I laughed too but it does not make much sense in the context of what the show has told us. Would it make sense to have jokes about how simple Clark Kent's disguise is from characters who do not even known he needs one?It's a common enough expression in American English these days, so having it show up on Supergirl is a kind of delightful joke. I laughed.
It's just a show. You should really just relax...
Do you remember when in Silver Age you could buy Kryptonite in you local drugstore?I had the same question about public awareness of Kryptonite.
Do you remember when in Silver Age you could buy Kryptonite in you local drugstore?![]()
That doesn't say anything about a non-compete clause. That merely says there was an employment contract, likely for exclusive employment, and that while employed by CatCo, she couldn't publish something else.
If I worked for the NY Times, I couldn't publish something for the NY Post. That doesn't mean that if the NY Times fired me, I couldn't get a job for the NY Post.
Once my employment is terminated, my employment is terminated, unless there is a specific non-compete clause. Non-compete clauses are very rare, and I doubt you would see one in the press.
Of course I am, danvers.com. You deliberately published an article using CatCo resources on a competing social media platform, which is not only a conflict of interest but also a direct and flagrant breach of contract.
It was a a direct and flagrant breach of her (employment) contract to publish on a a competing social media platform.
She was fired for competing against CatCo Magazine because it was against the words in her contract to compete against CatoCo.
That's called a noncompete which means that she is not allowed to compete which she did, which is why she got fired for competing in violation of her contract that forbid her competing that she ignored because she wanted to compete even though it was against her contract to compete.
"Sigh"
Enforceable non-competes are somewhat rare, unless maybe you're a key person who's also got a contract that pays you a lot on termination.
Um, once she was fired, the contract is over. She is not barred from writing on her own blog when she is no longer employed by CatCo. You can "sigh" all you want, but once she was terminated, so was the contract. Yes, she was fired for cause, and it was justified. But there is a difference from not being allowed to compete while employed, and not being allowed to compete when the employment is terminated. Snapper couldn't do anything in this episode because she was not bound to CatCo.
Non-compete agreements have powerful lobbyists in Seattle and Boston in the form of Microsoft and EMC, respectively, so California will likely continue to benefit from this imbalance for many years to come.
National City is fictional, so I have no idea whether or not non-competes are big thing there.
I knew Rahul Kohli from iZombie would be in this, but I wasn't expecting Claudia Doumit from Timeless..
Yeah, I hate when the characters make jokes based on things that are pop culture to us, but should be unknown to them. Like Gus Gorman doing the Superman shirt rip pose in Superman III, or Lex's line in Superman II (TV version only) where he calls Superman the Smallville Slugger. Feh.I laughed too but it does not make much sense in the context of what the show has told us. Would it make sense to have jokes about how simple Clark Kent's disguise is from characters who do not even known he needs one?
The entire Snapper Carr storyline this season has made no sense and demeans Kara - she's been right at every turn and Carr has been no more than an arrogant, pompous bully...but the writers require that she bow to him as if he were some gruff-but-wise mentor from whom she learned something important.
Schematic, amateurish writing.
I don't think that was the case, she seemed to keep the Super and Reporter sides separate, only reporting on stuff that Kara Danvers uncovered(the whistleblower and the fake trials), and she didn't even end up blogging any of it since she turned everything over to Snapper.
So really it was the opposite, she was willing to sacrifice the reporting scoop completely for the benefit of stopping the nanobots...
I'm sort of in this weird place where I did enjoy every episode, but the season overall is a hot mess.
Being out of the DEO for (almost) the entire episode was a welcome change of pace, but it also highlighted just how disconnected these two setting have become.
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