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The Flash - Season 1

I don't care if it's realistic, it's still condescending. And describing it as what a "father" would do, rather than a "parent," just drives home how gendered it is. You keep talking about how you can understand what's motivating Joe and Barry, but you haven't made any effort to look at it from Iris's point of view, which is what I'm trying to do. It's her perspective that matters here, because it's her life and her control over it that's at issue. It's hard for men to see how it feels to women to be treated like this, to have men trying to reduce them to helpless children for their own "protection."
 
I loved Cisco's reaction at not being able to give the new Trickster a nickname. :lol: And I still they should bring back Shaun Cassidy as the Mirror Master from the old series and have Katie Cassidy guest star so we could have a father/daughter onscreen reunion.
 
^That was David Cassidy...and I had no idea! I haven't seen the series since it originally aired.

If anyone's allowed to be paternalistic, it's a pater.

That is hardly the same thing as three men deciding they need to protect a woman without giving her a choice in the matter.

"Iris, do you want to know that Barry is the Flash?"

"Umm...and if I say no...?"

I'm wondering if maybe time-traveling Barry will save the real Dr. Wells the second time around.
That could be an interesting way of keeping the actor on the show once the RF is firmly outed.
 
I don't care if it's realistic, it's still condescending. And describing it as what a "father" would do, rather than a "parent," just drives home how gendered it is. You keep talking about how you can understand what's motivating Joe and Barry, but you haven't made any effort to look at it from Iris's point of view, which is what I'm trying to do. It's her perspective that matters here, because it's her life and her control over it that's at issue. It's hard for men to see how it feels to women to be treated like this, to have men trying to reduce them to helpless children for their own "protection."

I said father because we're talking about a father. A single father. There is no female influence in Joe's life, like a wife or even a girlfriend, who could give him that perspective, so he does what he feels is right from his own perspective.

And just because I can understand Joe's behaviour, doesn't mean I think it's right, or that I can't see it from Iris's point of view too, and I think it's pretty condescending of to to suggest I haven't put any effort into doing so.
 
"Eddie, there's one way you can help us to stop this villain from the future. It's a simple operation."

I like that Eddie recognized Barry as soon as he heard his unaltered voice. Memo to George Reeves, Adam West, Lynda Carter....
 
So Barry just recruited Eddie into fighting his great-great-great-great-....-great-great-son... Hmm, the plot thickens.

Yeah well Eddie doesn't know aoubt Eobard yet but I can imagine Barry's reaction.

Barry: Hey Eddie, you don't mind being hit by a train and dying so that my mother won't be killed by your descendant do you?

:techman:
 
It's a descendant of a mirror universe Eddie, not this Eddie, but the producers will obviously ignore that, so I should start trying to as well.

UM? Eddie would have mislead Iris just on Joe's say so. No need for the big reveal.

If Eddie was worth his salt as a detective, he should have been able to work out that Barry is the Flash after he is told that Wells in the man in Yellow.

OKay I'm going to say it.

Is it possible that Iris is a little retarded?

She might almost always scores 80-something on an IQ test?

"We have to tell them the truth!"

"They're children, children like stories, so we'll tell them a story."

Not only should people be lying to her, but maybe Iris should be wearing a helmet when outside?
 
I'm wondering if we'll get a fake out in the season finale. Barry plans to time jump to save his mom; but when he exits the time stream, he's landed in the 25th century. That could lead to a season two opener with a reveal of the origin of Reverse Flash and maybe explain his hatred for Barry.

It would be a nice way to still give Barry a chance to save his Mom; but in trying to change Thawne, he creates the monster. Then when returning to present, he feels guilty and starts trying to help Wells / Thawne be a better person (thus giving Tom Cavanaugh a reason to stay on the show).
 
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<edit>No, thought better of this. Leaving it alone.</edit>

It's hard to decide not to help a friend who doesn't ask for it. It's hard for a parent to let a child grow up and take responsibility for herself. But it's also necessary and right. We can't claim to care for others if we put our own feelings and wishes above theirs.

