seen from United States
seen from China

seen from Maldives
seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from Germany
seen from Singapore
seen from United States
seen from South Africa

seen from China

seen from United Kingdom
seen from South Korea

seen from United Kingdom
seen from Germany

seen from Taiwan
seen from India
seen from United States
seen from China
seen from China
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The Truth ☀️🦇
Chapter 6
7. The Problem with Questions
Location: Watchtower. Status: Ordinary meeting (which is precisely when disasters happen)
The meeting room hums softly with holograms and overlaid reports. Barry is eating something pink that is anything but natural, with pink cake underneath. Hal is half-reclined in his chair. Arthur looks tired, like a king with a heavy crown.
Bruce stands near the main console, arms crossed beneath his cape.
Clark struggles not to look at him too much.
Five days pass.
Five days in which Bruce is physically incapable of lying.
Five days in which Clark discreetly helps him navigate conversations as if handling unstable explosives with oven mitts.
It is manageable.
Until now.
Hal: So, Batman, a quick question.
Clark closes his eyes mentally.
Bruce turns slowly.
Hal smiles.
Hal: Did you hack my constructions last week just to prove you could?
A pause.
Bruce: Yes.
Silence.
Hal blinks.
That doesn’t really prove anything either. Bruce does things like that sometimes and doesn’t regret them. And he usually has no incentive to lie to Hal when he does, because he doesn’t care what Hal thinks of him.
It is also not unusual for Barry to burst out laughing and spit some crumbs.
Barry: Seriously?!
Bruce: You leave the encryption exposed through the feedback loop.
Hal sits up straight.
Hal: I didn’t.
Bruce: Yes, you did.
Cyborg stops typing and raises a hand to stop them before they enter their own feedback loop.
Victor: One moment.
He opens the code projections. Scans them.
Victor: …You did. It is exposed.
Hal points accusingly.
Hal: That’s not the point! The point is he admits it!
Barry laughs again.
Barry: That proves nothing. He loves pointing out your mistakes to your face.
Hal: But I asked if you only did it to prove you could!
Barry shrugs, and there are a lot of looks exchanged among the League members, except Clark and Diana. Clark keeps his gaze fixed on the table. Diana looks at Bruce and catches him before speaking.
Diana: Batman, could you tell me a lie right now?
Batman’s lips whiten as he presses them together, displeased and trapped.
Bruce: No.
They are heroes, so there is no idle murmuring, just tension and Barry’s exclamation of “damn it,” setting his radioactive pink bun aside.
Arthur: That’s… concerning.
Bruce already hates this.
Diana watches him intently from the other side of the room, but she doesn’t agree with Arthur; she doesn’t seem worried. She looks… content. Quietly happy.
Clark, now looking at Bruce, intervenes before anyone else can.
Clark: It is temporary.
All heads turn to him, and Bruce looks like a man watching his own funeral.
Barry: You knew?!
Hal: Why did you know?!
Bruce clenches his jaw.
Bruce: It happens on Rann, when we deactivate the Thanagarian artifact. Superman is there.
Victor: The World’s Finest…
It is a murmur, but everyone hears it just before it erupts. There are reproaches about dates and hiding problems, and incredulous laughter because Batman can’t lie.
Then Diana speaks.
Diana: Magic?
Bruce: Probably.
Diana: Is someone taking care of it?
Bruce: Yes.
Diana nods, and the general conversation is about to resume. Clark knows he could stay silent, but he also knows that, even if Bruce gets annoyed, now that the cat is out of the bag, they have to expose everything or there will be real problems.
Clark: Is someone handling it who isn’t you? Or me?
Bruce has the decency not to look at anyone.
Bruce: No, but it is enough.
Hal’s irritated sigh is the first response, but not the only one. Arthur rests his head on his hand, Hawkgirl looks tense. Victor, incredulous. Barry…
Barry: Bats!
He reprimands him.
Bruce: I am working on it. And that is optimal.
Again, exasperated reactions follow, and this time even Diana and Clark join in.
Hal: And the guy believes it too—he mutters before leaning in until he makes contact with Bruce, who is still standing with arms crossed, facing them next to the data-filled screens—Then let’s take advantage, since you don’t feel like fixing it fast: do I appeal to you?
Bruce: No.
Barry falls off his chair laughing.
Arthur covers his mouth. All the tiredness has vanished from him.
Hal: How rude!
Bruce: You are yelling.
Hal: I know! I didn’t expect you to actually not like me at all!
Bruce: I tolerate you more than you think.
The response is so quick that, even without seeing Bruce’s eyes, everyone imagines it is a truth that slips out, even though no one has asked a question.
Hal pauses.
Hal: I have seen how you talk to the Robins. I take it as a compliment.
Clark smiles, despite himself, and is surprised when his gaze meets Bruce’s. He sees no trace of reproach, so, like Hal, he decides to think the best and believe Bruce also has fun.
Barry: And me, Bats? Me? Do I appeal to you?
Knowing he is caught, Batman rolls his eyes.
Bruce: You all appeal to me.
Barry: Some more than others?
Clark can only shake his head. Barry will always be a brat.
Bruce: Yes. And you are dropping in rank now.
The League laughs again. Clark has known for years that Bruce is funny when he chooses to speak, but it is always, always great to see.
He is about to intervene to keep the moment going, but they get to it first:
Bruce: No.
Clark: I didn’t say anything.
He didn’t, and besides, he can lie.
Bruce: You were about to.
The League laughs again.
When they calm down, it is Diana who speaks.
