Everyone knows sexism is a problem with some of the fans. Nobody yet though has told me how in some situations one can tell the difference between sexist ranting and old school ranting in many situations. People are kind of good at hiding their true feelings in many cases. Even sexist know how to be clever. At the same time you can't just assume everyone is going to love a movie or be happy with what they see. I mean how can anyone tell in some cases when it comes to the internet? What approach do you take when it comes to Star Wars moaning and groaning? Benefit of Doubt or Instant Paranoia? Not everyone comes to a argument twirling a mustache.
I generally approach internet discussions with 2 rules:
1. Take everything said at face value and give people the benefit of the doubt. I don't know anyone well enough to psychoanalyze or second-guess their motives.
2. If someone says something so racist, sexist, or otherwise bigoted that it doesn't deserve the dignity of a response, I don't respond to it.
Iron Man 3 wasn't actually a send-off, though. Nor do I see how Age of Ultron could be reasonably construed to be one. Especially not with the Infinity Gauntlet plot already well underway by that point, front and center in the film. Did anyone think that by the time the culmination of that plotline came around, Iron Man wouldn't be in the picture? The very notion is absurd.
If Robert Downey Jr. didn't want to come back for any more movies after his Iron Man 3 contract ran out, then yes, Iron Man wouldn't have been around for the conclusion of the Infinity Stones storyline. RDJ was so intrinsic to the character in the public consciousness that I don't see any possibility of Marvel recasting the role for a very long time. And while Iron Man 3 was more of just a thematic closure for the character, Age of Ultron ended with him explicitly talking about retiring, thus leading to him being semi-retired at the beginning of Civil War.
The first Iron Man. Coulson refers to them as ‘new’, and they hadn’t settled on the ‘SHIELD’ abbreviation until the very end of the movie.
Doh! I forgot about that one. God, the first Iron Man movie feels like it was an infinity ago.
The toxic fanboy culture can make a lot of noise online but there aren't enough of them to impact the Solo box office the way we've seen.
A week ago, my sister, my father, & my half-brother each separately asked me about what I thought about Solo. Now, none of them live under a rock or anything but they're also not as deeply steeped in sci-fi culture as we all are here. And none of them knew anything about Lord & Miller getting fired until I told them. So, yeah, I think we do need to take a step back and realize that we're in a very hardcore minority here. That's not to say that the hardcore fans can't influence the tone of the mainstream reaction but it's not a 1:1 reaction.
This cross pollination of the three biggies and bias. One day I might conduct a poll to find out the 'order'. What is the loyalty favourite. Trek, Star Wars or Doctor Who.
Star Wars is much more of a casual thing for me. I know all of the movies pretty well forwards & backwards but I don't watch the TV shows, buy the comics, or read the novels. (However, "Shadows of the Empire" for Nintendo 64 was friggin' awesome!)
Star Trek is my legacy favorite. I gobbled it up voraciously during my formative years, from about 4th grade until I graduated high school. But once I got to college, I kinda got bored with Enterprise. There are still huge chunks of Enterprise & The Original Series that I haven't seen and I haven't watched any of The Animated Series and I only bothered with the first episode of Discovery. But pick out nearly any random clip from any random episode of The Next Generation, Deep Space 9, or Voyager, and I'd lay fair odds that I'll be able to identify the episode.
Doctor Who is my new love. I hold it a personal point of pride that I've seen every single surviving episode of both the classic series and the new series as well as Torchwood. Still working on The Sarah Jane Adventures and Class though. I'm also addicted to Doctor Who wall calendars, novels, and those 3" Titans vinyl figures.

Although, for me it's a big-4 since Buffy/Angel is also way up there for me.
I must admit I lost interest and then watched an episode with some vampire like creature that killed what looked like a main character. It was disturbing, but I have a sensitive nature.
You mean when they killed off Col. Sumner in the very first episode of Stargate Atlantis?
They all have their flaws but even AOTC has some fans who rank it highly.
That would be me. It's my #2 favorite, after Revenge of the Sith.
I think they change Obi-Wan pretty strongly, making him more manipulative by seeming to lie about a lot of things rather than just one big exceptional lie.
The more I look at how devastated Obi-Wan was at the end of Revenge of the Sith, the more I think he's lying to himself as much as anyone. He's concocted this myth about Darth Vader betraying & murdering Anakin Skywalker so that he can still sleep at night.
I don't care if Alden Ehrenreich isn't a big household name. I've been a fan ever since Hail, Caesar.
Which was another movie that seemed to underperform at the box office. Maybe Ehrenreich is just cursed.