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From the same book where I learned about Itty, Ambush Bug #3:
Who was responsible for the bolt of lightning that caused the accident that gave Barry Allen his powers? This person is the same one who aimed the last spaceship from Krypton towards Earth, who tossed a bat into the window of Wayne Manor one night, who booby-trapped Steve Trevor's plane and who rained meteors down on Argo City.
--asking questions based on Ambush Bug continuity is asking for trouble.
wyld
When our story opens, the Question is investigating an impossible locked-room murder mystery involving a midget and a 6'6"-tall call girl into heavy bondage. Don't worry, I'll explain later. It's all vitally relevant.
--Alan Moore, Twilight
From the same book where I learned about Itty, Ambush Bug #3:
Who was responsible for the bolt of lightning that caused the accident that gave Barry Allen his powers? This person is the same one who aimed the last spaceship from Krypton towards Earth, who tossed a bat into the window of Wayne Manor one night, who booby-trapped Steve Trevor's plane and who rained meteors down on Argo City.
--asking questions based on Ambush Bug continuity is asking for trouble.
wyld
When our story opens, the Question is investigating an impossible locked-room murder mystery involving a midget and a 6'6"-tall call girl into heavy bondage. Don't worry, I'll explain later. It's all vitally relevant.
--Alan Moore, Twilight
They're only depicted that way in comics. In reality they're usually white. Visible "lightning" isn't actually electricity; that's invisible to the unaided eye. What we see is the oxygen in the air catching fire from the electricity passing through it.
They're only depicted that way in comics. In reality they're usually white. Visible "lightning" isn't actually electricity; that's invisible to the unaided eye. What we see is the oxygen in the air catching fire from the electricity passing through it.
I think Bill Nye the Science Guy told me that once...
"Of course we're criminals.
We've always been criminals.
We have to be criminals." --The Batman
They're only depicted that way in comics. In reality they're usually white. Visible "lightning" isn't actually electricity; that's invisible to the unaided eye. What we see is the oxygen in the air catching fire from the electricity passing through it.
No, silly, bolts of lightning are *yellow*.
--wyld
PS: Unless Lightning Lord is throwing them, then they're bluish-white. And if Lightning Lass is throwing them, they might be pinkish.
When our story opens, the Question is investigating an impossible locked-room murder mystery involving a midget and a 6'6"-tall call girl into heavy bondage. Don't worry, I'll explain later. It's all vitally relevant.
--Alan Moore, Twilight
That would be Lightning Lord from the Five Years Later storyline, no? Bluish-white.
--personally, I loved that take on Mekt.
wyld
When our story opens, the Question is investigating an impossible locked-room murder mystery involving a midget and a 6'6"-tall call girl into heavy bondage. Don't worry, I'll explain later. It's all vitally relevant.
--Alan Moore, Twilight
Who was responsible for the bolt of lightning that caused the accident that gave Barry Allen his powers? This person is the same one who aimed the last spaceship from Krypton towards Earth, who tossed a bat into the window of Wayne Manor one night, who booby-trapped Steve Trevor's plane and who rained meteors down on Argo City.
When our story opens, the Question is investigating an impossible locked-room murder mystery involving a midget and a 6'6"-tall call girl into heavy bondage. Don't worry, I'll explain later. It's all vitally relevant.
--Alan Moore, Twilight