Smallville When Does Chloe Find Out Clarks Secret Again

Fictional character from Smallville

Chloe Sullivan
Smallville character
Fallisonmackf.jpg
First appearance "Airplane pilot"
Created by Alfred Gough & Miles Millar
Portrayed past Allison Mack
First comic advent (Tie-in comic) Smallville: The Comic (November 2002)
First comic appearance (DC Universe) Action Comics #893 (November 2010)
In-universe data
Alias "Watchtower"
Relatives Lois Lane
Affiliations Smallville Torch
Daily Planet
Justice League
Isis Foundation

Chloe Sullivan is a fictional character in the television series Smallville, which is based on the Superman and Superboy comics published by DC Comics. Portrayed by series regular Allison Mack, Chloe was an original character created exclusively for Smallville past series developers Alfred Gough and Miles Millar. Other than primary protagonist Clark Kent, Chloe is the only primary grapheme to terminal the whole duration of the prove, though Mack signed on for only 5 episodes in the tenth and final season.[1] The grapheme has too appeared in various literature based on Smallville, a web serial, and was then later adapted back into the original Superman comics which inspired Smallville.

In Smallville, Chloe is Clark Kent'due south all-time friend, Lois Lane'south cousin, and the editor of the high school newspaper the Torch; she notices that the meteor rocks (kryptonite) are mutating the citizens of Smallville which she tracks on her "Wall of Weird". She mostly teams up with friends Clark and Pete Ross in researching and stopping meteor-infected people from harming other citizens. In the first five seasons, Chloe harbors an unrequited love for Clark, but eventually accepts her identify as his platonic friend and nothing more. In after seasons, Chloe discovers she herself has the metahuman ability of empathic healing, though she apparently loses information technology afterward an encounter with the alien supervillain Brainiac. In terms of romantic storylines, later Jimmy Olsen (the aforementioned-named older blood brother of Superman supporting character James Bartholomew Olsen) is introduced to the show, he becomes Chloe's boyfriend and afterward hubby, merely the pair later divorce after a monster disrupts their wedding. In the show's final 2 seasons, Chloe finds love with Oliver Queen, otherwise known equally the costumed vigilante-archer Green Pointer, whom she eventually marries and has a son with.

Chloe Sullivan has been characterized as contained, intelligent, curious and somewhat impulsive by both the writers and the actress that portrays her. The latter two characteristics often crusade Chloe to go into trouble with both her friends and with billionnaire industrialists Lionel Luthor and his son Lex, 2 of the testify'south primary antagonists. Mack has been recognized with multiple honour nominations and wins for her breakout portrayal of Chloe.

Role in Smallville [edit]

Introduced in the serial pilot, Chloe spends much of her time helping her best friend Clark Kent, who she's is in love with (Tom Welling) cease the mutant citizens of Smallville, who have developed special abilities caused by the meteor rocks that fell to Smallville in 1989 during baby Clark's inflow, from committing crimes. It is established at the get-go of the showtime flavor that Chloe is an aspiring journalist and the editor of the schoolhouse paper the Torch. Her journalistic curiosity—always wanting to "betrayal falsehoods" and "know the truth"[two]—causes tension with her friends, peculiarly when she is digging into Clark's past in the season two episode "Lineage".[three] In the early seasons, Chloe hides the fact that she is securely in dear with Clark, although the feeling is non reciprocated; she confesses her love to Clark in flavor ii's "Fever" while he is sick and unconscious, but to her dismay he calls out Lana Lang's name in his delirium.[4] Her feelings and frustration for Clark get in the manner of her better judgment as she betrays his trust in the flavor two finale, afterwards witnessing him and Lana Lang (Kristin Kreuk) sharing a osculation in his barn, and agrees to uncover information on Clark for Lionel Luthor (John Glover) in substitution for a job at the Daily Planet.[5]

