Have you noticed a change in the writing for Mick this season? After the first episode he hasn't stumbled over big words as often(he hasn't been trying to use them either).With the exception of Stein, his teammates haven't called him stupid as much as last season. And even Stein's insults are much rarer now. Zari made the comment of Grodd speaking better English but Mick also ratted out her secret about Helen earlier. I wonder if it's the direction of the writing or response to fan complaints.
I definitely think Mick’s been presented differently this season. But I would say that it’s not that he’s inherently more competent or smart, its that his teammates are acknowledging and noticing that more and putting him down less, and that changes how the viewer responds to him?
I think… realistically, Mick has often been incredibly belligerent with the team. I get the impression it was pretty bad for a while there. We see him twist Ray’s arm for poking him in the chest in S2, and no one wants to volunteer to go collect him for a mission. In fact he’s often sleeping during missions or flat out refuses to go and help. He insults the team pretty often honestly, and he’s at odds with Sarah (sometimes fairly, like saving Ray in the Camelot episode) and sometimes just because he’s angling for a fight.
So I think there was this huge tension between him and the team in S2, which contributed to them taking mean shots at his intellect and competence (some more than others) while in turn he was violent and uncooperative with them. And a lot of this comes from his grief, and their grief (losing Len, and also Rip?)? Which doesn’t excuse the straight-up ableism going on and how they insult his intellect instead of deal with the actual issues (his rage, his belligerence) but I think it informs what’s changed in S3.
In S3, the Mick that we know isn’t the one who betrayed the team and created Doomworld, it’s the one who chose the team. Who fought with them and aligned himself with them, fully and truly and authentically for… essentially for the first time since the Time Pirates in S1. He’d never had to face another similar choice since then, and until the end of S2, he never did fully choose them. And when he did, they noticed?
So now that he has chosen them? And that he volunteers to come back from his retirement/vacation in Aruba to help, and that the first thing he does when he sees an anachronism in 3x01 is to call up Sara? He’s treating the team like family and they’re responding to it in kind. Martin even invited Mick to stay at his home for the Westallen wedding??
So… Mick’s still making some speech issues. He can’t say anachronism or doppelganger. He still demonstrates the aphasia that the fandom has discussed. It’s less-so, I would agree, but that might also be because he’s less stressed and anxious around his team because they’re less likely to take digs at him for not knowing the words. And he’s still a little belligerent. And he definitely did rat out Zari and seems to take (private) glee in ratting out his teammates to each other (or their temporal-aberration children, y’know).
But his dynamic with the team has definitely changed, and thus the lens with which we see Mick has changed. He’s also healthier, I think, and much further in his grief and coping process, though maybe not at the end yet (but is anyone truly ever at the end of mourning?).
And I think it’s just a natural direction of writing. It might be partially in response to fan complaints but I think it’s also… you can’t keep up that type of friction between one member and the rest of a team, not permanently across seasons. Something’s gotta give? So they told the story they wanted to tell with it, and now they’re advancing the narrative?
So now we get to see genuine, if still somewhat rocky, teamwork. A natural progression of people coming to understand and care about each other and communicate in their somewhat stilted ways.
At least, that’s my interpretation :)









