My New Internet Crush...Javicia Leslie - The New & Improved Batwoman

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I hope she ain’t playing that lesbian shit!!

Fucking tired of that shit in TV shows and Movies.

Black bitches and niggas is 12% of the total 4% of the US population but watching Hollygay you would think black mfs are 98% of the total.

i stopped watching series and movies soon as that shit starts. Fuck theses crackas!

Fuck it just venting!!!! Chick fine as fuck!

I hope you're prepared to be disappointed then because that was an actual requirement when they recast the role. The Ryan Wilder casting announcement specifically asked for a member of the LGBT community. Fact is, I didn't know that the Javicia was bi until she won the role, that's a hell of a way to come out I guess.
 

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I hope you're prepared to be disappointed then because that was an actual requirement when they recast the role. The Ryan Wilder casting announcement specifically asked for a member of the LGBT community. Fact is, I didn't know that the Javicia was bi until she won the role, that's a hell of a way to come out I guess.

Thank you for the information. I’m not disappointed at all. I only watched 2 episodes of the first season.

You reiterated the point that they make it a requirement which is probably the case across the board with all movies and shows. Not because 96 % of the population asked but only because who is in charge represents the LGBT community. There is a high percentage of LGBT working behind the camera if 4% can make those type of decisions for the 96% that watch the fucking movies and shows.

That shit does not have anything to do with good business. I am a business owner. I want the 96% money. I can do without the 4%.
 

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She's pretty.... not sure I've seen her in anything else....won't be watching tho...
 

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Batwoman Makes Ryan Wilder More Like Batman Than Kate Kane Was
The latest episode of Batwoman reveals that Ryan Wilder and Bruce Wayne share a fear of bats that Batman's cousin Kate Kane never seemed to possess.
BY MATT MORRISON2 HOURS AGO
Warning: The following feature contains SPOILERS for Batwoman Season 2, Episode 2 "Prior Criminal History."
The most recent episode of Batwoman revealed that Ryan Wilder is closer to Batman than Kate Kane in one respect; they both share a childhood fear of bats. While the roots of Ryan's fear have yet to be revealed, it is both ironic and fitting that she should take up the mantle of the Bat to protect Gotham City in the Arrowverse.
Ryan's fear was revealed shortly after she visited Mary Hamilton's underground clinic and was stunned to find the rich pre-med student working to treat the poor for free. Despite a rocky start, the two women came to bond over their shared hatred of Alice, who was responsible for killing both of their mothers. Coincidentally, it was at that moment that one of Mary's orderlies brought in the body of Mouse; Alice's right-hand man, which had apparently been fed upon by several small animals before being found by homeless people in the sewer tunnels under Gotham City.
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RELATED:Alice's Batwoman Plan Copies A Mission Impossible 2 Twist
Mary performed a toxicology test which determined that Mouse had died from ingesting the same rare toxin that Alice had used to kill her mother and that Mouse had been dead long before the animals started chewing on his body. As she explained this to Ryan and Luke Fox, Mouse's corpse began to convulse, and a bat erupted from his chest, apparently having chewed its way out before flying free. While Mary and Luke rightly found this disturbing, they did not react as violently as Ryan, who was the only one of them to scream. When Ryan noticed them starring at her afterward, she became defensive, noting that she really hated bats.


Chiroptophobia (the technical term for the fear of bats) is a trait Ryan Wilder shares with Bruce Wayne, who has also been depicted as having a childhood fear of bats. The first notable occurrence of this came in a flashback in Batman: The Dark Knight Returns, in which a young Bruce Wayne fell into a cave full of bats. Batman: Year One also made reference to Bruce Wayne having a fear of bats, in the scene where Bruce, having had a disastrous first night as a vigilante, became inspired to "become a bat" and adopt the image of the bat to strike terror into the hearts of criminals because of his own phobia.

The Batman movies of Christopher Nolan and Zack Snyder both paid homage to these moments and made Bruce Wayne's conquering his fear a major milestone of his journey to becoming a hero. By the episode's end, Ryan finds herself similarly tested as Batwoman and is forced to confront her fear while putting aside her desire for revenge to save the city. In this, Ryan shares a common touchstone with Bruce Wayne that Kate Kane never did in the comics or in the Arrowverse.
 

