Hayden is an inch taller than Kristen (shockingly enough)--she's 5'2" to Kristen's 5'1". I checked.
I knew Hayden was short, but that picture pointed out how just short Kristen was. And yep, I noticed Kristen wears heals a lot, whereas Hayden's shortness is usually emphasized to make her seem very young.
Jack Coleman is only 6'2", so not really super tall... Just tall. ZQ is also 6'2". By "only", being from a tall family, I mean to say that these people are still smaller than my 6'4" dad (though he's shrunk to 6'3" now). I have a stronger reaction to people who are really, really short to ones who are of average size (to me). Jack and Zach are two of the only ones that seem "of average size" to me (my perceived average is skewed toward the tall side--as a 5'7" female, I was actually medium-sized among my friends--I'm convinced that height averages have really increased with my generation). Basically, in my eyes, all the men under 6'0" are the short ones!
You can imagine my awe when I saw one of Judy Garland's dresses at the Smithsonian. At 4'11 1/2"... That is short. Granted, there were a few Munchkins that weren't all that much shorter. She was probably the only costar Mickey Rooney was taller than (reminds me of the Andy Hardy scene where he jitterbugged with a 6'2" tall woman--LOL).
And yep, some of the best Sylar scenes are in the latter half of season 3. Definitely. He gained a lot of depth in that season; the most since we found out about his Gabriel side in season 1. But even his Sylar side gained depth here. I honestly don't get why people are saying the show is confusing. It's like if anyone gets more facets, it's suddenly convoluted and confusing. No, it's just called character growth; that's good writing, not bad. I'm not into completely stagnant characters. Stagnation is bad writing.
Granted, there are people who are convinced that Spock is completely without emotion and asexual in TOS. I've only seen perhaps half the series so far and I would definitely argue with that.
And I can't wait for Sylar to go through even more twists and turns. You really don't know which side he's going to end up on. He's in the dark, dark gray area... Not just pure evil. Gabriel Gray's last name should be a big, whopping clue of how the writers view him. Most of the characters on Heroes are in the gray area rather than white or black. I think a lot of people saw the title "Heroes" and thought that the show was going to be full of mostly good guys doing good things like Superman. I don't think that was ever the show's dramatic intention.

Jack Coleman is only 6'2", so not really super tall... Just tall. ZQ is also 6'2". By "only", being from a tall family, I mean to say that these people are still smaller than my 6'4" dad (though he's shrunk to 6'3" now). I have a stronger reaction to people who are really, really short to ones who are of average size (to me). Jack and Zach are two of the only ones that seem "of average size" to me (my perceived average is skewed toward the tall side--as a 5'7" female, I was actually medium-sized among my friends--I'm convinced that height averages have really increased with my generation). Basically, in my eyes, all the men under 6'0" are the short ones!
You can imagine my awe when I saw one of Judy Garland's dresses at the Smithsonian. At 4'11 1/2"... That is short. Granted, there were a few Munchkins that weren't all that much shorter. She was probably the only costar Mickey Rooney was taller than (reminds me of the Andy Hardy scene where he jitterbugged with a 6'2" tall woman--LOL).
And yep, some of the best Sylar scenes are in the latter half of season 3. Definitely. He gained a lot of depth in that season; the most since we found out about his Gabriel side in season 1. But even his Sylar side gained depth here. I honestly don't get why people are saying the show is confusing. It's like if anyone gets more facets, it's suddenly convoluted and confusing. No, it's just called character growth; that's good writing, not bad. I'm not into completely stagnant characters. Stagnation is bad writing.
Granted, there are people who are convinced that Spock is completely without emotion and asexual in TOS. I've only seen perhaps half the series so far and I would definitely argue with that.
And I can't wait for Sylar to go through even more twists and turns. You really don't know which side he's going to end up on. He's in the dark, dark gray area... Not just pure evil. Gabriel Gray's last name should be a big, whopping clue of how the writers view him. Most of the characters on Heroes are in the gray area rather than white or black. I think a lot of people saw the title "Heroes" and thought that the show was going to be full of mostly good guys doing good things like Superman. I don't think that was ever the show's dramatic intention.