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It’s reminding me a lot of when Earth 1 Laurel started to become Black Canary  and everybody was being a dick to her. All the characters were super unlikable that season, but I ended up really liking Laurel and Thea.

Sorry, but it clearly presented an exploitative and dehumanizing system, try again.

Arrow talk: remember when this show used to be a superhero show? I’m not really complaining though, this is the best it’s been since season 2. They haven’t gone back to Diaz maybe having enhanced strength yet, so I’m going to assume he ends up in prison with Ollie before Ollie gets released. And speaking of prison,

Most (all) Gayle episodes are skipable for me. Gayle ruins every episode she’s in.

That is a very good point, but the technology itself was actually a murderer which only confuses things further.

Is it that their satisfied with their jobs, or is it that they’re just happy to part of the very small number of people who have a job? We don’t really get a sense of what the economic climate is on the planet, but it can’t be that great if companies only use humans for 10% of their jobs.

It started well enough, with the system, and The System, consistently shown in a negative light, but then it all falls apart at the end.

The idea that Stan Lee deserves any credit for inspiring the New Gods is laughable to say the least.

This is the first episode of the season that really felt like an episode of Doctor Who to me, and I enjoyed it a lot. But then they completely fucked it up with their nonsensical ending. Worker’s rights are good (okay, off to a good start) but the systems which exploit them are also good (wait, what?). It just doesn’t

Rorschach doesn’t kill innocents, but that’s a pretty low bar for not being a horrible human being. That being said though, he was right. Veidt was an even worse monster and the chance to build a utopia wasn’t worth all the deaths he caused.

There’s parts that work and parts that, in hindsight, don’t. I usually skip the pirate bits for instance. But part of it is that it’s been so thoroughly aped at this point that it doesn’t have the impact it once did.

My thing about Zak Snyder is that he’s clearly a very talented cinematographer, but that really hasn’t translated into being a good director.

Whatever Happened to the Man of Tomorrow is about every aspect of Silver Age Superman being destroyed in the most mean-spirited way possible. To me that’s a pretty strong indication that, when taken with Watchmen and Miracle Man, Moore hates Superheroes.

Scott Pilgrim has some video game references because people reference things. Welcome to the 21st century. The references aren’t the point though, not like RPO.

Yeah, it clearly didn’t work out the way I thought it was going to, you’re so smart for pointing that out.

It’s their antichrist, it can work anyway they want it to, and I thought maybe their antichrist could be trapped in the murder house.

Or as my girlfriend and I keep asking each other "who was suit?"

New Antichrist body, but I would assume same Antichrist soul.

I really enjoyed this season, but that ending was not satisfying. I thought for sure Constance was going to bring him into the house, trapping him there forever. But I guess instead he's going to come back later and probably just repeat all of this. 

She probably should have told her once she became an adult, yeah. I can’t really get a sense of how old Nora's supposed to be though.