Board Thread:Young Justice News/@comment-47881-20130128165351/@comment-432124-20130130035140

Anythingspossibleforapossible wrote: Cari1994 wrote: Anythingspossibleforapossible wrote: Cari1994 wrote: Psypher wrote: Cari1994 wrote: "Assorted members of the Young Justice production crew also confirmed the end of the show’s production earlier this year." Please tell me that this means nothing. Please don't tell me that it's official.

I believe they're referring to the various posts stating season two is in the can. So production stopped until they got the greenlight to start a new season. Or not. Thank you. Hopefully, the absence of YJ on DC Nation just means that it will be airing on another block or another network, which, either way, would be good.

But if it is getting canceled, the worst part of it would be that we have no idea how this season is gonna end. Things are not looking good for the heroes right now and Greg keeps saying that things are gonna get worse. If things turn out badly in the season finale and this series ends with a cliffhanger, I'm gonna be pissed. He said a few times that he's not into ciffhangers so I would imagine worse case scenario is that it will be open-ended which was how season 1 ended. I assume at least the major storylines of this season will end within this one otherwise if there was fear of that then there would have been twenty-six episodes planned. I would consider any kind of open-endedness to be a cliffhanger. And Greg has also said that he has ideas for a hundred seasons, so it seems that there would likely be some questions left up in the air at the end of the season. And like Bodhi14 said, it happened at the end of "The Spectacular Spider-Man", a show by Greg Weisman, in which the Connors family moved to Florida, Miles Warren was left in charge of their lab, Harry Osborn seemed to be on a dark path, and Norman Osborn was revealed to be alive. If those aren't cliffhangers, I don't know what is.

Plus, even if the major storylines of this season do end in this season, as I said, we don't know how those storylines will end. As I also said, things could turn out terribly for the heroes at the end of this season, as Greg keeps saying that things are gonna keep getting worse throughout this season. Plus, things did end badly for the heroes at the end of the second season of "Avatar: The Last Airbender" and things ended badly at every season finale of "Smallville" except that of Season 10, so it could happen here. Considering no new eps will appear after season 2 until at least 2014 I seriously doubt we'll be left in any serious danger. The big storyline of season 1 ended by its last episode setting up more drama for the next. As for live-action series, they're set up a little differently. Usually they're set up to last an entire year and have the benefit of ended on cliffhanger usually because they know they're being picked up for the next year.

As epic and "grown-up" as YJ I think despite the remaining episodes I still think that that this whole invasion will wrap up by the end of season 2. I've seen lots of programs where it's set up that the an entire season's worth of storlines have been wrapped up by the end of the year. The difference with YJ is, it's late, I have no idea what I'm saying is that it is put on a pedestal by die-hard fans that expect way too much out of it. ''Scooby-Doo! Mystery Incorporated'' while great with it's many storylines only has fifty-two episodes to play with before the end. It doesn't matter if there's more stories to tell, when you have a deadline you have to try and be able to fit what you're trying to tell within that. Look at ThunderCats, that had a whole other year to finish, it certainly wasn't done, that had a goal to accomplish and was cut short yet they were able to bring some, while bittersweet, open-ended closure to it by having a grand confrontation that ended with a bitter revelation while proving that the animal nations could be brought together. The latter was a season-long storyline that came to fruition. Look at all the Stargate shows, they were all cancelled before their time with storylines that really needed to be concluded (really needed to be concluded) yet they still ended in such a way that it was acceptable (expect for the last, but whatever). There's one thing that you missed from my last edit of that comment that I think that you need to consider: "...if the scene at the end of "Bloodlines" isn't addressed by the season finale, then we should...assume that things aren't gonna end well for the heroes in this season."