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Arrow - Season 3

Was it me or was a lot of the dialogue in this episode just really bad. The story was okay for the most part, although I had a huge problem with the ex-boyfriend just standing around waiting to Oliver to deal with the guns instead of trying to pull the trigger. I am hoping that there is more to the Brother Eye story--at one point I thought that the boyfriend had hung himself so he could upload his consciousness to the machine.
 
Is she a bimbo if she recognizes her assets and uses them to support her genius daughter through school. Its not like she's sleeping with the customers, she's just slinging drinks. Remember what mom said, she worked 60 hour weeks in 6 inch heels to get the big tips needed to support her and her child after Felicity's father abandoned them.

(I guess that rules out the fanwank that Merlyn is Felicity's father... thank gawd. :rolleyes: )
 
I must be used to it as well because I didn't notice anything particularly off about this episode's dialogue.
 
Is she a bimbo if ...
Yes. Was she smart enough to sell ideas and designs to support her daughter? No. Was she strong enough to move crates or shovel dirt? No. She did it with a tight dress. I mean, sorry, she is a bimbo. There are a lot of worse things she could be, like a financial adviser or real estate agent.
 
Is she a bimbo if ...
Yes. Was she smart enough to sell ideas and designs to support her daughter? No. Was she strong enough to move crates or shovel dirt? No. She did it with a tight dress. I mean, sorry, she is a bimbo. There are a lot of worse things she could be, like a financial adviser or real estate agent.

That makes me think of the old joke of a businessman who divorced his wife and a year later brought a date to a sleazy restaurant / bar. At the bar he met his ex who was working there as a waitress. He laughed at her for falling "so low" in fortune since they broke up.

She looked at his date and then at him and replied, "At least I don't come in here to eat when I'm trying to impress someone."

You joked about the financial advisor and real estate agent, both of whom sell ideas and "designs", but since many are unscrupulous that joke is "funny".

Just like it would be funny to say "at least she wasn't a banker who made unsustainable mortgages to families who could not afford them, thus contributing to a housing collapse and foreclosure on the dreams/fortunes of over 5 million of said families, and at least she wasn't the unscrupulous broker who repackaged those mortgages into derivatives and sold those worthless derivatives to individuals and institutions in volumes large enough to help trigger the worst recession in the US since the Great Depression of '29. And at least she wasn't a politician in Washington who stood in front of the TV cameras in their custom fitted Brooks Brothers suits, decrying the falling economy while protecting the people and bailing out the institutions who lead us into that great recession in the first place.

The urban dictionary describes a bimbo as "A girl who is stupid, wears lots of make up and is obsessed with boys and clothes. Generally blonde but there are exceptions. Usually hangs around with other bimbos. You can spot them because they will be the big group of girls that all look the same and are giggling hysterically."

That doesn't sound like a woman who works 60 hours a week, most likely without sick time or vacation time. You deride her for not being strong enough to "dig ditches or move crates" but lets see your average stevedore stand in 6 inch stilettos for 60 hours each week, in clothes too tight to breathe while hoping to get 5 dollar tip from the grabby guy at table 12 before he loses his cool and belts him one.

My guess is the stevedore would be fired within the hour.

Like many of us, Felicity looked at the tight dress and makeup and made assumptions about her mother that were wrong.

Assumptions, she learned 2 years ago from billionaire playboy Oliver Queen, are a dangerous thing when we base them on such superficial evidence.

I liked how her mom called Felicity on the carpet, how she acknowledged Felicity's (like her father's) intelligence far outstripped her own, but that this troglodyte STAYED by Felicity's side and did whatever it took to support this genius in the making. Even when all she could feel from her daughter was derision and disrespect because she couldn't move crates, or dig ditches or steal millions from unsuspecting families willing to invest their futures with her.

In the end, Felicity was right.

She did get her toughness from her mom. :bolian:

Thank heavens.
 
I think it was the scene near the end when Felicity was talking to Ollie. It just hit me... Wow! This is bad. That never happened before. Was it the writing? Was it the insincerity in the delivery? It was probably a bit of both. I'd like to say that there was more with Laurel but it was probably just that initial feeling still lingering.
 
This episode resolution almost caused me to delete the series from recording.

It started with Cooper escorting the thugs out to wait for the armored trucks arrival. He says one totally unnecessary sentence then turns to go back inside to Felicity and Donna. Conveniently while he was away, Felicity was able to send her message to which Oliver and Roy are able to arrive about 15 seconds later.

Then the LASER guided machine guns somehow know who the enemy is and get Arrow in their sights but he's able to simply jump out of their targeting systems. In the meantime, Cooper, rather than simply shooting his captives, uses the time Arrow is being kept busy jumping around dodging laser beams to release Felicity from being cuffed to the console, apparently so he can shoot her in the head from a standing positing instead. :lol:
 
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I think it was the scene near the end when Felicity was talking to Ollie. It just hit me... Wow! This is bad. That never happened before. Was it the writing? Was it the insincerity in the delivery? It was probably a bit of both. I'd like to say that there was more with Laurel but it was probably just that initial feeling still lingering.

Yeah, I didn't notice anything at all with the Ollie/Felicity dialogue near the end.

As for Laurel, if this is the first week you've noticed bad Laurel dialogue, you've definitely confirmed the theory that you're just not used to it since that's been going on for pretty much two years. Nothing in this episode is worse than her tough guy bullying of the District Attorney.
 
The AV Club commentariat strikes again!

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:devil:
 
So is anybody else getting LEGO Batman 3: Beyond Gotham? It's features Stephen Amell as Green Arrow, and it's also supposed to have Arrow DLC that gives you the show's version of Arrow, Diggle, Sarah Lance/The Canary, Malcom Merlyn, and possibly one or two others, I can't remember for sure. It also has a level, that I believe I read takes plance on Lian Yu
I got the game this afternoon at work, but when I started it I couldn't find the Arrow DLC, just ones for The Dark Knight trilogy, Man of Steel, and a 75th Anniversary Batman pack.
 
Looks like belts around the legs are the in thing for heroes this season... Roy's got the same thing going (hey, does he even have a name yet? Red Arrow? Arsenal? Guy-in-background-who-hasn't-done-much-yet?) although despite his gear upgrade Ollie does not.

And truly - Diggle! Get with the program! A SKI MASK?!

Mark
 
Nice to finally see her in costume.

I also like that she'll be taking on the Black Canary identity prematurely and finding difficulty in the role.
 
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