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Supergirl TV Series is being work on.

My point is that its been reported that he is in the Pilot. An actor has been cast as some kind of stand in. From the sound of it just to represent his presence as a visual cameo. So there is not going to be a true performance or development of Superman as a character. Which would mean there can be no real relationship developed between Kara and her cousin.
 
Which is not a bad thing. Having her constantly look over her shoulder or need to prove herself to her cousin would get old fast. This way we can let her grow as a character without the direct comparison to Superman. We will still do it but the show can ignore him for all intents.
 
Considering Supergirl's got all the same superpowers and can do pretty much all the same cool things on screen, I don't think people will really miss Superman or feel his absence nearly as much as Batman's in BoP back in the day.

The only issue I can see is if they have her continually going up against huge, massive threats and Superman never shows up to help. Since surely he can't be busy with something else every time, or wouldn't just show up in the city to help at random times anyway.
 
Considering Supergirl's got all the same superpowers and can do pretty much all the same cool things on screen, I don't think people will really miss Superman or feel his absence nearly as much as Batman's in BoP back in the day.

Well, Birds of Prey had many flaws, but a failure to justify Batman's absence was not one of them. It established right up front that Batman had been broken by the Joker's murder of Catwoman and paralyzing of Batgirl, that he'd retired from crimefighting and left Gotham. It's hardly flattering to Batman, but it was a clear and consistent explanation for his absence. There was a lot about the show that made far less sense than that. (And it has a parallel in Nolan-Bruce's 8-year retirement between his second and third films.)


The only issue I can see is if they have her continually going up against huge, massive threats and Superman never shows up to help. Since surely he can't be busy with something else every time, or wouldn't just show up in the city to help at random times anyway.

Well, that's no worse than what we already deal with in shared comics universes. I often wonder, if Metropolis and Gotham are so close to each other in DC geography, how come Superman can't swoop in and clean up Gotham on his lunch hour? To some extent, you just have to suspend disbelief about such things.

(In my Spider-Man novel, I included a conversation where Peter explained to Mary Jane why he was generally the "first responder" for mid-level supercrime in New York City, because the Avengers tended to deal with bigger, more global threats, the Fantastic Four focused on superscience crises, Doctor Strange dealt with the mystical, and Daredevil tended to limit his activities to Hell's Kitchen. Although I probably overlooked characters like Luke Cage and Iron Fist. And it's still kind of a fudge. I actually did include references to other heroes dealing with side effects of the novel's crisis "off-camera.")

Anyway, the fact that this is on a TV budget probably limits the number of "huge, massive threats" we'll be seeing. A CBS show may have more money to spend than a CW show, but it's still nowhere near a feature budget. So we probably won't see that many crises that require two Kryptonians to handle.
 
Superman doesn't turn up in every comic Supergirl appears in, does he?

No not for every comic, but for a lot of the massive, world-threatening "events" he does (or it'll be Superboy or some other superhero who shows up to help out, because of course the comics do love their crossovers).

Well, Birds of Prey had many flaws, but a failure to justify Batman's absence was not one of them. It established right up front that Batman had been broken by the Joker's murder of Catwoman and paralyzing of Batgirl, that he'd retired from crimefighting and left Gotham. It's hardly flattering to Batman, but it was a clear and consistent explanation for his absence. There was a lot about the show that made far less sense than that. (And it has a parallel in Nolan-Bruce's 8-year retirement between his second and third films.)

Yeah but the problem is that even as a broken and retired crimefighter, Batman was still a far more interesting and compelling character to think about than any of the show's actual main characters.
 
Yeah but the problem is that even as a broken and retired crimefighter, Batman was still a far more interesting and compelling character to think about than any of the show's actual main characters.

Which hopefully will not be a problem for this show.

(And I do think BoP had a few effective characters. Dina Meyer's Oracle was terrific, Ian Abercrombie was one of the best Alfreds ever, and Mia Sara was surprisingly good as an older, subtler version of Harley Quinn.)
 
It's a muffin... it's a Twinkie... It's

SUPERCAKE!



Confirmed power: Can turn her S shield into delicious cake. Beats her cousin's giant S-shaped plastic wrap by a Kryptonian mile.
 
It's a muffin... it's a Twinkie... It's

SUPERCAKE!



Confirmed power: Can turn her S shield into delicious cake. Beats her cousin's giant S-shaped plastic wrap by a Kryptonian mile.

That's one superpower I'm glad I don't have. I'm overweight and lacking self-discipline as it is.
 
Greg Berlanti is quickly becoming the king of superhero television. He'll have four different superhero shows on the air next year, not to mention Jaimie Alexander's Blindspot. He's come a long way from his earlier, less successful superhero projects, the Green Lantern movie and No Ordinary Family. (And The Tomorrow People, if that counts.)
 
Cookie makes sense...I was thinking that it looked like a pizza with frosting on it....
 
She's biting a cake in that picture... which, incidentally, was most likely taken during the SG Pilot wrap party.
 
Looks too thin, solid, and easy to pick up whole to be a cake. Some sort of pastry, yes, but not what I'd call a cake.
 
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