Why? I see no problem. There can be huge age gaps between siblings, and even more so with cousins. It keeps them from directly competing, so if anything it seems like a smart move for a TV series about Batwoman.
The show is focused on the younger, newer generation of Gotham heroes, keeping it separate from the animated Batman shows. But it doesn't go so far into the future as to be like Batman Beyond.
Kate - Bruce's much younger cousin
Luke - Lucius's son
Julia - Alfred's daughter
As for the Robins and Batgirls, that stuff is messy and the Robins have their own show anyway. Oracle is confirmed to exist, to wherever Babs is, she is no longer Batgirl. I'd guess Nightwing is busy in Bludhaven, and if any other Robins exist/ed I suspect they are either dead, retired, or in the case of Jason if he exists - perhaps banished from Gotham as Bruce might have chased him out of the city and he didn't bother to return.
Oh, and if anyone was worried about ratings:
https://www.thegeekbuzz.com/news/sup...llation-sight/
I think people take for granted how much older Superman is from Supergirl in the Arrowverse because the Kryptonian metabolism has slowed his aging down, but I think the age difference is pretty similar to the one between Bruce and Kate.
Well yeah, that would be the other reason, if the narrative of the (Earth 38) Batman and Superman friendship is to make more sense. Kara was 13 when Superman, in the old Supergirl intro pulls her out of the pod. Then apparently dropped her off to the Danvers to raise.
Interestingly, now that we have Batwoman and know that Bruce "was there for her" when she was growing-up, and like an "older brother" - Clark kinda looks like a jerk by comparison.
Last edited by Bat-Meal; 11-15-2019 at 12:10 AM.
I meant to Kara specifically. Finding your 13 year old cousin and dumping her off with a human family, right after (from her perspective) she lost her whole world is, to me, a dick move. Especially since in her mind, she was going to Earth to watch over Clark. But Clark didn't even bother to do that for her.
Yes, Bruce didn't need to be there for Kate, but he was anyway. Clark should have been there for Kara, but wasn't, and Kara needed that support from Clark more than Kate did from Bruce.
Has anyone figured-out how it is that Kate can run Wayne Tower? In ep 4 when Reagan asks Kate what she does: "Nothing really, just keeping tabs on my cousin's building". Is there some kind of inheritance deal, or what? Or is it one of those TV things we as viewers just have to accept, so they can get on with the super-heroics?
I think Kate is just a squatter and there doesn't seem to be anyone other than Luke interested enough in the building to keep squatters out. He seems to be the only one in the building other than now Kate.
I imagine up until this point Luke was keeping other squatters out. But once Kate gained his trust he decided not to make an issue about evicting her like he seemed to be doing with other potential squatters.
Kinda amusing that grown-up Clark off-loaded *the teenager who was sent to earth to babysit him as an infant* because she showed up too late to do so.
"Yeah. I no longer need a babysitter. You're about twenty years late. (Don't expect a great Yelp review.) Nor do I, a young single man, need a teenage girl crashing in my bachelor pad, because people will talk about whether or not that's appropriate, and I've seen enough Three's Company as a kid to know how these things go..."
Honestly, sending a prepubescent to take care of an infant all alone was a stupid idea even if you leave out the issue of her being stuck in space longer than him.