You may be right, Christopher… but I still prefer the Scarecrow and Mrs King,
As a show, yeah, I prefer it too. But I wasn't expressing a personal preference, I was making a vaguely humorous comment paralleling two actors' famous AI roles.
You may be right, Christopher… but I still prefer the Scarecrow and Mrs King,
Involving Superman in the crossover would suggest needing a really big villian.
Do we even know Superman will be in it?
^ Superman was not "submissive" to Kara in that episode. He lost the fight, barely, by one blow, and acknowledged as much. In the process, he showed how a man of character and confidence responds to a strong woman. It's an example some people (you know, nobody in particular) could stand to learn from.
Superman is the most powerful hero in the DC Universe--he was made weak losing that fight
Again, Clark wasn't threatened by Kara's victory. I'd say that's a sign of true confident masculinity. Now, flailing about in desperate denial in an attempt to reassure everybody that he can totally beat up some dumb old girl -- that would have been emasculating.
Pity the same isn't true for folks whose masculine identity is crucially dependent on Superman serving as their personal penis enlarger.It’s great that Superman isn’t insecure about his masculinity and doesn’t feel the need to prove himself or whine after losing a fight to his cousin.
This is patently absurd. Smaller people defeat larger people in fights ALL. THE. TIME.Only in fiction would someone like Tyler Hoschlin lose a fight to someone like Melissa Benoist. This is as unrealistic as flying and super strength.
That fight made Kara look weaker, not stronger.
Wow, you really, really hate strong women don't you? Weren't you also bitching about Rey over in the Star Wars section?It was poor writing on every level. Having him be submissive to Supergirl by going around to everyone who could hear him, just to drive home the point as if we didn't get it hammered over our heads, is absolutely emasculating.
Only in fiction would someone like Tyler Hoschlin lose a fight to someone like Melissa Benoist. This is as unrealistic as flying and super strength.
And yes, I am aware of what Loeb does--another liberal writer spewing his politics by weakening a character. But at the same time, it was also explained--something that should have happened on Supergirl.
Clark, from birth, trained himself to hold back to the point where he does it on a subconscious level. Supergirl does not do that. If Clark lets loose like she does, she is no match for him.
As for Batwoman kicking the crap out of him, well, that would surely show that they have no confidence in Batwoman as well, just like they have no confidence in Kara.
There couldn't be more of a blow to feminism than weakening a man to make a woman look strong, which is exactly what they did. What they said is they don't have enough confidence in Kara to stand on her own two feet, so they had to have Superman lose just to say,"see? Supergirl rules."
That fight made Kara look weaker, not stronger.
Only in fiction would someone like Tyler Hoschlin lose a fight to someone like Melissa Benoist. This is as unrealistic as flying and super strength.
And yes, I am aware of what Loeb does--another liberal writer spewing his politics by weakening a character. But at the same time, it was also explained--something that should have happened on Supergirl.
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