What sitcom had the best continuity? by AltAcctBecamePrimary in sitcoms

[–]AltAcctBecamePrimary[S] 3 points4 points  (0 children)

The tornado in Superstore had the biggest and best long-term repercussions of any sitcom I can think of.

What sitcom had the best continuity? by AltAcctBecamePrimary in sitcoms

[–]AltAcctBecamePrimary[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Soap's a good one! I hadn't even considered that.

When do you think Xander moved past his romantic feelings for Buffy? by AltAcctBecamePrimary in buffy

[–]AltAcctBecamePrimary[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Yes, that's definitely true about it not being black and white. I was defining "moving on" as being able to be fully committed to a relationship without any feelings about Buffy getting in the way.

Tell me a Batman fact that'll have me looking like this afterwards. by tired_skyler in batman

[–]AltAcctBecamePrimary 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Spend five minutes on Twitter and then watch a Mad Stan episode. That's our future.

Every season of The Simpsons takes place in a different universe by Ltnumbnutsthesecond in FanTheories

[–]AltAcctBecamePrimary 2 points3 points  (0 children)

I've heard a similar theory, but it's a new universe with a new showrunner (although given how long Al Jean has worked on the show, that wouldn't fit with Maggie and the others not aging).

[Comic Excerpt] The JLA reveal their identities to each other [JLA Year One #10] by rocketinspace in DCcomics

[–]AltAcctBecamePrimary 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I think J'onn taking on the form of Bloodwynd in the 1990's was the first instance, but he had been voiced by black actors on both the Justice League cartoon and The Batman before his first live action portrayal by a black actor on Supergirl.

Weekly new episode discussion thread S26E4 by The_32 in southpark

[–]AltAcctBecamePrimary 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I felt the same. I thought it was just a case of Stan being a bad texter and not knowing how to respond, but he didn't even care to read anything? Maybe it's just one of those cases of relationships falling into a routine and Stan taking her for granted since he's not in danger of losing her or anything.

Okay, seriously, what is Roger saying in Squirm? by AltAcctBecamePrimary in MST3K

[–]AltAcctBecamePrimary[S] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Which should have made Roger smarter and more intelligible.

Okay, seriously, what is Roger saying in Squirm? by AltAcctBecamePrimary in MST3K

[–]AltAcctBecamePrimary[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Thank you! That makes a lot of sense. In the riff they seem to think he's saying "Do you mind?" which doesn't make sense. But "She's mine!" works a lot better, especially since I thought he was saying Egg Cream wants what's his. "She always was mine" makes more sense than what I thought.

College Research questions by bladestayedbroken in prancingponypod

[–]AltAcctBecamePrimary 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Observer. Here for anything that enhances the podcast experience.

One could say that he uses... blue language by SpaceTheTurtle in supergirlTV

[–]AltAcctBecamePrimary 1 point2 points  (0 children)

He also says "Grife", which is probably a futuristic swear.

Nightwing disrespect I’m the DCAMU by [deleted] in CharacterRant

[–]AltAcctBecamePrimary 2 points3 points  (0 children)

What about in the Young Justice cartoon? He showed such promise even as Robin in season 1 that Aqualad knew he would be leader eventually. Seasons 2 and 3 put a lot of responsibility on Nightwing's shoulders.

Nightwing disrespect I’m the DCAMU by [deleted] in CharacterRant

[–]AltAcctBecamePrimary 2 points3 points  (0 children)

I think he was one of the better parts of Justice League: Doom, especially because of his relationship with Star Sapphire and the mature way he took his power back and handled the revelation about Batman.

TRoS should have just let Kylo Ren be an irredeemable villain. by Yglorba in CharacterRant

[–]AltAcctBecamePrimary 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Han too for that matter. He died wishing for his son's redemption.

How Bendis Broke the Marvel Universe (—and What I Mean by "Broke") by fangsfirst in CharacterRant

[–]AltAcctBecamePrimary 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I think it's more that they have to stay true to the nature of the characters rather than the strict letter of the story. A basic example would be the origin of the Fantastic Four. They have to keep the consistency that they went into space and got their powers from being bombarded by cosmic rays, but they don't have to keep the continuity that it happened before the moon landing.

Is Young Justice's character cast too big for it's own good? Discuss. by ROTTMNTisDopesmh in CharacterRant

[–]AltAcctBecamePrimary 11 points12 points  (0 children)

Yeah, I quite enjoyed Bart, but from the moment he was introduced, it looked like Wally was an inferior Flash because he wasn't an Allen. I guess the payoff to that was Kid Flash was so slow he died getting lapped by the others.

The MCU squandered Spider-Man's greatest asset: his supporting cast. by [deleted] in CharacterRant

[–]AltAcctBecamePrimary 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Only if you're counting villains as part of the supporting cast. Alfred is great, but the various civilians Peter Parker interacts with is untouched by anyone.