21. The 1990s "Dark Age" of comics was totally negative.
It was pretty bad for superhero comics, because superhero comics are inherently silly as a result of their premise. I mostly read DC Vertigo titles in the 90s, which could get pretty grim, but maybe because they were written by a bunch of young anti-establishment Brits, they were also fuckin' hilarious and had a fun, punk-rock vibe. But even the grim-&-gritty superhero comics still launched the fandom of a lot of comic readers. Most of us liked a lot of crap when we were younger.
22. CGI has ruined the movies.
17. Blue and orange color-grading has ruined movies.
These are just new tools for the filmmaker's toolbox. The problem isn't that they exist, but that too many "me-too!" bandwagon jumpers abuse the crap out of them without any thought about artistic intent or appropriateness. I.e., an electric screwdriver is a handy thing to have, but sometimes you need an adjustable wrench.
15. "That comic/game/fantasy art heroine's pose/proportions are impossible!"
It is possible to have sexy characters without consistently posing and dressing them like a blowup doll. If a character is some kind of combatant or researcher or scout and currently engaged in that activity, shouldn't the art emphasize their competence and ability first and their sexuality second or third?
10. Roger Moore was the worst James Bond.
I agree with your reasons (although interestingly, Moore was Ian Fleming's first choice). Moore is the Bond of my youth--Octopussy was the first Bond film I ever saw in theatres, and Duran Duran's "A View to a Kill" is the first memorable theme song for me. So I can't outright hate the guy. The franchise's writing as a whole was so bad at that point, they managed to make Christopher Lee one of the worst villains of the series!
8. Only the even-numbered Star Trek movies are good.
Right on about Search for Spock. Plus, in retrospect, all the Next Generation films are pretty bad. First Contact is the most fun and watchable of those, but I'm no longer sure the havoc it wreaked on continuity was worth it.
1. Superman is too powerful to be an interesting character.
I know we're in this period where every hero has to be brooding and flawed and have deeply personal reasons for doing what they do. But can we keep one guy around who tries to do the right thing just because it's the right thing?