You an also pontificate on a hilltop on situations where you have no skin in the game. Whatever happened with your friend she wasn't your child--it's a wholly different situation.

There are myriad times where people have to intercede in ways that were against however another party wished to proceed at the time. Have you never taken keys away from a drunk or told someone that they had to back off of a certain situation? Again, these are beliefs that work fine as a keyboard philosopher but in practice are rarely successful.

The Barry/Joe relationship is a perfect example. Joe 'protects' Barry from certain things as well.

That is hardly the same thing as three men deciding they need to protect a woman without giving her a choice in the matter. The sad fact is, men still have a privilege in our society that women have to fight for. It's not symmetrical. Men have a responsibility to be extra-careful in how they treat women, because there is so much ingrained cultural temptation to think we're supposed to "take care of" them or coddle them or otherwise make choices for them, rather than respecting their right to choose for themselves. The way the men on this show treat Iris is gendered in a way that their occasional secret-keeping from each other is not -- especially now that the three most important men in Iris's life are collectively conspiring to hide the truth from her, which is a really creepy power imbalance. This needs to stop now. Iris deserves to know the truth, and they have no good reason to keep it from her.

You act as if, when and if Iris finds out, she won't be major-league pissed off at anyone who's held her in the dark. Of course that'll happen. Hell, it happened on Arrow with Laurel.

Bruce, Dick, and Alfred kept the "Batman" secret from Aunt Harriet. Was that because she was a woman or magnified in any way because she was a woman? Or was it an obvious construct because of the TV show and superhero trope. Heck, they have to have somebody around who doesn't know. If the sexes were flipped I could imagine it being the same way.
 
Bruce, Dick, and Alfred kept the "Batman" secret from Aunt Harriet. Was that because she was a woman or magnified in any way because she was a woman? Or was it an obvious construct because of the TV show and superhero trope. Heck, they have to have somebody around who doesn't know. If the sexes were flipped I could imagine it being the same way.

In the Wonder Woman series from the 70s, didn't Diana keep her superhero identity from Steve Trevor?

Any clsoe male friends/relatives that don't know Kathy Kane in Batwoman?
 
You an also pontificate on a hilltop on situations where you have no skin in the game. Whatever happened with your friend she wasn't your child--it's a wholly different situation.

And Iris isn't a child either. She's a grown woman, and if Joe can't respect that, then he's a crappy father.

And Joe is not the one who needs defense here. This is about male privilege and female marginalization. The privileged are not the ones who need to be defended, because they're not the ones being made vulnerable.


Have you never taken keys away from a drunk or told someone that they had to back off of a certain situation? Again, these are beliefs that work fine as a keyboard philosopher but in practice are rarely successful.

What the hell? How is Iris a "drunk" here? How is she the one whose decisions are endangering others? On the contrary, she's the one being endangered by being kept in the dark about what's going on around her. Joe thinks he's protecting her, but he's being a fool to think that ignorance is in any way safe for her.

And how are you any less a "keyboard philosopher" than I am? This is equally abstract to both of us.


You act as if, when and if Iris finds out, she won't be major-league pissed off at anyone who's held her in the dark.

If you think that, then you've completely and profoundly missed my entire point. What I'm saying is that, hell yes, she'll be pissed, and she deserves to be pissed, because these men have no right to make decisions for her and treat her like a child. Wow, how could you possibly think that's not what I've been saying all along?


Bruce, Dick, and Alfred kept the "Batman" secret from Aunt Harriet. Was that because she was a woman or magnified in any way because she was a woman? Or was it an obvious construct because of the TV show and superhero trope. Heck, they have to have somebody around who doesn't know. If the sexes were flipped I could imagine it being the same way.

