So...
Daredevil Season 2 puts the entire rest of these shows to bed. I'm sorry, as much as I love the Flash, there's just no candle to be held here. Flash, Supergirl, Arrow and Legends of Tomorrow have charm and fun, and they have MASTERED the art of fanservice to a degree that even the MCU can't quite match. But there are times these shows get so bad, and so stupid, and insult the audience so badly, that it is impossible for me to see them as "good" shows. Worse, they do so consistently and whittle away at their own audience. So much so that the only thing the show becomes good for for people who made the show relevant *is* fanservice, and once the crossover episode is over, we let it go again.
While Netflix is more serious, and at times slow, it always is going somewhere interesting, and I don't ever feel like I wasted my time, that developments will be retconned away with a handwave or resolved in "Martha" levels of hamfisted sentimentality. Jessica Jones, the worst of the Netflix bunch so far wasted tons of potential, but even their neutered purple man was cooler, more charming and more engaging than all but Deathstroke and Evil Wells on the CW, and even then, those characters have been hilariously butchered to a point that tarnishes their contributions in my eyes.
Cage was a beautiful celebration of Harlem, in addition to being chocked full of well humanized badasses and intrigue. Even Daredevil season 1 had Kingpin, who just mops the floor with any villain, and I never, once, was annoyed with Matt and Karen being dragged out, or felt confident that their breakup was temporary.
Now, Agents of SHIELD can take a long walk of a short pier as far as I'm concerned. Before Legends of Tomorrow, it was the worst conceived show I could have imagined. Remember that guy everyone loved as a heroically sacrificed plucky comic relief for our best superheroes? Let's bring him back to life as a Mal Reynolds impression and surround him with a team full of plucky comic relief with no superheroes at all! BRILLIANT. Cut the check!
I've no doubt they've done things worth mentioning with AoS, but as with Arrow season 5 (five!) there's a such thing as too little too late with TV shows. Heroes Season 4, like LOST Season 6, was a dramatic improvement, but when shows take a great premise and end up cannibalizing themselves and running in circles for 2-3 years and then say, okay, NOW we will advance the story in interesting new directions as would be appropriate for a season 2, a lot of people don't care anymore.
Agent Carter was fun, but also an odd expansion, like doing a Deadshot solo or something, and worse, it simply didn't cash in on the post-WWII Marvel Universe very well, which feels like wasted opportunity as well. The fun promised in the Agent Carter one-shot that justified the show's existence wasn't followed up on. Similar, imho, to the fun from the Item 47 one shot. Marvel's network TV division is a mess and one step from being a clown show. I appreciate the work that these guys put into it, but man... what a shame.
I think the Arrowverse is on it's final decline. I think they're running out of fanservice (Vigilante INO) and ways they can keep the shows the same without changing the cast they love so much. I still enjoy the romp and cheese and fanservice in Flash and Supergirl, however, if I had to choose Netflix's character development that is consistent and progressive over the far superior costumes (seriously, DD's "real" costume sucks, I wish he'd go back to the black) and fanservice of the CW, I'd have to go with a show that doesn't insult me, that has actions that actually mean something and are worth my time to watch, that actually touches on some real life issues in a way that isn't entirely juvenille or insulting and boasts superhero action set pieces that are actually engaging to watch, like the fights Arrow left behind long ago. I'd like to watch superhero shows that have a fracking clue what to do with their female and minority characters, that aren't in any way in competition with silver screen versions of those same characters and liable to have characters 'taken' from them at a whim. I'd like to watch superhero shows that are well plotted instead of plotted on the fly, with compelling villains. Most importantly, I'd like to watch superhero shows that add something to the mythos, instead of just calling me to remember how much I loved the original comics so much.
Rant over, I guess.