Chloe and Clark patch their relationship in the season three episode "Whisper", after Clark discovers that she has been helping Lionel. When Chloe stops her investigation, Lionel not only has her blacklisted from the Daily Planet, simply also fires her father from LuthorCorp.[half dozen] In season 3's "Forsaken", Chloe decides to assist Lex Luthor (Michael Rosenbaum), Lionel's estranged son, with getting Lionel arrested for the by murder of Lex'southward grandparents; Chloe'south hope is to get out from under Lionel's control.[vii] In the season 3 finale, the FBI place Chloe and her male parent in a safehouse in waiting for Lionel'south trial; unfortunately, the safe-house explodes one time Chloe and her father enter and they are presumed dead.[8] This prompts Chloe's maternal cousin Lois Lane (Erica Durance) to come to Smallville to investigate Chloe's decease in the fourth flavor premiere.[9] In season four's "Gone", Clark and Lois team-upward and discover that Lex'due south security team had plant the explosives in the safehouse and absconded Chloe and her father to safety before the bomb detonated, and that he has been hiding her ever since. Subsequently Chloe's testimony in the same episode, Lionel is convicted of murder and sentenced to life imprisonment.[10] In the season four episode "Pariah", Chloe discovers Clark's secret when Clark'due south ostracized girlfriend Alicia Baker (Sarah Carter) decides that his secret needs to exist exposed to the world in guild for him to finally accept who he actually is. Alicia expects Chloe to write an exposé about Clark, but Chloe decides that Clark kept his underground for a reason and decides not to write the story instead.[11]

Chloe finally reveals to Clark in the season v premiere that she has known his secret, simply that she wanted him to exist comfy enough to tell her on his own. At the same time, Clark reveals that he was not infected past the shooting star rocks in Smallville, equally Chloe initially suspected, simply that he is in fact an alien who was sent to Earth as a baby during the shooting star shower of 1989.[12] In season five's "Thirst", Chloe earns her dream task at the Daily Planet, starting in the basement.[13] In the season 6 episode "Justice", Chloe begins assisting Green Arrow (Justin Hartley) and his team of superheroes under the codename "Watchtower".[fourteen] In "Freak", she discovers she herself is shooting star-infected, with an unknown ability, and begins to worry that she is a "time bomb" heading towards insanity.[15] She after discovers in "Progeny" that her institutionalized mother, Moira Sullivan (Lynda Carter), is falling star-infected as well.[16] In the season finale, Chloe learns that her special power lets her heal any wound and fifty-fifty opposite expiry, when it activates to salvage Lois.[17] In flavour seven's "Descent", when Chloe attempts to keep information regarding "The Traveler" a secret from Lex, who is unaware that "The Traveler" is really Clark, he fires her from her job at the Daily Planet.[xviii] When in "Sleeper", Lana falls into a catatonic land having been attacked by the Kryptonian artificial intelligence known as Brainiac (James Marsters), Chloe takes over Lana's Isis Foundation, a free dispensary for individuals who accept been infected by the meteor rocks.[19] In the seventh flavor finale, Chloe is attacked by Brainiac, but her healing powers prevent him from harming her. When she returns habitation, Jimmy Olsen (Aaron Ashmore), her on-again-off-again fellow since flavour six, proposes marriage. Before Chloe can answer the Section of Domestic Security (DDS) appears and arrests her for hacking into the regime database.[20]

