Two motorcyclists attack a FEMA truck carrying vital medical
supplies to the only hospital in the Glades. Roy Harper, at the wheel of a
stolen car, tries to chase away the attackers. He manages to run one off the
road, but the driver of the other shoots through his windshield, causing Roy to
flip the car. The cops arrive and arrest Roy, while Triad assassin China White
(Kelly Hu) intercepts the FEMA truck and kills the driver and passenger.
(I shamelessly adore Roy. The kid steals a car to fight
crime. I mean, come on.)
At the police station, assistant district attorney Laurel
interrogates Roy about his possible connection to the Hood: She knows he’s been
fighting crime in an attempt to emulate his former savior (he’s even been carrying
around his own wee little red arrow), and she suspects the Hood might be
encouraging his efforts. Laurel, who has adopted a bizarre new hard-line
anti-Hood stance, urges Roy to stay far, far away from him: “He has this way of
seducing you,” she says wistfully. Roy blinks at her uncomprehendingly.
Thea and Oliver show up at the police station to bail Roy
out. Oliver takes Roy aside to chew him out for a while, but you can tell he’s
already secretly thinking about how it might be cool to have a spunky, hero-worshipping
teen sidekick assisting him with his vigilante escapades. Roy fills Oliver in
on all the recent attacks on deliveries of medical supplies—if the attacks
continue, the struggling hospital will be forced to close, thus cutting off the
only convenient source of medical aid for the impoverished residents of the
Glades.
Oliver and Digg check out the hospital situation themselves.
It’s chaos—too many sick and injured patients, too few resources. Outside,
Alderman Sebastian Blood (True Blood’s Kevin Alejandro) gives a press
conference on this sorry state of affairs. Spotting Oliver, he berates him on
camera about the Queen family’s role in the devastation of the Glades.
Oh, this. This. At Queen Consolidated, Felicity is
irate—against her fervent wishes, Oliver has transferred her from the IT
department and has made her his executive assistant. Felicity is having none of
it: “Did you know I went to MIT? Do you know what I majored in? Hint: not
the secretarial arts.” Oliver informs her in the most condescending manner
possible that they all have to have secret identities now (says the man with a
secret identity as a billionaire CEO), and anyway, he needs a Girl Friday
(actually, he says “Girl Wednesday”, because Oliver is kind of dumb, but let’s
all be perfectly clear on this: In 2013, the term “Girl Friday” is offensive as
all hell). He coldly shuts down her objections, and… wow, there’ve been plenty
of occasions in the series thus far where Oliver has been an entitled ass, but
this is the first time he’s been a deeply misogynistic one.
Digg points out to Felicity that things could be worse: “My
secret identity is the black driver.” I respect the idea behind this, but it’s
an invalid comparison, Digg—at the start of last season, you voluntarily took
the position of Oliver’s bodyguard and driver, a position you: a) apparently
wanted, and b) were qualified for based on your military experience. Felicity,
on the other hand, does not want to be a corporate executive assistant, nor is
she in any way qualified to be one, and the idea that Oliver can just pick her
up and slot her in that role strictly on the basis of her gender (see: his
“Girl Friday” comment), regardless of her skills, her education, her
experience, her planned career trajectory, and her feelings on the matter is…
pretty powerfully misogynistic.
Fix this, Arrow writers. This is a deep blunder. You
have messed up badly. Fix this.
(One of the co-writers of this episode is a woman. Here’s my
message to her: You’ve got a hotly-coveted, prestigious job in a highly
gendered industry—only about 30% of television writing jobs are held by women.
So imagine one of the executive producers coming up to you and saying, “Hey, I
need a Girl Friday, so from now on, you’re going to be making my dinner reservations
and fetching my coffee. I mean, you’re still going to be writing episodes, too,
but you’re not allowed tell anyone that. As far as anyone knows, you’re my
assistant, not a screenwriter.” Kind of mind-blowingly offensive, right?
Yeah, that’s what Oliver did to Felicity.)
Another truck from FEMA tries to reach the hospital. Once
again, it’s intercepted by China White, and this time, she’s brought along a
buddy: Bronze Tiger, a dude with a badass set of Wolverine-esque metal claws,
who is played by Spawn’s Michael Jai White. Oliver, in his guise as the
Hood, arrives and battles them, but the police (inexplicably accompanied by
Laurel) swarm the scene and open fire, sending everyone scurrying in all
directions.