Neither of us is the right person to ask, because neither of us is a woman. I wish we had some female contributors in this thread to offer some perspectives on the issue, rather than just having a bunch of guys trying to mansplain gender issues to each other, which is bound to get farcical if we keep it up. But I think that, yes, a woman in that situation would perceive a gendered element to being treated that way by the men in her life, and would be entitled to feel that it was unfair. Although neither one of can really say for sure.

And "if the sexes were flipped" doesn't cut it. I don't care how symmetrical you make the situation on the surface -- the larger context of societal male privilege is going to shade the issue and keep it from being symmetrical in practice. And it's only the people who are outside the circle of privilege who can easily see that.
 
Bruce, Dick, and Alfred kept the "Batman" secret from Aunt Harriet. Was that because she was a woman or magnified in any way because she was a woman? Or was it an obvious construct because of the TV show and superhero trope. Heck, they have to have somebody around who doesn't know. If the sexes were flipped I could imagine it being the same way.

In the Wonder Woman series from the 70s, didn't Diana keep her superhero identity from Steve Trevor?

Any clsoe male friends/relatives that don't know Kathy Kane in Batwoman?

Captain Lance was pretty much the last name character to know Sara was dead on Arrow. Every other character protected him from that news.
 
And his reaction to it was incredibly realistic and beautifully heartbreaking. :( (I haven't seen tonight's Arrow.)

I think we should keep in mind regarding Joe keeping Iris in the dark (because Barry and Eddie are very clearly just following his lead) that he's not just acting out of some nebulous parental desire to protect her. Iris was explicitly threatened by the Reverse Flash, so he's going to be extra on edge where she's concerned. He is, of course, wrong (as are Barry and Eddie) but there's more nuance than just "controlling dad."
 
You an also pontificate on a hilltop on situations where you have no skin in the game. Whatever happened with your friend she wasn't your child--it's a wholly different situation.

And Iris isn't a child either. She's a grown woman, and if Joe can't respect that, then he's a crappy father.

She's still Joe's child. And Iris was overtly threatened by the Reverse Flash. I'm not certain how you don't get that good parents protect their grown children from things every day.

And Joe is not the one who needs defense here. This is about male privilege and female marginalization. The privileged are not the ones who need to be defended, because they're not the ones being made vulnerable.

Not really, but you're making it about that. It's happened across the sexes on multiple shows many, many times. Sara played Laurel for a fool for weeks on Arrow to protect her. What's the difference?


Have you never taken keys away from a drunk or told someone that they had to back off of a certain situation? Again, these are beliefs that work fine as a keyboard philosopher but in practice are rarely successful.

What the hell? How is Iris a "drunk" here? How is she the one whose decisions are endangering others? On the contrary, she's the one being endangered by being kept in the dark about what's going on around her. Joe thinks he's protecting her, but he's being a fool to think that ignorance is in any way safe for her.

Dial back to your argument that it's not one person's position to deny another person whatever it is they rightfully want to do.

And how are you any less a "keyboard philosopher" than I am? This is equally abstract to both of us.

Well, I do have kids. And I imagine yes you have to let the little birds fly and eventually someday leave the nest. But you also don't let them fly into powerlines without doing what you can to prevent it. The abstract part is, thankfully, I hopefully will not have to make the sort of overtly protective decisions that keep my kids from violent death, as apparently Joe thought he was doing.

I'm also not speaking in absolutes as you often do on here. Or at least I'm trying not to.

You act as if, when and if Iris finds out, she won't be major-league pissed off at anyone who's held her in the dark.

If you think that, then you've completely and profoundly missed my entire point. What I'm saying is that, hell yes, she'll be pissed, and she deserves to be pissed, because these men have no right to make decisions for her and treat her like a child. Wow, how could you possibly think that's not what I've been saying all along?

That's likely the argument she'll make exactly. So why get all angsty and introduce sexism when it's obvious that's how it's all going to play out? Was your use of the phrase "creepy power imbalance" merited? If Iris was a male and the exactly same situation happened would you be saying that those in the know had no right to deny him his choice to know?

