The story of how stars were made by the Universe and how Stars then went on to engineer everything else in that very universe. They changed the Universe by spawning further generations of stars, then planets and eventually the building blocks of life.Watch this episode here
In elevating himself from simply being Gotham City's nocturnal protector to a leader of the largest collection of superheroes within the DC universe, Bruce's knack for preparation was turned up to eleven, bordering his ability to prepare for anything on outright memetic levels. This includes the time where he created a backup personality of himself - the Batman of Zur-En-Arrh - in the event he suffered a psychological breakdown that would drive him mad, akin to having a backup operating system for a computer. He has even developed contingency plans to defeat any of his fellow League members in the event they turned rogue, which reflects on the other high-level suits he put into development. For example, the Knightfall exosuit was commissioned to allow the Defender of Gotham to battle Bane, while the Justice Buster was designed to exploit the weaknesses of his fellow founding members. He even possesses the Final Batsuit from a sixth-dimensional version of himself, capable of rewriting the minds of others with a single thought. However, none exactly compare to his ultimate trump card - a suit that puts him on the same godlike levels of power that his comrades possess: the Hellbat. Forged by Superman in the heart of the Sun, each founder of the Justice League has contributed to its construction: strength on par with the planet-moving Wonder Woman, reinforcements by the Flash's connection to the Speed Force, the willpower of a Green Lantern battery, and so on. The suit itself is physically composed of nano-kinetic mesh which can shapeshift around Batman's body, operates based on a telepathic link to him, and is capable of flight, invisibility, and chest-mounted lasers shaped like a bat.
How The Universe Works S08E09
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The Hellbat is the physical manifestation of Batman's otherworldly determination to never surrender in the face of overwhelming odds. He notably used it to stage a one-man invasion of Apokalips, in hopes of bringing his son Damien back to life. In doing so, he actually succeeded in going toe-to-toe with Darkseid himself, which is no mean feat; the Dark God's own avatars are capable of wiping out universes and traveling to the edge of the DC universe - which in and of itself is vastly larger than our own - within mere seconds, thus putting Darkseid's own speeds at about 6 quintillion times the speed of light. That same avatar even took a punch from the Green Lantern Alan Scott, who was empowered by the entire DC multiverse. Despite such unquantifiable levels of power at his fingertips, it does have one glaring weakness; the Hellbat's energy is drawn from Batman's own life force, and if pushed to the brink, the suit could very well end up killing him before the fight is even done.
Granted, the Hellbat is also capable of replenishing its power supply by absorbing the biomass of others, but this ties into one of Batman's core tenets: his absolute refusal to kill. By acknowledging that he is by no means the patron saint of sanity, Bruce knows that he cannot afford to take another life lest he continues to do so, never knowing when to stop. In spite of his fragile mental state, Batman has notched many amazing accomplishments throughout his crime-fighting career. He has outsmarted the nigh-omniscient Metron, defeated his twisted parallel universe counterpart - the Batman Who Laughs, and has even managed to defeat Superman himself on several occasions. While such feats were performed with foreknowledge and planning ahead, he is no stranger to being put on the spot with whatever resources he can muster at the time. Even in the face of Armageddon itself, nothing can stop the Dark Knight from mustering everything he can to uphold his ideals and fight to his very last breath.
Now, to focus on his opponent: Iron Man, better known yet as genius playboy billionaire philanthropist Anthony Edward Stark. On a surface level, one could be forgiven for doubting young Tony's destiny as one of the Marvel universe's most iconic heroes, considering that by all accounts the man was hedonism incarnate. After the death of his parents Howard and Maria while he was still a boy, the wunderkind genius was left to inherit Stark Industries, the leader of developing state-of-the-art weaponry with all the military funding in the world at its disposal. He spent days partying with any woman who would pleasure him - his lust only matched by the amount of alcohol he was more than ready to consume, and when not wasting away at clubs and parties, he was off selling his weapons to the highest bidder. This would blow up in his face, quite literally to be exact; during a weapons demonstration outside of the US, Tony was ambushed by terrorists and forced into servitude to make weapons, all while operating on a makeshift pacemaker keeping him alive.