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Batwoman boss breaks down that Kate Kane shocker and recasting

Batwoman showrunner Caroline Dries discusses casting Krypton's Wallis Day as an altered version of Kate Kane, whose eventual return will "rattle" Ryan's confidence.
By Chancellor Agard
March 21, 2021 at 09:00 PM EDT

Warning: This article contains spoilers from Sunday's Batwoman, titled "Survived Much Worse."
Batwoman is far from done with Kate Kane.
EW has learned that Wallis Day (Krypton, The Royals) has been cast as an altered version of Kate Kane, the character Ruby Rose originated in season 1, and will appear in the back half of season 2. Previously, Batwoman showrunner Caroline Dries told EW that she didn't want to immediately recast the role when Rose left the series in May because there wasn't a convincing a story-based reason for Kate's appearance changing in between seasons. But Sunday's game-changing episode and Day's casting reveal that she found one and promise of Kate's return is imminent.

'Batwoman' cast 'Krypton' vet Wallis Day (right) as an altered version of Kate Kane, previously played by Ruby Rose (left), in season 2.

| CREDIT: BETTINA STRAUSS/THE CW; DAVID M. BENETT/DAVE BENETT/GETTY IMAGES

In the pivotal hour, titled "Survived Much Worse," Ryan (Javicia Leslie), Sophie (Meagan Tandy), and Jacob (Dougray Scott) followed Alice (Rachel Skarsten) to Coryana in order to save Kate Kane, whom Safiyah (Shivaani Ghai) claimed she was holding captive and Alice was determined to kill, and acquire a Desert Rose, which would cure Ryan's deadly Kryptonite poisoning. Unfortunately, everyone failed on both accounts.

Safiyah revealed that she lied about having Kate, which was a huge blow to Alice because she finally realized she didn't want to murder her sister. In retaliation for the deceit and manipulation, Alice set fire to Safiyah's Desert Roses before Ryan could get one. Meanwhile back in Gotham City, Julia Pennyworth (Christina Wolfe) told Mary (Nicole Kang) and Luke (Camrus Johnson) that she found evidence that confirmed Kate died in her plane crash, another shock. On the upside, Mary and Luke also discovered Ryan's beloved plant was actually a Desert Rose, meaning Ryan won't die when she returns home.
While every character believes Kate is dead, that's not actually the case. The episode's final scene revealed that Kate is alive, but is unrecognizable because of injuries sustained in the plane crash and being held prisoner somewhere in Gotham City. (Note: Day herself didn't appear in episode 8.)
Below, EW chats with Dries about the shocking Kate reveal, what it means for Ryan's time as Batwoman, and more. (Plus, watch the latest installment of On Set to hear what the cast has to say about this episode.)

Javicia Leslie on 'Batwoman'
| CREDIT: THE CW
ENTERTAINMENT WEEKLY: Over the summer, you promised you weren't going to kill off Kate Kane because you didn't want to feed into the Bury Your Gays trope. Was it always the plan to reintroduce Kate with a new actress at some point this season?

CAROLINE DRIES:
Yes. Once we sat down and huddled for season 2 and decided, "Look, we are not killing Kate Kane. That's not the way we want that character to go out." We looked back at what our options were, and to me, this seemed like the most organic option to tell in this space we had for our season 2 launch.

Ultimately, we [thought], "What's the midpoint of our season? It's probably about episode 8 or 9. Let's make this reveal here." And the way we revealed it was very specific which is we have the Bat Team and all of Kate's loved ones looking for her for the first half of the season, and they definitively learn that she's dead so that they can now close the book on Kate and grieve, but the audience is let in on this huge secret that she's alive, and that then propels these two parallel stories moving on to the second half of our season which [are]: the Bat Team coalescing without Kate, and Kate going through her mysterious journey as will unfold as the season goes on.

What made it appealing to bring Kate back into the show so quickly, especially while you're still introducing a new Batwoman?

Oh, interesting. I don't think of it as being quick at all. I mean, we saw eight very long episodes of TV, so again, to me, it's the midpoint of our season, so it felt like a natural place to introduce her. I understand that the audience maybe felt a little tortured because they don't understand how we're actually going about bringing back an altered version of Kate Kane, but for us, we just trusted the storytelling, and we knew, "Look, we can only have the characters looking and this being sort of their central drive for so long before that gets old and boring, so we thought eight episodes felt like a good span of time."

