BLOCKBUSTER: The Boston Celtics have agreed to trade Jaylen Brown to the Philadelphia 76ers for Paul George, two first-round picks and two second-round picks, sources tell ESPN.
"After we get rid of MLK (the "most dangerous negro in america") , the negroes will be left without a national leader to steer them ....unless WE develop and promote a more FBI approved leader for the negroes"
- Bill Sullivan of COINTELPRO (FBI)
To be clear:
James Gunn didn’t make any “mistakes.”
He didn’t make any “bad calls.”
He made exactly the Superman and Supergirl movies he wanted to make.
Because he’s trying to redefine what heroes look like going forward.
If it’s a man, he has to be flawed, humbled, weak, or failing.
If it’s a woman, she has to be tougher, bossier, “messier,” more capable than the men…
…and have a HUGE MALE BODY COUNT.
Notice the contrast.
Superman has almost never killed Lex Luthor, despite Lex repeatedly causing mass death and destruction.
When Superman has killed, it’s been extraordinarily rare, tied to extreme circumstances, and usually portrayed as a terrible moral burden.
But in Gunn’s very first Supergirl movie, Supergirl kills the main villain without apparent hesitation.
And Gunn changed that from the comic, where Supergirl ultimately spares Krem and banishes him to the Phantom Zone instead.
So no—I don’t believe James Gunn accidentally made these choices.
I believe he made them deliberately.
He created a version of superheroes that many longtime fans won’t recognize—and, in my view, one that pushes audiences away instead of drawing them in.
I predicted this back in December 2025.
So far, I think that prediction has held up.
@dom_lucre I feel like DC needs to stick with the darker approach like the Dark Knight Rises. Imagine that vibe with Poison Ivy. That’s what makes DC movies incredible IMO