At the start of season eight, it is revealed that Chloe was non arrested by DDS, just Lex's security personnel impersonating DDS agents. While subjected to their tests, Chloe discovers that her altercation with Brainiac has apparently caused to her to lose her meteor-related powers, simply instilled two new abilities: vast super intelligence and technopathy.[21] Returning to Smallville, Chloe reopens the Isis Foundation. Though she loves Jimmy, she finds herself attracted to paramedic Davis Bloome (Samuel Witwer). In the episode "Abyss", Brainiac'south infestation causes Chloe to lose her memories. Clark takes Chloe to his biological begetter Jor-El, who restores her memories.[22] After Chloe marries Jimmy in "Helpmate", she is kidnapped by Doomsday, a genetically engineered killing machine aptitude on destroying Earth and becomes Brainiac's vessel again.[23] Brainiac attempts to drain the globe of all its homo knowledge only is stopped and removed from Chloe'south body by the Legion, superheroes from the future, in "Legion".[24] In "Hex", Chloe assumes the codename Watchtower full time because she feels her life needs more significant.[25] Chloe discovers that Davis is Doomsday in "Eternal". She attempts to assist Davis' suicide using kryptonite; when this fails, she stays past his side in club to proceed Doomsday under control.[26] In the episode "Brute", she and Davis leave town together; Chloe reasons it will protect Clark.[27] In the season eight finale, she uses blackness kryptonite to separate Davis from Doomsday; Clark buries Doomsday beneath Urban center. However, when Davis discovers that Chloe is even so in dearest with Jimmy, he stabs Jimmy and attempts to kill Chloe; Jimmy impales him on a metallic rod, and they both die. Chloe vows to keep the Watchtower Jimmy gave her as a wedding gift open up, in the hope that all lost heroes—namely Oliver and his squad—will find their way home.[28]

At the showtime of the 9th flavour, using Oliver's money, Chloe transforms the Watchtower into an data fortress and superhero headquarters.[29] In this capacity, she acquires a rival in Tess's estimator skilful Stuart Campbell (Ryan McDonell);[30] her status as superhero information broker also makes her a target for Checkmate bosses Amanda Waller (Pam Grier) and Maxwell Lord (Gil Bellows).[31] Over the course of the season, she grows romantically close to Oliver.[32] In the flavour 10 première, when Oliver is kidnapped past Suicide Squad leader Rick Flag (Ted Whittall), Chloe risks her own sanity by putting on the helmet of Doctor Fate to acquire his location. With the information acquired from Fate's helmet, she organizes a switch for Oliver; in Flag'south captivity, Chloe fakes suicide and goes off-the-grid.[33] Chloe returns in "Collateral", and reveals that she has been helping Clark, Oliver, and the residue of the heroes while in hiding, having blackmailed the Suicide Team into helping her. Afterward, she resumes her relationships with the show's protagonists.[34] In the episode "Fortune", Chloe decides to move to Star City to return to journalism following her spousal relationship to Oliver Queen.[35] In a flashforward in the series finale, Chloe is now the mother to a young boy, but remains in touch with Clark and Lois.[36] [37]

Portrayal [edit]

Chloe Sullivan was introduced by the show'southward creators to be a "Lois Lane archetype", as well as be Smallville's "outsider", which series developers Gough and Millar felt the prove needed in order to accept a character that notices the strange happenings in Smallville.[38] She is the original cosmos of Al Gough and Miles Miller, having not been produced first in the DC Comics Universe, unlike the other main characters Clark Kent, Lana Lang, Lex Luthor and Pete Ross.[39] When they first began developing the serial, Gough and Millar had intended for Chloe to have an "ethnic background".[2] Afterward learning nearly Smallville from the show's casting director, Dee Dee Bradley, Allison Mack toyed with the idea of auditioning for the function of Lana Lang, simply chose instead to audience for the role of Chloe Sullivan.[2] Gough and Millar felt she had a "rare ability to deliver big chunks of expositionary [sic] dialogue conversationally", and decided to bandage her against their initial intention to give the character an ethnic origin.[38] According to Mack, the reason she got the part was because she went into her 2nd audition with a "very flippant attitude".[forty] Kristen Bong too auditioned for the role of Chloe Sullivan; she would eventually go on to star in the television series Veronica Mars.[41] Aside from Allison Mack, Roan Curtis portrayed Chloe every bit a kid in the season 6 episode "Progeny", with Victoria Duffield portraying a immature Chloe during junior high school in the 8th season episode "Abyss". Mack enjoys the fact that her graphic symbol was created specifically for the show, because she feels similar she does not take to worry about existence compared to someone else in the same function, which she likens to people comparing Michael Rosenbaum's performance every bit Lex Luthor to Factor Hackman'due south portrayal in the Superman film series of the 1970-80s.[forty] Mack just signed on for five episodes of the tenth and final season.[1]