Season 2 has largely been about establishing Ryan Wilder as the new Batwoman. What does having Kate back in the mix mean for Ryan as Batwoman?

Seeing Ryan grow into the Batsuit has been priority one from a storytelling point of view, and it's been a beautiful journey so far witnessing Ryan take on that mantle, and she's proven to the city by episode 8 that she is Batwoman. She belongs in the suit. And when Kate comes back, and when they discover Kate's back, that confidence will be rattled a little bit, and she'll start to wonder, "Well, where do I fit?" And so while the city believes in her, full heartedly, Ryan will go through her own journey of learning to believe in herself, and that's really something we focus on towards the later part of season 2.

CREDIT: DEAN BUSCHER/THE CW

When it came to casting this new Kate, what made Wallis the right actor for the job?

I believe she auditioned for Ryan Wilder. So when I met her via Zoom audition —those super awkward Zoom auditions — she was super cool and had great swagger and poise, and I just really liked her. At the same time, I believe there was sort of like this internet campaign — I don't know how widespread it was, but it got my attention — that Wallis should be Kate Kane, and she does sort of look a lot like Kate Kane, so it drew me to her. And ultimately when we were going through the audition process again, her name rose to the surface, and she just killed her audition, so we went with her. But it helped that I had known her previously just from those past auditions.

While the audience knows Kate is very much alive, everyone else believes she's dead. How does Kate's "confirmed" death affect them moving forward?

We do, which we never do on our show, a little bit of a time passage of one month so that we can allow the characters to grieve and have a funeral, and then a month goes by, and we can not have them sobbing in every scene because nobody wants to watch that. So, there's a little bit of sense of moving on and healing, and what's central to the show now is the Bat Team coalescing, coming together, and Ryan looking at the Batsuit and realizing, "Oh, she's not coming back."

For Ryan Wilder, everything in her life that's ever been good has been ripped away, and in the back of her mind, she always knew, "This is too good to be true, this is going to be ripped away from me." Especially with the notion of Kate still being out there. And then when it's definitive, Kate's not coming back, Ryan looks at the suit and is like, "I'm Batwoman. What does that mean? What can I do for the city, not just as Batwoman, but as, her journey in episode nine is, as Ryan Wilder?" Kate Kane gave so much back to the city just as Kate. Bruce Wayne donated so much to the city as Bruce. What is Ryan doing just as Ryan [going] to give back to the city? So she really starts to sort of design her own Bat code, so to speak, and her own rules for the Bat Team, and embraces the job full heartedly at this point.

Tatiana [Leah Gibson] being the one who killed all of Alice's Wonderland gang surprised me a lot. Did you know she was the one behind it when it happened way back in season 1, or did you rejigger the storyline to accommodate this new Batwoman you were introducing?

No. To be honest with you, in my mind, it was always Safiyah, but as — it didn't have anything to do with the new Batwoman — as we were sort of peeling back the layers of Safiyah, it became important to us that she wasn't just this villain who just blindly kills people because she has a bone to pick. She wasn't looking for a fight with Alice. In our minds, she was a woman who felt burned by Alice and is trying to move on and just forget about her. Because we make it very clear that she has feelings for her, and so why would she go and poke the bear? Why would she throw these tantrums? But who would do that? Tatiana. So it kind of just worked out to add a little bit more of a love triangle drama between Tatiana and Safiyah that of course, it was Tatiana who did all that. We still want Safiyah to be bad, but we don't want her to be recklessly bad.
Camrus Johnson as Luke Fox, and Nicole Kang as Mary Hamilton in 'Batwoman' season 2 episode 8 "Survived Much Worse."
| CREDIT: THE CW

And we find out Ocean is still alive in a very Vampire Diaries-esque way..
Oh, you noticed? [Laughs].

Yes! Are Safiayh and Ocean still major parts of the season moving forward?

As we saw in episode 8, many major things happened. It was sort of meant to be our midseason finale. The island is burned down. All of Safiyah's precious roses are up in flames, thanks to Alice. So Safiyah's not just going to sit there and be like, "Oh well." You know? What is she going to do? So we have that to look forward to. Ocean, we saw, died and came back to life. He's got all of these unresolved feelings for Alice. How dare this woman, who he kind of was bonding with, in their weird toxic way, literally had the strength to put a dagger through his heart. So he comes back. He'll ultimately return to Gotham with some questions about that, looking for answers.