Fed up with Roy’s nocturnal escapades, Thea presents him
with a check for two weeks’ severance pay, the carved arrowhead Oliver gave her
when he first returned from the island, and an ultimatum: She doesn’t want to
spend all her time worrying about his safety, so she’s firing him and dumping
him unless he stops going after bad guys. Aw, I really wish the show wouldn’t
do this. I mean, obviously Thea was 100% right to dump Roy last season when she
discovered he was knocking over liquor stores, but this is different.
It’s not that I don’t see her point—hey, it’d sure suck worrying about your
boyfriend’s safety all the time—but this is a very tired, very hackneyed, very
gendered trope, because it’s always the wife or girlfriend who worries
about her husband’s or boyfriend’s dangerous job, never the reverse. And right
now this show needs to steer far, far away from hackneyed gendered tropes,
because it’s not doing so well on the gender-issues front.
Just keep Roy and Thea fun and light, Arrow. Don’t
drag them down into your murky abyss of sucktacular, soul-killing interpersonal
relationships.
(Speaking of sucktacular, soul-killing interpersonal
relationships: In a side plotline, Oliver fails to notice that Digg has broken
up with Carly. Oh.)
At Queen Consolidated, Oliver meets with Alderman Blood (he
asks Felicity to fetch coffee for their meeting. Hey, Oliver? Go screw
yourself. Hey, Arrow writers? Go screw yourselves, too). He suggests
arranging a benefit for the hospital as a way of publicly atoning for the harm
the Queen family has done to Starling City’s less fortunate. Alderman Blood
agrees to this.
Disguised as the Hood, Oliver visits Laurel in her office at
night to question her about the reasoning behind her new anti-Hood stance.
Laurel bawls him out for failing to save Tommy’s life. Kind of an odd way of
looking at it, since she’s the
one who refused to leave her office before the destruction of the Glades
despite multiple warnings about the looming catastrophe, thus leading to
Tommy’s death while trying to rescue her, but whatever.
Anyway, a third FEMA shipment is scheduled to be delivered
at the same time as the hospital benefit, so Oliver blows off the gala
(Alderman Blood gives a blistering speech excoriating Oliver for his
unreliability and shiftlessness) and heads after China White and Bronze Tiger
instead. He foils their plans and, still trying to adhere to his no-killing
policy, turns them over to the police.
Island plotline: Oliver, Shado and Slade find a photo of a
rock formation on the corpse of the unidentified man who kidnapped Shado last
episode. They find the rock formation and enter a hidden cave. Inside are the
long-decayed remains of members of the Imperial Japanese Army, all of whom have
mysteriously misshapen skulls. Oliver (who can now add “corpse-looting” to his
list of character flaws) steals the arrowhead he will later give to Thea off of
one of the skeletons.
The Hood approaches Roy in a dark alley and tells him to
knock it off with the amateur heroics. Roy begs the Hood to take him under his
wing; the Hood refuses, but asks Roy to keep him abreast of all illegal and
dangerous shenanigans in the Glades.
Roy reconciles with Thea, promising he’ll give up
crime-fighting. He is so totally lying.
And then the Hood visits Laurel at her office once more, in
an attempt to figure out why she’s acting like such a jerk these days. Turns
out it’s a trap: As soon as he shows up, Laurel signals the police. Oliver
suddenly finds himself surrounded on all sides by dozens of gun-toting cops.
Well. It’s a shame the let’s-make-Felicity-a-secretary-isn’t-it-funny? plotline crapped up this episode so badly, because otherwise there’s some fun stuff here—it’s always good seeing China White, there's a cheap thrill in watching Alderman Blood giving Oliver a hard time in the press, and seeing Roy taking the first tentative steps towards possibly becoming Oliver’s eventual sidekick is exciting. However, if it’s not made clear in later episodes that Oliver has made a serious misstep in his treatment of Felicity, it’s probably going to be a deal-breaker for me. There are shows out there that don’t treat their female characters like their concerns are inconsequential and foolish; I’ll find one of those to watch.
Comments
Oliver's the CEO. If he thinks it's important to have Felicity close by during the day (even though they really don't do much crime-fighting during office hours), he can say he needs a tech person on hand at all times and stick her in an office next to his. No one would question it.
(I won't give spoilers, but this whole situation got even grosser and more maddening in the most recent episode.)
I don't know. The sexism that women in tech face--that women are undervalued, under-hired, and under-promoted--has been a huge hot-button topic in recent months. Weird that Arrow would be so tone-deaf on the issue.
This is one of the first shows I've liked where I don't actually like the lead. Although, to be fair, I don't dislike Oliver either, I just don't want to be him (I usually only like shows where I want to be the lead character), and I do like that he's unstable and tends to make wrong choices more often than right choices. But I love so many of the other characters to make up for Oliver.