Character evolution [edit]

Storyline progression [edit]

Allison Mack was disappointed that the grapheme "lost some of her backbone" in the second season. The second season was nigh exploring Chloe'southward middle, and the idea of her being this "lovelorn […] angsty teenager". Equally Mack describes her, "[Chloe] was a picayune spineless and a fiddling bit too much of a pushover [in flavour two]." Mack does believe that by the end of the season Chloe manages to get some of that integrity back.[42] The extra likes to make certain that her character is kept "smart" and "ambitious",[43] only at the end of season 2 Chloe's impulsiveness causes her to become stuck under Lionel's control, when she "spitefully" agrees to uncover Clark'due south secrets for Lionel Luthor after Clark is not honest with her about his newly established relationship with Lana.[42]

For flavor 3, Mack wanted the character to be given a major obstacle to overcome, something that would aid the character mature. The obstruction in question became Lionel's control over Chloe, subsequently she made a deal to spy on Clark. Allison Mack believes that Chloe is in her own comfort zone while she is working at the Torch, as she is in complete control, but likens Chloe being under Lionel's control to that of a "caged animal". When she ruins the lives of a mother and her son in season iii'due south "Truth", later on exposing the mother as a avoiding from the constabulary, Chloe is forced to look deeper into her ain self. Mack believes that this outcome was a turning bespeak for Chloe's maturity; it is the moment that she realizes that there needs to be a line she should never cross.[43] After it is revealed to Clark in the season 5 premiere that Chloe knows his secret, the character becomes a larger part of the storyline for the show. Knowing Clark'due south secret allowed Chloe to finally come to terms with her feelings for Clark, and recognize where their relationship will always be; Chloe'southward credence of her identify in Clark'due south life provides a means for the two to have a more meaningful friendship, without the concerns of Chloe's unrequited love. According to Mack, Chloe has learned to evolve her beloved for Clark into something more "18-carat" and "selfless".[44]

For the actress, having Chloe become function of the meteor infected community in season half dozen allowed Mack's character to proceed to evolve. Mack views this transition equally a ways for her character to become more emotionally connected to those people—the meteor infected—she spent v seasons trying to expose to the public. Being infected past the meteors gives Chloe motivation to try to understand them and allows her to abound closer to Clark, equally she tin ameliorate understand what it feels similar to alive in a globe where you lot accept a special ability. Writer Holly Harold believes that, in addition to being infected by the shooting star rocks, bringing Lois into the journalistic field as well provides Chloe with a lot of ammunition for growth and development. Lois's presence at the Daily Planet allows Chloe the risk to reflect upon herself, and notice what things are most important to her – her career or her family and friends. The competition that Lois provides is beneficial, as it gives Chloe a chance to bring out the best in herself.[45]

Characterization [edit]

Allison Mack characterizes Chloe as being a "misfit" during the showtime season; more of "a really smart daughter with attitude". She goes on to describe Chloe as intelligent and independent. Another of Chloe's defining characteristics is her demand to "expose falsehoods" and notice the truth in every state of affairs. The character is curious, and wants to be honest with people. She is always trying to make sense of the situation.[40] Next to her marvel, her impulsiveness is a key characteristic that eventually leaves her nether the control of Lionel Luthor, when she offers to uncover information on Clark for Lionel.[42] The reason for this expose is based on Chloe'southward dear for Clark. Every bit Allison Mack explains, Chloe is and so blinded past her love for Clark that she neglects to meet all of the mistakes that he makes. It is this unrequited love for Clark that "drives [Chloe] to be as ambitious and as focused as she is".[43]