Diana: This must be exhausting.
Bruce responds automatically.
Bruce: Yes.
There is laughter again, but now it is just sighs because everyone knows the gravity behind that reality: Bruce could get exhausted and exposed. Not just as Batman to civilians, but as Bruce to villains—and even discover parts of himself before he wants them discovered.
Victor: We can minimize unnecessary interactions until we solve it.
Arthur nods once.
Arthur: Reasonable.
Hawkgirl: And we need to alert a magic expert.
Bruce: Zatanna.
Diana: Constantine.
Both suggestions collide.
Bruce: Zatanna first. Constantine if that does not work.
Clark would like to alert both, but he will not be the one to expose Bruce’s secret to anyone else unless everything is in danger again. Or Bruce himself is.
Slowly, Diana nods, and Victor starts typing some things on his screen. Everyone is serious because the reality of Batman possibly being cursed is never good.
Gradually, the session comes to an end, and everyone is standing, ready to leave, when Barry raises his hand.
Barry: Before we go, I want to make it clear that this is the most fascinating thing that has ever happened.
Bruce: I know.
Clark smiles as he leaves the room. It is nice that the final tone is pleasant.
To be continued...
Chapter 8
And I shall shed my light over dark evil, for the dark things cannot stand the light. The light of … THE GREEN LANTERN!
LANTERNS: Hal Jordan Puts John Stewart to the Test in First Official Footage
HBO Max has released a new trailer previewing their 2026 slate, and among the quick glimpses of upcoming projects is our first official look at DC Studios’ Lanterns. Though brief, the footage is already generating substantial conversation among fans. Not only does it introduce the dynamic between Hal Jordan and John Stewart, but it also provides our first real look at the Green Lantern ring for this upcoming series.
The footage arrives at the 1:35 mark of the preview, running for roughly 11 seconds, with an additional short shot of John Stewart appearing at 1:49. While there is no costumed superhero action on display, the teaser makes its intentions clear: this series will begin as a story about mentorship, discipline, and the weight of responsibility that comes with wielding one of the most powerful weapons in the universe.
https://youtu.be/SEJMjYvpzpw?si=XhO4C-RUmW9XEFa1
We see Hal Jordan, portrayed by Kyle Chandler, in what appears to be a tense training moment with Aaron Pierre’s John Stewart. Hal pointedly reminds John that he is “not ready until the ring says so,” underscoring the Corps’ strict reliance on willpower, judgment, and the ring’s sentient criteria for worthiness. Seconds later, Hal dramatically exits their vehicle, leaving John behind—only for the car to speed off a cliff. It is a moment that not only highlights Hal’s tough-love approach to mentorship but also hints at the demanding, borderline ruthless training regimen new Lanterns undergo. The scene ends before we see exactly how John escapes, but the message is unmistakable: the Corps does not coddle its recruits.
Beyond the immediate training sequence, the teaser raises significant implications for the broader direction of the DCU’s Lantern mythology. With Hal Jordan clearly older and more seasoned, speculation has intensified that the series will chronicle some version of Hal’s transition out of active duty, potentially positioning John Stewart as the new primary defender of Sector 2814. This mirrors long-standing fan debates. Some audiences have waited years to see John Stewart finally take center stage in live action, while others are apprehensive about Hal’s story concluding just as it begins.
Notably, the comics have previously depicted an aging Hal Jordan taking a darker turn as Parallax, a storyline many fans now wonder could serve as inspiration for the series’ long-term trajectory. Whether Lanterns will explore that arc remains unknown, but the somber tone of the footage suggests that this adaptation will not shy away from the Corps’ more complex mythology.
Narratively, Lanterns centers on new recruit John Stewart and veteran Lantern Hal Jordan as the two “intergalactic cops” investigate a shadowy, earth-based murder mystery set in the American heartland. The grounded procedural framework—paired with cosmic stakes—aligns well with the creative team involved. Showrunner and executive producer Chris Mundy (True Detective: Night Country) is developing the series alongside writers Damon Lindelof (Watchmen) and acclaimed comic scribe Tom King (Supergirl). With this trio shaping the narrative, fans can expect a blend of noir, psychological tension, and faithful comic-book world-building.
The cast extends beyond Stewart and Jordan: Ulrich Thomsen steps into the role of Sinestro, while Kelly Macdonald, Garret Dillahunt, Poorna Jagannathan, Nicole Ari Parker, Jason Ritter, J. Alphonse Nicholson, and Jasmine Cephas Jones round out the ensemble.
Lanterns is slated to premiere on HBO in 2026, and if this early footage is any indication, the series aims to deliver a grounded, character-driven entry point into the new DCU—one that finally brings the Green Lantern ring back into the spotlight where many fans have long wanted it to be.
Read the full article
the concept of older, self loathing hal jordan being pathetically in love with you but resenting himself for it because of the immoral age gap. you keep advancing at him because he’s the closest to a caring mentor you’ve ever had and the guys your age just don’t do it for you— but he’s a dick and WILL keep pushing you away until his control finally snaps.
If you don’t think Guy Gardner is out here at the bar using his Green Lantern ring to promise women any size they want, you are lying to yourself.
Kith
Green Lantern brush marker doodle