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Black Wolverine
Fan-favorite Stargate SG-1 star headed to CW's Arrow in S2
Trent Moore
Friday, August 9, 2013 - 12:55pm
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A beloved Stargate SG-1 star will be heading to Starling City soon as part of Arrow’s second season.
Teryl Rothery, who played Dr. Janet Frasier for seven years on the long-running SG-1 series, has signed on for a 3-4-episode arc in year two of The CW’s hit superhero series.
No word on exactly who Rothery will be playing, though she did tease that the character is “very different” from her previous roles. Could it be related to that Flash spinoff? We have no idea, but we can’t wait to find out.
After several years on SG-1, Rothery’s character grew into a true fan-favorite character. It’ll be nice to see her back in the sci-fi fold.
Who do you think Rothery will be playing this fall?
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(Via Gateworld)
Smallville and Stargate SG-1 actress Teryl Rothery recently confirmed that she will have a role in the second season of The CW's Arrow in a 3-4 episode arc, but she didn't say which character she would be playing. Now, Green Arrow TV has confirmed that her character is Jean Loring, best known in the comics for being the wife and then ex-wife of Ray Palmer/The Atom. Loring will make her premiere in episode three, and we also have the following character description. "JEAN LORING is a savvy attorney from the DC COMICS UNIVERSE who would do anything for her clients. Jean makes her way onto “Arrow” as a longtime friend and legal counsel to Moira Queen, who is on trial for her role in the destruction of The Glades, but soon finds herself pulled into the scandalous lives of the entire Queen family." Interestingly, there was a "Ray and Jean" reference in the episode "The Undertaking" last season. Could we see Dr. Palmer appear on the show at some point?
BH/HHH, I really don't get why there is anything to be apprehensive about SM/BM, we know nothing concrete about it. CB fans just seem to instinctively be pessimistic about everything and think the worst rather than be optimistic and hope for the best, which is sad. Agree about Flash on Arrow, it's exciting. Still pissed than WW is getting screwed over yet again.
Flash is fundamentally sci-fi, and Arrow already features a lot of sci-fi (earthquake machines for instance). They can make it work, maybe some kind of chemical explosion gives Barry his powers.
I'm sure they'll make it work but I think it's a bigger leap than Earthquake machines. They even had one if those in the Nolanverse.
I hope they stick to how it was done in the comics, lightning mixed with chemicals. I think they could definitely make that work, I guess escalations gonna be a huge thing in the Arrow universe. Barry Allen gaining super powers is gonna be like the first domino that knocks all the others over.
Actually, I hope they don't do that; as that's all the more sci-fi. Rather, I hope they rework the Flash's origin into something seemingly more plausible; e.g. something to do with bio-engineering perhaps. Prostheses and exoskeletons are probably out though as that would change the character too much.
Bio-engineering is boring to me, on top of being done too much. Amazing Spider-Man is going that route with most of their villains, Iron Man 3's Extremis was the same thing.
To me, it's kind of a lazy excuse to writing a creative origin. Because some dude was doing science on people!
Lightning and chemicals for me.
Just because the text we are dealing with involves preternatural fiction does not negate following any form of logic. First of all, even if a fictive narrative abandons real world logic, it must have internally consistent logic. In the world of Arrow, there is no such precedent that would make lightning seem magical. Even in modern comics (which have relied more on magical realism/speculative fiction than on hard and fast sci-fi or outright fantasy), one can't get away with just spewing complete crap.It's superheroes. It shouldn't all be believable. If you want something to actually make sense, read a ****ing science text book instead.