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Feels more applicable.
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* HypeBacklash: At the time it came out, "Rosa" was the most highly regarded episode of the season, being seen as a much needed commentary on racism that schools fail to teach people about. However, in the years since, fans doing their own research on Rosa Parks, which made clear [[ArtisticLicenseHistory how much this episode ignored and got wrong]] and revaluation of the episode made people note that the heroes suffer from BystanderSyndrome, while all the racism is cartoonishly {{Anvilicious}}. Nowadays, while still regarded as one of the strongest episodes of Whittaker's first season, it's not considered a particular classic.
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if the episode is still liked it is not condemned
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* CondemnedByHistory: At the time it came out, "Rosa" was the most highly regarded episode of the season, being seen as a much needed commentary on racism that schools fail to teach people about. However, in the years since, fans doing their own research on Rosa Parks, which made clear [[ArtisticLicenseHistory how much this episode ignored and got wrong]] and revaluation of the episode made people note that the heroes suffer from BystanderSyndrome, while all the racism is cartoonishly {{Anvilicious}}. Nowadays, while still regarded as one of the strongest episodes of Whittaker's first season, it's not considered a particular classic.
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None
Changed line(s) 7 (click to see context) from:
* CondemnedByHistory: At the time it came out, "Rosa" was the most highly regarded episode of the season, being seen as a much needed commentary on racism that schools fail to teach people about. However, in the years since, fans doing their own research on Rosa Parks, which made clear [[ArtisticLicenseHistory how much this episode ignored and got wrong]] and revaluation of the episode made people note that the heroes suffer from BystanderSyndrome, while all the racism is cartoonishly {{Anvilicious}}. Nowadays, while still regarded as on of the strongest episodes of Whittaker's first season, it's not considered a particular classic.
to:
* CondemnedByHistory: At the time it came out, "Rosa" was the most highly regarded episode of the season, being seen as a much needed commentary on racism that schools fail to teach people about. However, in the years since, fans doing their own research on Rosa Parks, which made clear [[ArtisticLicenseHistory how much this episode ignored and got wrong]] and revaluation of the episode made people note that the heroes suffer from BystanderSyndrome, while all the racism is cartoonishly {{Anvilicious}}. Nowadays, while still regarded as on one of the strongest episodes of Whittaker's first season, it's not considered a particular classic.
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Evil Is Sexy TRS; this has become an objective, in-universe trope.
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* EvilIsSexy: There is precisely ''one'' nice thing that can be said about [[HateSink Krasko]] - Namely, that [[MrFanservice Josh Bowman]] looks really good in a leather jacket.
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Changed line(s) 7 (click to see context) from:
* CondemnedByHistory: At the time it came out, "Rosa" was the most highly regarded episode of the season, being seen as a much needed commentary on racism that schools fail to teach people about. However, in the years since, fans doing their own research on Rosa Parks, which made clear [[ArtisticLicenseHistory how much this episode ignored and got wrong]] and revaluation of the episode made people note that the heroes suffer from BystanderSyndrome, while all the racism is cartoonishly {{Anvilicious}}. Nowadays, while still regarded as the strongest of Whittaker's first season, it's not considered a particular classic.
to:
* CondemnedByHistory: At the time it came out, "Rosa" was the most highly regarded episode of the season, being seen as a much needed commentary on racism that schools fail to teach people about. However, in the years since, fans doing their own research on Rosa Parks, which made clear [[ArtisticLicenseHistory how much this episode ignored and got wrong]] and revaluation of the episode made people note that the heroes suffer from BystanderSyndrome, while all the racism is cartoonishly {{Anvilicious}}. Nowadays, while still regarded as on of the strongest episodes of Whittaker's first season, it's not considered a particular classic.