A leading theory amid audiences was that Chloe would eventually change her name to Lois Lane, Clark'due south wife in the comics, as she embodies various characteristics that Lois Lane has in the comic books.[40] The artistic team removed the notion that Chloe was going to turn into Clark's future wife when they introduced Lois Lane in season 4. Though the characters share similarities, according to Mack, Chloe and Lois are more "dissimilar shades of the same color […] Chloe is a softer version of Lois". Chloe's upbringing allows her to be less jaded than Lois. Chloe also looks to the future, whereas Lois is more shortsighted.[46]

The season half dozen finale reveals that Chloe has the ability to heal others.[17] Mack describes Chloe'south newfound meteor ability as like to "empathy". The extra further defines the ability as the ability to heal others past taking their hurting and making it her own.[47] Writer Todd Slavkin contends that giving Chloe the ability to heal was the best choice for the graphic symbol. Co-ordinate to Slavkin, Chloe has sacrificed so much in her life for the greater proficient that it only seemed natural that her meteor power would reflect that. For the author, it did not make sense for her ability to be something "malicious and evil and destructive".[45] In season eight, Chloe discovers that she also has super-intelligence – being able to solve complex algorithms faster than LuthorCorp'southward near powerful supercomputer.[21] She and Clark later deduce that her newfound intelligence was brought on during her come across with Brainiac, who infected her with a function of himself during his attack.[48]

Relationships [edit]

One of Chloe's key relationships is with the series protagonist, Clark Kent. Although believers in the "Chlois" theory initially suspected that Chloe would eventually go Lois Lane, Clark's future wife in the comics, Mack contends that Clark does not dear Chloe in the way that she loves him. The actress does not believe that Clark's feelings will ever change.[40] Regardless of Clark's feelings, Mack recognizes that Chloe is blinded by her love for Clark, which ultimately affects her judgment in not only seeing Clark's faults, but making choices that place her character in danger.[43] In season v, Clark finally discovers that Chloe knows his surreptitious, and this revelation allows Chloe the opportunity to come to terms with her feelings for Clark; this also provided a means for the two have a more meaningful friendship, without the concerns of Chloe's unrequited dearest.[44]

Speaking on the evolving human relationship of Clark and Chloe, Mack believes that the season 6 introduction of Jimmy Olsen into Chloe's life increased her value to Clark. Before, Chloe would drop anything for Clark, but now that Chloe has other priorities, it makes Clark realize how valuable she is to him. The introduction of Jimmy Olsen also provides Chloe with someone she tin finally have a romantic relationship with. The relationship is strained when Chloe has to lie to comprehend upwards Clark's hush-hush, besides as keeping the fact that she is meteor-infected hidden. Writer Holly Harold questions whether or not Jimmy has taken over the identify in Chloe's heart that Clark occupied for so long.[45]

Chloe's human relationship with her mother is one tackled both off-screen and behind the scenes. In a brainstorming session, Mack, Gough and Millar came up with the thought that Chloe's mother had left her at a young age. Mack wanted to brand the character a "latchkey child", in an effort to explicate why she is out all hours of the dark. Mack feels that Chloe has real abandonment problems, which play on the fact that she never feels like she is good enough for anyone. These abandonment bug were meant to provide a reason for why the character is devastated past the fact that Clark does not love her the same style that she loves him, as well as the reason for why Chloe does non accept many female friends.[42] One of Chloe's story arcs in flavor five involved her finding her female parent in a mental institution, and living with the fear that she will accept a mental breakdown of her own and end up in a psychiatric facility. This fear also affects Clark, who worries that keeping his secret will take negative effects on Chloe, similar information technology did Pete.[44]

Reception [edit]

Allison Mack has been nominated for a number of awards for her role as Chloe Sullivan. She was nominated for a Saturn Award as best supporting actress in a television program in 2006 and 2007.[49] [50] Mack has been nominated seven consecutive times—betwixt 2002 and 2009—for Teen Choice Award's Choice Teen Sidekick; she won the award in 2006 and 2007.[51] [52] [53] [54] [55]

Other media appearances [edit]

Apart from her appearances on telly, Chloe has likewise appeared in her ain online spin-off, a series of young developed novels, a bi-monthly Smallville comic book, and been given a 2010 introduction into the official DC comics universe.