In episode 8, Alice had this major breakthrough that she didn't want to kill her sister and then immediately learned she was already "dead." How does Alice move forward from this point?

So, that's something we explore on a very deep level with Alice. So [in] the first half of season 2, Alice, subconsciously, whether she realizes or not, her search for Kate, her revenge on Gotham, her revenge on Safiyah, it's all a distraction from what she's supposed to be doing, which is grieving the death of her sister. Then she realizes she is actually dead, or so she thinks, and now it's this quiet after the storm, and she's feeling this tidal wave of grief starting to wash in, and she's never grieved anything before. She's not mature enough to handle those feelings. So we will watch as she does everything in her power to push those feelings away. And in a really intimate story about her relationship with her own psyche and what she's willing to do in order to avoid any feeling that's not anger or rage.

This interview has been edited for length and clarity.

Batwoman
airs Sundays at 8 p.m. on The CW. Be sure to subscribe to EW's YouTube channel so you won't miss new On Set episodes, dropping every Sunday night after the latest Batwoman episode.
 

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Batwoman boss, star preview the birth of Ryan's rogues gallery in season 3

Javicia Leslie and showrunner Caroline Dries preview Batwoman and Batwing's partnership, the show's take on Poison Ivy, and more.
By Chancellor AgardOctober 12, 2021 at 03:27 PM EDT

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Batwoman's titular hero is returning more confident than ever in season 3.
Last season, the CW superhero drama had to reconfigure its story around a new lead character, Ryan Wilder (Javicia Leslie), who picked up the Batwoman mantle following Kate Kane's disappearance and spent the entire season wondering if she was worthy of it. Thankfully, that's no longer a question.
"Season 3 is definitely a continuation of season 2, but Ryan is now firmly planted as Batwoman," showrunner Caroline Dries tells EW. "She's confident, she knows her role, [and] her biggest problem now is, 'I have to clean up this mess I made at the end of season 2.'"
Javicia Leslie on 'Batwoman'

| CREDIT: COLIN BENTLEY/THE CW
The mess she's referring to is the Bat team losing track of Batman's villain trophies in the season 2 finale. As the new year begins, these dangerous items are out in the world and anyone can pick them and cause mayhem — as we'll see in the season 3 premiere, which introduces a dangerous new version of the Mad Hatter (Amitai Marmorstein). There will be more twists on Batman's rogue's gallery as the season progresses.

"How we left off with all of the Batman villain trophies being spread out in Gotham, it brings this feeling of nostalgia because we get to play with these villains that we've grown knowing and watching," Leslie says. "Episode 3 [has] the Victor Fries influence. That episode was my favorite."
Dries adds, "That was our key goal this season: to create [Ryan's] own rogues gallery. To [give Ryan] her own personal mess that she created, that's part of her backstory and history and responsibility."
Introducing these new villains has affected the show's tone as well. "The tonal vibe that we leaned to is more of a horror, action-thriller tone. That plays out in almost every episode," Dries says. "On The Flash, they have metahumans that can do all of these crazy things, so that makes them really challenging villains for the Flash and his team to go up against. With our show, she's going up against human beings. So how do you still make them feel formidable? How do you still get the scares and the tension? And so it almost ends up leaning itself towards more of a thriller."

That said, Batwoman isn't shying away from larger-than-life villains. For example, this season will feature Bridget Reagan (Jane the Virgin) as Poison Ivy, a villain whose plant-controlling powers push her very close to metahuman territory.
"That story is heightened and crazy and pure spectacle as it gets at certain points, [but] it's a love story," Dries teases. "She is the big bad, but there are a couple big bads who are being groomed along the way."
Camrus Johnson and Javicia Leslie on 'Batwoman'

