Kara was lucky that Earth 1 Alex was also gay.
I didn't really get that sense from her at all.
Well, we have two versions of the Flash who look like, John Wesley Shipp , two Bruce Waynes who presumably had one very bad night in crime alley, two Barry Allens that became forensic scientists for the CCPD, and uh, at least two Mariah Careys..?Kara was lucky that Earth 1 Alex had a similar past and that she was also gay. Chances of that being the case in the multiverse are very slim.
It wasn't any one thing so much as *everything* Kara said to her. Knowing all kinds of things about her past, what kind of person she is at her core and yes, that she's gay. Of course for that last part to be powerful enough to matter, it kinda needs to *not* be obvious otherwise anyone could make the same observation.Is she (E1 Alex)?
I didn't really get that sense from her at all.
What I thought Kara appealed to was E1 Alex's internalized sense of morality and justice.
^^^Supergirl - "Elseworlds, Part 3"
Clark/SM: 'I've encountered books like this before." That deserved more attention. That's the kind of 500-pound gorilla of a reference that needs to come up again, since we actually see Superman using the book with no trouble at all.
Random thought: could the fact that Earth-1 (seemingly) doesn't have a Clark Kent be at least partly why Earth-1 Bruce is missing while Earth-38 Bruce is (presumably) still around?
What I DID hate was the fact the writers feel the need to ultimately emasculate him yet again with the "Kara, you're so much stronger/better then me in every way..." scenes they give him at the end of this. Yeah, I get it - the show is "Supergirl" but IMO they don't need to continually 'lessen' the Superman character at every opportunity like they have with his past two guest appearances (IMO).
The repeated use of that term in this discussion is very telling.The existence of a stronger female relative does not emasculate a man.
I imagine that the reason Superman never intervenes is because he trusts Kara to get the job done. He’s constantly supportive of her, believing in her when she sometimes doesn’t in herself.
He and Kara seem to be equal in power, he just has a few more years of experience. That’s why I think he steps away and leaves her to protect Earth. If something happened to him, she’s Earth’s only protector and he wants her to be fully capable and not stressing over what he would do. Her only real issue is living in the shadow on his cape, him stepping away allows her to realize that she doesn’t need him.
That's not a problem.
It's not "emasculating."
The existence of a stronger female relative does not emasculate a man.
No, but in addition to the ridiculous writing that made that a thing, having that man constantly talk about how superior she is and how much better she is, is absolutely emasculating. Again, you can make Kara great without making Superman a submissive wuss.
It's not even inconsistent with previous portrayals of the character.
It's just something that you don't like.
Those aren't remotely the same thing.
Kara was lucky that Earth 1 Alex had a similar past and that she was also gay. Chances of that being the case in the multiverse are very slim.
No one with a healthy sense of masculinity would consider that emasculating. Being a man does NOT require being stronger than women. That is a sexist assumption that is as degrading to men as it is to women. True, healthy masculinity is about being supportive to others, using your strength to take care of others rather than to feed your own ego or show off how tough you are. Men who are afraid to appear weak are the weakest men of all.
Just to be clear: I don't mean that in a "something happened to Bruce and Clark would have saved him" kind of way, but more of a "Clark has a positive influence on Bruce" type of thing. Indeed, much like we see here with Oliver & Barry.Ooh, I like that.
Well it was a blue glowy pointy stick, so clearly something is going on there. One assumes this is something that will be addressed when the "cost" of saving Barry & Kara comes due.What bugs me about the ending is, how did Ollie actually save the day by shooting an arrow at the Book of Destiny? I mean, it's a cosmically powerful artifact -- why would a pointy stick have any effect on it? Did the Monitor give his arrow some special power? If so, why didn't they say so?
Don't be ridiculous. Everyone knows representation is a zero sum game dammit!
The existence of a stronger female relative does not emasculate a man.
It’s funny how it seems to only be an issue with certain male fans. Superman couldn’t be prouder of Kara. Secure men aren’t threatened by women, especially powerful women.
The existence of a stronger female relative does not emasculate a man.
Why wouldn’t she be gay? You’re born that way, the fact that she’s an exact double of her Alex would imply she has the same genetics. So she would be gay too. It’s not like it has anything to do with how you’re raised.Kara was lucky that Earth 1 Alex had a similar past and that she was also gay. Chances of that being the case in the multiverse are very slim.
To be fair, it was establised as far back as Supergirl Season 1 that Superman had been an active hero on Earth 38 for nearly a decade prior to Kara's pod landing, and CONTINUED in that role as she grew up.
What I DID hate was the fact the writers feel the need to ultimately emasculate him yet again with the "Kara, you're so much stronger/better then me in every way..." scenes they give him at the end of this. Yeah, I get it - the show is "Supergirl" but IMO they don't need to continually 'lessen' the Superman character at every opportunity like they have with his past two guest appearances (IMO).
Why wouldn’t she be gay? You’re born that way, the fact that she’s an exact double of her Alex would imply she has the same genetics. So she would be gay too. It’s not like it has anything to do with how you’re raised.
Those are things that can be influenced by life and situations, it wouldn’t change your sexuality. That’s set at birth. If the two are genetically identical, then both would be gay.I think he might mean alternate dimension versions in fantasy fiction are not often exact copies of what the audiences knows as the original (think DC's Earth 2, in the way it was first handled in the Silver & Bronze Age of comics, or Star Trek's "Mirror, Mirror"). There's usually some difference in appearance, life choices, occupation, moral codes, etc., hence the shock for the lead characters when they encounter the alternate version.
I think that's the key right there. The interpretation of Kara's strength relative to Kal-El's as the "emasculation" of Superman points to a profound insecurity. I don't use the word "profound" lightly, but seeing this as "emasculation" is a rather extreme reaction.Secure men aren’t threatened by women, especially powerful women.
Even putting that aside, Earth-1 Alex's subtle reaction to Kara's comment about her own Alex wanting "a wife and kids" said it all to any observant viewer.Those are things that can be influenced by life and situations, it wouldn’t change your sexuality. That’s set at birth. If the two are genetically identical, then both would be gay.
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