(as if knowing the Flash's identity is some sort of right, anyway)

Or, being a man, are you being subconsciously protective of how she's being treated because she's female?


Bruce, Dick, and Alfred kept the "Batman" secret from Aunt Harriet. Was that because she was a woman or magnified in any way because she was a woman? Or was it an obvious construct because of the TV show and superhero trope. Heck, they have to have somebody around who doesn't know. If the sexes were flipped I could imagine it being the same way.

Neither of us is the right person to ask, because neither of us is a woman. I wish we had some female contributors in this thread to offer some perspectives on the issue, rather than just having a bunch of guys trying to mansplain gender issues to each other, which is bound to get farcical if we keep it up. But I think that, yes, a woman in that situation would perceive a gendered element to being treated that way by the men in her life, and would be entitled to feel that it was unfair. Although neither one of can really say for sure.

Not being a woman didn't stop you from framing the entire situation in those terms.

Break it down to a power issue - Joe and Eddie are both cops. Barry has powers. Iris thus has limited means to protect herself--without her sex mattering.

What I'm saying is, in this case, I believe her sex is incidental. I could be wrong, and really nobody will know without psychoanalyzing the writers. I imagine if Mo Ryan reviewed this episode she had something to say on it. I know Alan Sepinwall said it was absurd to have Iris be the only character that doesn't know but he stated it more around the fact that it marginalizes the character.

And "if the sexes were flipped" doesn't cut it. I don't care how symmetrical you make the situation on the surface -- the larger context of societal male privilege is going to shade the issue and keep it from being symmetrical in practice. And it's only the people who are outside the circle of privilege who can easily see that.

Ok, so, as a man, how can you see it?

Believe me, there's plenty of horrible gender inequality in television--but I saw this as a daughter/sister/significant other situation when it could have just as easily been a son/brother/SO deal.
 
I could see them throwing her off the trail of Dr. Wells given that everyone else that he knows about gets killed, although I'm not sure that Barry and Joe know that yet. But her finding out that Barry is the Flash should probably happen soon.
 
I could see them throwing her off the trail of Dr. Wells given that everyone else that he knows about gets killed, although I'm not sure that Barry and Joe know that yet. But her finding out that Barry is the Flash should probably happen soon.

I'm sure it will. Her being the only name character who does not know can only go on for so long without the character suffering such that it'd be hard to come back from it.

At least on the 60s Batman Comissioner Gordon and Chief O'Hara were in the dark too.
 
She's still Joe's child. And Iris was overtly threatened by the Reverse Flash. I'm not certain how you don't get that good parents protect their grown children from things every day.

Then you're obviously not actually reading what I'm writing. I've said at least twice that he's not protecting her, he just wrongly thinks he is. For that matter, Kestrel just said the same thing.

It's clear by this point that you're not even hearing me, let alone understanding, so it would be pointless for me to continue.
 
She's still Joe's child. And Iris was overtly threatened by the Reverse Flash. I'm not certain how you don't get that good parents protect their grown children from things every day.

Then you're obviously not actually reading what I'm writing. I've said at least twice that he's not protecting her, he just wrongly thinks he is. For that matter, Kestrel just said the same thing.

It's clear by this point that you're not even hearing me, let alone understanding, so it would be pointless for me to continue.

One of the first things I said was what he was doing wasn't out of logic. Disagreeing with you isn't a lack of understanding of what you're saying. It's simply disagreeing.
 
I could see them throwing her off the trail of Dr. Wells given that everyone else that he knows about gets killed, although I'm not sure that Barry and Joe know that yet. But her finding out that Barry is the Flash should probably happen soon.

Did you watch Smallville?

After the adorable blonde sidekick played by the talented Allison Mack, figured out that Clark Kent was Superboy, she sat on that information for almost half a season rolling her eyes every time he'd tell some new embarrassingly implausable lie to cover up about his super powers.

The wife always knows.
 
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