Perhaps the greatest of the Golden Gladiator's inventions was that of an entire virtual universe: the eScape, where the only limits are set by Tony's own imagination. He's even managed to weaponize it by - predictably enough - turning it into a suit: the Virtual Armor, made of solid holograms that can form any weapon that he can think of. Even that pales in comparison to the armor Tony created within the eScape, the Godbuster. The suit's name isn't for show either, as not only was it capable of wiping out the entire virtual universe and the Motherboard AI controlling the eScape, but an earlier iteration of it put Iron Man on par with the reality-warping gods known as Celestials; they and others within their power range such as Galactus, Odin, and Franklin Richards are strong enough to threaten the entire Marvel multiverse with a mere snap of their fingers. Ultimately, the power to defeat gods isn't exactly what makes the Armored Avenger special, as years of protecting Earth and fighting the good fight allowed Tony to retool himself from an irresponsible party animal into a dedicated leader who can give everything he has to save the world, proving that this man of iron has a heart of gold deep inside.
Sure her makeup isn't as avant-garde as Kim Chi's or as flawless as Naomi's, and her costuming isn't on par with the works of art that Miss Chi has consistently sent down the runway- but they haven't been bad either. Some of them have been downright gorgeous in their own distinct way (her episode 1, 2, 5, 7 and Book Ball outfits especially). If Miss Bob's looks had been truly disastrous it would definitely make me question my support, but they simply haven't.
She also would have been the queen to make the most well-rounded Top 3. If Kim Chi is Yin and Bob is Yang, then ChiChi was Yong, the dancing, bright pink third slice that creates TRUE Fabulous Balance in the universe. She also made for a wonderful Underdog. They may have beat us over the head far too frequently with the information that she came from nothing and still had nothing- but they also had a point. More than anyone in this competition ChiChi would have benefitted THE MOST from the $100,000 and publicity the Crown would bring. Unlike Bob or Kim Chi (especially Kim Chi) Miss Devayne was a relatively unknown queen coming into this. Barely any presence online, no national following whatsoever . . . when I tried to look into her before the season began I distinctly remember coming up empty-handed. Does she need the crown to advance her career? Not at all- her mere presence on the show has all but cemented her as a fan-favorite. But it would have helped nevertheless.
The eighth season of the American superhero television series The Flash, which is based on the DC Comics character Barry Allen / Flash, premiered on The CW on November 16, 2021.[1] The season follows Barry facing against his nemesis the Reverse-Flash, the fire Meta Deathstorm and the Negative Speed Force. It is set in the Arrowverse, sharing continuity with the other television series of the universe, and is a spin-off of Arrow. The season is produced by Berlanti Productions, Warner Bros. Television, and DC Entertainment, with Eric Wallace serving as showrunner.
First, let's talk Benny, who -- as Ty Olsson promised in our recent interview -- certainly evolved from an enigma into a fully-realized character worthy of our sympathy this week, as befits any multifaceted addition to the "Supernatural" universe.
Chicago Med co-showrunners Diane Frolov and Andrew Schneider reveal that a Chexton wedding was in the works from the beginning of Season 8. "Both have evolved professionally and emotionally in ways that allow them finally to join their lives together," Frolov says to People. "When they reconnected earlier this season, April saw that Ethan was now more open, less rigid; and Ethan realized he could now be the man she needed. This allowed the feelings both still felt for one another to blossom."
As for what's planned for the couple after the wedding, Schneider reveals that the newlyweds will remain in the Windy City. "They're starting a mobile clinic so that together they can take first-rate medical care to underserved neighborhoods in Chicago," Schneider reveals. "They'll remain in town!" Could this mean Ethan or April may stop by the ER for an occasional cameo? In the One Chicago universe, anything is possible.
Sue DearbonBiological InformationSpeciesStatusHumanAliveUniverse InformationHome universeEarth-1Current universeEarth-PrimeGeneral InformationOccupationMIT student (graduated)Socialite (formerly)Underground weapons dealer (disguise; formerly)Thief (formerly)Landlord of Central City Citizen MediaAffiliationBlack Hole (undercover; formerly)Team FlashFamilyRichard Dearbon (father)Penelope Dearbon (mother)Leroy Davis (uncle)Alter egoJanuary Galore (formerly)Genoa (briefly)ActorNatalie DreyfussRebecca Roberts (as January Galore)Images 2ff7e9595c
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