Oh, one other thing I liked was when Cisco said that Trickster Jr. hid the source of his transmission using "Felicity-level" encryption. Well, what other standard would you use? 

I think it was a character choice, the Trickster may like sitting there like some sort of guru when he talks to people.Is that how Mark sits in a chair in real life, or did they cgi hid legs for some reason?
^But surely being ignorant of the facts has placed Iris in more danger, rather than protected her from it. Which is usually the case in life.
Why are people amazed when fictional characters make illogical decisions when actual people do it all the time?
I never said I was amazed by it. I said I object to it.
This episode was everything I wanted it to be. I hope that Hamill can show up again.
But yeah, keeping Iris in the dark is getting a bit weird at this point. The pretty much the entire cast besides her know that Barry is the Flash. Really at this point I'm not sure how not knowing is even protecting her. The villains know she writes about the Flash, so they could use her to get to him. Others know that her father is a cop or her boyfriend is a cop and that could make her a target. I did like that Eddie seemed to be conflicted about lying to her, he seems like such a decent guy that I wonder why his descendant is the Flash's enemy.
^And she's an adult, not a five-year-old. So it's still paternalistic and gendered for Joe to make decisions for her and take away her control of her own life. Would he do the same if he had a son instead of a daughter?
You have the benefit of being able to do that by not feeling paternalistic about anyone, I assume.
The Barry/Joe relationship is a perfect example. Joe 'protects' Barry from certain things as well.
I also got a kick out of Barry learning to phase. I know that's a pretty big part of The Flash's power set, so I've been waiting for it here. I was also happy that Barry noticed how Wells talked about it.
I predicted rightly in a earlier post that Barry finally noticed that Wells was giving him instructions on how to use his powers way too detailed to be mere theories.
We know that The Reverse Flash got stuck in the past but what happen to The Flash that chased him back? Why would he just leave The Reverse Flash back in time?
I'm wondering if maybe time-traveling Barry will save the real Dr. Wells the second time around.
^But surely being ignorant of the facts has placed Iris in more danger, rather than protected her from it. Which is usually the case in life.
Why are people amazed when fictional characters make illogical decisions when actual people do it all the time?
I never said I was amazed by it. I said I object to it.
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