Chloe Chronicles [edit]

Apart from the goggle box series Smallville, the character of Chloe Sullivan appeared in her own web-based spin-off series, titled Smallville: Chloe Chronicles. Allison Mack continued her duties equally the investigative, high school reporter, with the series originally airing exclusively on AOL.com. The first book aired between April 29, 2003 and May xx, 2003.[56] The spider web series eventually made its way to Britain's Channel iv website. Smallville: Chloe Chronicles was created past Mark Warshaw, with the scripts written past Brice Tidwell; Allison Mack was given final script approval. This final approval allowed Mack to review and make changes to the script equally she saw fit. Warshaw also communicated regularly with Gough and Millar so that he could observe more unique ways to aggrandize Smallville stories over to Chloe's Chronicles.[57]

"I think it's a chip more similar The X-Files or NYPD Blue. The Chronicles are similar a detective story, with Chloe following clues and interviewing people, going from spot to spot, figuring things out."

— Allison Mack describes Chloe Chronicles.[57]

In the first book, picking upward some time after the events of flavor one's "Jitters", Chloe begins checking into the rumors of the "Level 3" facility at the Smallville LuthorCorp constitute. Here, she starts investigating the expiry of LuthorCorp employee Earl Jenkins, which takes her to a research company known as Nu-Corp. Chloe interviews Nu-Corp'south Dr. Arthur Walsh, who reveals that he knows what really happened to Earl Jenkins while he was working at LuthorCorp. Walsh disappears before Chloe tin go the all of information.[58]

In book 2, Chloe is contacted by an ex-Navy SEAL, Bix, and erstwhile member of LuthorCorp's "Deletion Group" who has information regarding Dr. Walsh's disappearance. Walsh begins sending Chloe videos, which lead Chloe to discover that Walsh was working with Donovan Jameson, the head of Nu-Corp, and Dr. Stephen Hamilton on experimentations involving the meteor rocks. Chloe and Pete Ross (Sam Jones Iii), who accompanies Chloe equally her cameraman, larn that Jameson is experimenting on meteor infected people in lodge to steal their abilities. Jameson, exhibiting the same jitters as Earl Jenkins, attempts to kill Chloe and Pete to hide what he has been doing, but his jitters become uncontrollable and he kills himself in his lab. Equally Chloe and Pete leave the lab they come across Lionel Luthor, leading Chloe to realize that Lionel was funding Jameson's efforts.[59]

The third volume of the Chloe Chronicles, titled Vengeance Chronicles, features Chloe teaming up with the "Affections of Vengeance" Andrea Rojas (Denise Quiñones), from season 5'due south "Vengeance", to terminate Lex Luthor. Andrea informs Chloe that Lex turned Lionel's "Level 3" facility into his own "33.1" research lab. Rojas, working with meteor infected individuals Yang and Molly Griggs, wants Chloe'southward help to expose LuthorCorp's experimentation on the meteor infected.[60]

Immature-developed novels [edit]

Chloe's first appearance in literature was in the Attribute published Smallville: Strange Visitors. Here, Chloe is conned into believing that Dr. Donald Jacobi, a "religion healer" is interested in her research on the meteor rocks. She rapidly realizes, after attending one of Jacobi'due south shows, that he is nothing more than a con artist, which causes her to devote her fourth dimension to proving that so no one will autumn victim to his schemes.[61] In Smallville: Dragon, Chloe attempts to solve the murder of one of her teachers, Mr. Tait, which she and Clark believe to be the work of recently released convict Ray Dansk. While attention a party put on by Lex, Chloe is injured during an attack on the crowd by Dansk, who has turned into a reptilian brute thank you to exposure to the shooting star rocks.[62]

