The CW'S New Batwoman
<blockquote class="twitter-tweet"><p lang="en" dir="ltr">Say hello to the new Batwoman! <a href="https://twitter.com/CWBatwoman?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">@CWBatwoman</a> <a href="https://t.co/7F8Wfshs6X">pic.twitter.com/7F8Wfshs6X</a></p>— Warner Bros. TV (@warnerbrostv) <a href="https://twitter.com/warnerbrostv/status/1280993295934488576?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">July 8, 2020</a></blockquote> <script async src="https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.js" charset="utf-8"></script>
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The CW superhero shows have been trash.
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Oh, and she is smokin'. |
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Is it a problem with them bringing to many super heroes into the mix. Meaning it was originally just the Arrow. Then he started bringing in everyone and their grandmother to Team Arrow and the lair. And everyone has super powers or training or whatever now. Same thing with the Flash. Everyone is a super hero or Bad guy.
I think the CW likes their Tween Romance shows and tries to force the same thing into the super hero shows they have. Everyone is in a relationship or what are the problems with X and Y in this episode. Should X tell Y about their secret identity, how will that effect the love triangle with X y and z??? |
The CW?
Im out. The CW makes shows for chicks, man. I can promise you right now, without knowing dick about this series, that it'll be mostly aimed at teenage girls. |
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Stargirl is coming to the CW now. Really enjoyed it on DC Universe as you can tell the production is good. Hope it remains the same on CW.
I liked first few seasons of Arrow and still like the Flash. I liked Black Lightning but haven't watched s2. |
So here's what I think the problems are.
The CW definitely aims towards teens and girls so their storylines do have a lot of angst and romance in them. But the problem is more the nature of the characters themselves. Everyone knows that Marvel's characters are more flawed and thus more relatable. The DC characters are very one-dimensional and always have been. Aquaman lives underwater, Flash can run fast, Green Arrow uses arrows, blah blah blah. The only character who isn't one-dimensional is Batman, which is why IMO he's so popular. So when you start to try to give these characters backstory and delve into personal lives and try to give them complicated relationships, it starts to seem very soap opera-y and unnecessary. Couple that with the very one-dimensional "heroes vs. villians" plotlines and it just becomes very tiresome very quickly. And then you can throw in some lazy writing and repetitive plotlines (e.g. Oliver and his island, Barry and time travel and his future disappearance). Oh, and did I mention that TV just doesn't lend itself that well to superheroes? It's one thing to have an expensively-produced star-powered 2-hour theatrical movie full of special effects; it's entirely another to have a low-budget weekly show where you need to kill a lot of time. Jason Momoa and Gal Gadot will get the edge there every time. |
The first three or four seasons of Arrow and the Flash were good, but then they succumbed to boring villains, boring storylines, boring writing, or a combination of the three. CW oversaturated themselves with content and only half of it was good and then over reached on certain storylines that didn't have the major players in them due to licensing issues and limited budgets. I've been done with them for a little bit now.
Hard to judge this new Batwoman over just a few pictures, but I think they're trying anything they can think of to drum up interest again, but I would imagine most viewers are just over the fad at this point, realizing that movies is where the major players are going to reside in the future. |
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