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Thankfully, Ryan isn't facing these threats alone, because Luke Fox (Camrus Johnson), who was previously stuck behind a computer screen, will be joining her in the field as the armored hero Batwing.
"It's so much fun!" Leslie says of Ryan and Luke's crime-fighting partnership. "We never really get to see a male and female Bat duo go out there and kick villain ass [on screen]!"
"For Batwoman, having Batwing as her literal wingman has been good. He's been incredibly helpful, and the Bat team is able to be two places at once, essentially, in the field," says Dries. "For Luke, it's great because he's living out this fantasy of, 'I actually get to the man who I think my dad wants me to be.' For Mary [Nicole Kang], who is also part of the Bat team, there's a piece of her that's feeling left out. But more so than that is the medical science that backs her concern, which is that Luke shouldn't be wearing that Batsuit because he is not ready yet. He has some problems that he hasn't dealt with yet, and you don't just put on a super-suit and become superhuman."
But Batwing isn't Ryan's only new partner. As the season 3 trailer revealed, the Bat team is being forced to work with Alice (Rachel Skarsten), who was imprisoned but agreed to a White Collar-like deal in which she helps the Bat team round up the missing Bat trophies.
"Alice hates it with all of her heart, but I think to add to it Alice is also going through her own mental trauma, because a lot of what has happened to her in her life has never been dealt with and she's constantly being abandoned," Leslie says. "So when they're going on this journey, obviously Ryan hates it and Alice hates it, but they know they need each other and they're forced to work together."
Dries adds: "At the end of the day, she's a brilliant genius, but never forget she will always be out for herself. Her arc this season is realizing, 'What if I'm starting to care for somebody else, and what does that mean for my own survival?'"
Rachel Skarsten and Javicia Leslie on 'Batwoman'

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On the personal front, Ryan is also still reeling from Alice revealing that her birth mother didn't die in childbirth and is still alive.
"She is not that happy about it because, obviously, knowing that your birth mother is alive means that she chose not to be your mom. I think it's almost worst to know that she's alive than to think that she's dead," Leslie says. "That ends up being a huge hurdle for her to get over in order to be able to find out what's really going on. There's obviously a bigger picture, something bigger happening. Our show doesn't bring on a character for nothing. There's obviously something bigger behind the character of Ryan's mom, but I think that before she can get to why her mom is even in the picture again, she has to get past feeling that she got left, that she wasn't special enough to have her mom in her life."
While nothing has been confirmed yet, many fans suspect that Robin Givens, who is joining the show as a powerful CEO named Jada Jet, is playing Ryan's mother. But only time will tell.
Batwoman returns Wednesday at 9 p.m. ET/PT on the CW.
 

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Batwoman sneak peek reveals Diggle's surprising connection to Jada

David Ramsey returns to Batwoman in tonight's episode.

By Chancellor AgardJanuary 19, 2022 at 04:17 PM EST

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Courtesy of The CW and Warner Bros. TV
Batwoman (TV series)

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David Ramsey's John Diggle reunites with an old friend in this exclusive sneak peek from Wednesday's Batwoman.
The last time we saw the Arrow alum in Gotham was in season 2's "Rebirth," which is where he met and forged a bond with Luke Fox (Camrus Johnson), who was recovering from his near-death experience. On his latest trip to Batman's hometown in this week's episode, titled "Meet Your Maker," Diggle reconnects with a (previously unknown) blast from his past: Jada Jet (Robin Givens), the mother of both Batwoman (Javicia Leslie) and Joker 2.0, a.k.a. Marcus (Nick Creegan).
So how exactly do Diggle and Jada know each other? Well, the above clip reveals that Diggle worked private security for her and her husband (but mostly her) before he, you know, became a superhero. In fact, Jada wants to hire him to protect her and Ryan from Marcus. While Diggle — who is in town on a mysterious other matter — has to decline the job, he doesn't leave Jada high and dry and offers to help her find a shocking cure for Marcus' psychosis.

Watch the clip above to learn about their team-up. (Also, is anyone wondering if and when Diggle will meet Batwoman, since he already knows her mom and friend/sidekick?)
David Ramsey as John Diggle and Robin Givens as Jada Jet on 'Batwoman'

| CREDIT: THE CW
Ramsey's Batwoman return arrives a week after news broke that he was attached to a potential new Arrowverse show about young heroes called Justice U, which is in development at The CW. Additionally, Ramsey has also signed an overall deal with Berlanti Productions and will direct and guest-star on multiple Arrowverse shows.
Elsewhere in tonight's Batwoman episode, Ryan, Luke, and Sophie (Meagan Tandy) venture into the woods to find the newly revived original Poison Ivy, Pamela Isley (Bridget Regan). Hopefully, they beat Mary (Nicole Kang), who is also searching for her maker, to the punch.
Batwoman airs Wednesdays at 9 p.m. on The CW.
 
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