Comic books [edit]

Smallville [edit]

In 2012, the Smallville series was continued through the comic book medium with Smallville: Season 11. Written by Bryan Q. Miller, who also wrote for the television series, the first issue reveals that Chloe and Oliver Queen are living in Star City. Chloe is working for the Star City Gazette, but remains a friend and marry to the heroes. She and Lois notice a spacecraft in Earth'south temper,[63] later revealing the pilot is Chloe'south counterpart from a parallel Earth (the same universe where Clark Luthor and alternate-Lionel Luthor was from). She was sent by her cousin, Lois Queen (the alternate version of Lois Lane and Clark'south ally of that world), to warn Clark of the coming "Crisis", which destroyed her globe. She dies subsequently Oliver and Chloe have her to a hospital.[64] After Chloe asks Lois to steal the components and plans of Lionel Luthor's memory device, Project Intercept, with Oliver, Chloe had Emil Hamilton build it with upgrades and then she tin find information from the remnants of her deceased counterpart's memories. Inside what is left of her counterpart's heed, Chloe finds a universe coming to an end, caused by an set on led by a powerful gargantuan being; she also witnesses Lois Queen's death.[65] She finds she at present has some of the memories of her counterpart,[66] and discovers her killer is ane of the Multiverse'south guardians, the Monitors.[67] After taking a get out of absence with Oliver, Chloe afterward render as Clark begins to gather everyone to make a stand against The Monitors. At this point, Chloe is now about nine months pregnant.[68] [69] After the Monitors' defeat, Chloe and Oliver bring together the Department of Extranormal Operations. She later on gives birth to a baby boy, whom she and Oliver named "Jonathan," afterward Clark's late-adoptive father Jonathan Kent.[70]

Other versions [edit]

Although Chloe appeared alongside her television cohorts in the Smallville comic books,[71] which featured tie-ins to the Chloe Chronicles webisodes,[72] DC writers hoped to bring Chloe into DC continuity at least equally early as 2007. The graphic symbol ultimately made her first appearance in the mainstream DC Comics Universe in 2010.[73] [74] Co-ordinate to writer Kurt Busiek, the trouble of bringing Chloe into the mainstream comic volume universe, and keeping her goggle box background, was that she would have filled 2 roles: "the Girl from Dorsum Habitation and the Reporter". Those roles were already filled by the adult comic book versions of Lana Lang and Lois Lane, so the program was to requite the character a new background. Busiek hoped to make Chloe the younger sister of someone Clark had gone to school with, who was a now interning at the Daily Planet. Busiek believed that this would make her unlike from Lana and Lois, only nonetheless familiar to readers who also watched the bear witness. Another distinguishing feature would be that this version of Chloe would non know Clark's undercover, nor would she be meteor infected. These ideas never came to fruition.[75]

Chloe first appeared in "Jimmy Olsen's Big Week", a serialized Jimmy Olsen story written by Nick Spencer, offset in Activity Comics #893 (November 2010).[1] [76] Spencer stated that introducing Chloe has been his first "positive contribution" to the DC Universe. Because of the continuity differences between Smallville and the comic book Superman stories, Spencer chose to stay "equally true to the character" every bit he could by honoring her romantic history with Jimmy Olsen from afterwards Smallville seasons, as well every bit her journalistic background from its early seasons. Spencer decided to innovate Chloe after he began conceiving of a clever, dogged female reporter for Jimmy Olsen to interact with, and realized that he had been subconsciously writing about Chloe.[77]

Chloe Sullivan is mentioned during a flashback in a season three episode of Supergirl, titled "Midvale", where she helps a teenage Alex and Kara Danvers in solving a murder mystery of a classmate through e-mail correspondence. Parallel to the original interpretation, she is referred to every bit Clark Kent's best friend and knows his secrets and even has a "Wall of Weird".[ citation needed ]

References [edit]

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  2. ^ a b c Simpson, Paul, (Season 1 Companion), pp.128–131
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