Looks like Riverdale is using Lord Byng Secondary School while Smallville used Vancouver technical Secondary School.
I guess they just have similar architecture, then.
Looks like Riverdale is using Lord Byng Secondary School while Smallville used Vancouver technical Secondary School.
I spent a good deal of the episode trying to figure out who Betty reminded me of, Brittany Murphy FWIW.
On IMDB they say she looks like Phoebe Tomkins on The Originals though I'm not familiar with that show. Also, Vanessa Hudgens of the upcoming Powerless.I'm not that familiar with Mila Kunis, so I doubt that's it.
On IMDB they say she looks like Phoebe Tomkins on The Originals though I'm not familiar with that show. Also, Vanessa Hudgens of the upcoming Powerless.
Guess I'm sticking around.Don't know if I'll keep up with it. Probably not but if they ever bring in an updated Sabrina or other Archie Comics EU characters, I'll definately check back.
I love that name BTW.Looks like Riverdale is using Lord Byng Secondary School
I would have ended the episode with Archie, Jughead, Betty, and Veronica in the diner. I realize convention here demanded a cliffhanger, which is why we had the subsequent scene of Cheryl being arrested, but the iconic moment in the diner would have been a more emotionally powerful ending.
I keep wondering if what we're seeing is real or if it's the skewed interpretation of real from Jughead's novel-in-progress on Jason's murder. Because why is Jughead already writing a novel about Jason's murder?
They really did a crazy 180 with Reggie this episode after having him be all buddy-buddy with Archie in the premiere.
As one of the nostalgic fans, the diner scene with the four iconic characters sitting there was of interest, but I agree the younger audience not fully familiar with the mythos would not get it.For Archie fans who valued the nostalgia, sure. But presumably those are a minority of the viewing audience.
The scene underlined that faux lesbianism is boring and you're a chump if you fall for it.
John Doyle of The Globe and Mail describes the show as having “the look of a drama set in the recent past — that period to which Donald Trump refers when he brays about making America great again — but it is emphatically set in the present. A present in which Veronica can be designated as looking like Betty Draper in a certain season of ‘Mad Men.’”
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