already been kind of shown and it wasn't like Young Justice where there's massive amounts of

Like a few other unnamed people we know!

I guess the writers decided that Korra should get a shot at an Emmy.

To be fair, the other person has acquitted him/herself alright this season and had a fantastic moment in the finale.

I realized when that moment came on that I would never hear the end of it from all the people who were proved right.

I like to see it as just enough of all the right things.

Cade "Yeager"?

Really good capper to the series.

By which I mean, it is obviously a reference to Karl Marx's book Capital. If you write something controversial, it's going to sell more copies, and nothing could be more controversial than writing something which - on the outside - looks like it's going to be super-communist.

I'd say what you're seeing is a sociological thing called cultural capital. Even when they have a genuine interest in their kid's welfare, parents from working class backgrounds sometimes struggle to help their kids when schools have a culture more associated with middle class values and such.

Teen Titans Go has some solid satire of the DC universe and some unrepentant Golden Age Spongebob weirdness that easily makes up for the odd mediocre episode.