The other thing that makes SUPERGIRL stand apart is that the entire narrative of the show is agenda-driven. It's never good-vs-evil, but a social message morality play with real-world analogs, thinly veiled in comic book trappings. For the bulk of the season, Team Supergirl battles against a right-wing terrorist organization led by Ben Lockwood (SAM WITWER aka Doomsday from SMALLVILLE), a clone of talk host Sean Hannity.
Lockwood's alter ego of Agent Liberty, a twisted parody of Dan Jurgen's comic-book creation, rallies the people to take a stand against the immigration of extraterrestrials, the term "illegal aliens" being a bit too on-the-nose to be used here. When they prove that Lockwood and Liberty are the same person, resulting in his arrest, he is released, and given a government cabinet level position by President Baker (BRUCE BOXLEITNER), an anti-immigration Donald Trump stand-in.
I agree Agent Liberty was a twisted parody...bordering on a leader of something like ANTIFA (an anarchist left-wing group that should be declared domestic terrorists). I take umbrage with the description of the president played by Boxleitner as being Trump-like. Trump and his supporters, myself included (don't tell go in the corner), are for LEGAL immigration. My grandfather on my mom's side came here from Italy decades ago and did things the right way. If you ask me, Baker is what would've happened if Hillary Clinton had won even with all the messaging from season 2 and 3 with a poorly used Lynda Carter. The political left want to make immigrants their slaves in use for political power.
Also, the media has gone from being the 4th Estate to a 5th column with agenda driven so-called journalists beating the drums for globalism.
Here is the second meat in my mind of the article...
The social message posturing was put on the back burner, almost, for a while by the arrival of Lex Luthor (JON CRYER), who steals the series away with his magnificent portrayal of the megalomaniacal and Macchiavellian villain. Lex has engineered the ultimate opponent for Supergirl -- Red Daughter, a clone raised in a communist country and trained to hate everything about American excess. After impersonating the Girl of Steel and turning the country against her (again), Red Daughter ultimately sees Lex for what he is, and comes to the real Supergirl's defense. But before Lex can face defeat, he reveals to his sister the one truth she has been blinded to all this time: her best friend, Kara Danvers, has not trusted her enough to tell her that she is Supergirl. And since hurt feelings create villains in this series, we can expect Lena to become more prominent an antagonist in the next season.
If that happens, as I have said many a time on the subject, it would be the SAME OLD STORY of Super vs. Luthor, only it's covered in feminist ideology. I do agree Cryer had Gene Hackman's wit mixed with his crazed spin on Luthor...even using music as he does damage...I mean how can you go wrong with "My Way" by Mister Francis Albert Sinatra?
Writer RJ Carter even takes things on a personal level.
I've been in more than a few discussions about SUPERGIRL in my local comics shops, most of them involving how they have dropped the series due to its ham-fisted sermonizing. It's far from a scientific sample, to be sure, but it's definitely within what should be the core audience -- superhero fans -- and if the previews of Season 5 are any indication, there's no reason for these disappointed fans to come back for anything other than the crossover event.
Will we all be around for the crossover? Hey, give me a golden ticket! As for the show itself, if 5 continues more like 4 I have a poem to sum up its future...
If you get "woke"
You will go broke
And let me say
That's no joke.
By the way, the reviewer gave the show a 3.5/5...mostly due to Jon Cryer's Lex Luthor...and to be honest, I hope he returns.