Wonder Woman Meets Baroness Von Gunther - S1-E2
Continuity mistake: When Wonder Woman calls the Dept of Motor Vehicles disguised as General Blankenship, the woman who answers the phone has long polished fingernails, but in the closeup of her going through the file box the fingernails we see are quite short and unpolished (looks like a man's hand).
Wonder Woman Meets Baroness Von Gunther - S1-E2
Continuity mistake: When Wonder Woman and the Baroness are rolling down the grassy hill the Baroness is wearing open-heel stilettos with ankle straps, but when Wonder Woman throws her lasso the Baroness is wearing classic pumps.
Wonder Woman Meets Baroness Von Gunther - S1-E2
Continuity mistake: The ladder Tommy is standing on is coming loose from the wall it's attached to, and in the closeups we see the holes in the wall, but in the wideshots the wall is completely undamaged.
Wonder Woman Meets Baroness Von Gunther - S1-E2
Continuity mistake: Wonder Woman runs to save Tommy and heads toward a yellow bollard. The shot cuts to Tommy crying for help, but when it returns to Wonder Woman, she's several metres behind, once again running toward the yellow bollard.
Wonder Woman Meets Baroness Von Gunther - S1-E2
Continuity mistake: When Wonder Woman saves Trevor, it's daylight. The jeep then rolls down afire, and one can notice it's stock footage—aside from the grainy film—because the light is way darker, closer to dusk.
Wonder Woman Meets Baroness Von Gunther - S1-E2
Continuity mistake: After Wonder Woman saves Tommy and lands on the rooftop, the light cast on the wall swaps from dark to very bright between instant cuts.
Wonder Woman Meets Baroness Von Gunther - S1-E2
Continuity mistake: When Wonder Woman is sprayed with the sleeping gas and passes out, the position of her left arm changes between instant cuts.







Answer: There is no logical reason. Any normal person would notice these type of absences. The show employs a "suspension of disbelief," which is a literary device where the movie audience or a book reader accepts that certain things are unreal for the sake of the story to be told. It is similar to no-one noticing that Clark Kent looks exactly like Superman because he wears glasses.
raywest ★