Speaking of War of the Worlds, am I the only one who actually kind of liked the second season of the TV series?
Here's another random thought.
In Star Trek 4 Kirk mentions that they don't have money in the future, but in Star Trek 6 Scotty mentions that he just bought a boat. What gives, do they have money or not?
Well I think by money Kirk just meant the traditional paper currency and coins. But they do have credits of some kind (even though I was never quite sure how those were earned).
Does anyone wish All Along the Watchtower would have played an integral role from the beginning of NuBSG? I think it would have been cool if the song would have been a plot point from the beginning and not just at the end of the series. I think it was a great concept that could have been better executed.
Weirdly enough, All Along the Watchtower was going to be in the first season finale when Starbuck and Helo (I believe) walked into a cafe and turned on a juke box.
An invasion from space is what it was, anyway.![]()
Here's another random thought.
In Star Trek 4 Kirk mentions that they don't have money in the future, but in Star Trek 6 Scotty mentions that he just bought a boat. What gives, do they have money or not?
Well I think by money Kirk just meant the traditional paper currency and coins. But they do have credits of some kind (even though I was never quite sure how those were earned).
Star Trek is always inconsistent on this. According to TNG, it is basically a socialist society yet there are still commodities on Earth that are produced in limited quantities, such as Picard's family's wine, and would presumably need to be purchased rather than replicated. In DS9 we see Starfleet officers purchasing things with their credits, maybe earned because they live in an area that still requires money. Yet, in order to issue officers credits Starfleet would still have had to make an economic deal with the Bajor economy.
I don't agree with the criticism of the Star Wars prequels that Anakin Turned too soon. Some people like a lot of detail, me i like to keep things simple, and you really didn't need to show a slow process of turning to the dark side.
The first episode established that Anakin had emotional problems and was actually an insecure fearful child.
His greatest fear was losing people he loved.
This came to fruition when he lost his mother to the Sand People and he slaughtered an entire tribe of this. When palpatine learned of this, this was the weakness he could exploit, and he exploited it by telling him the story of Darth plagarus (sp?). And we know that he and Anakin had a lot of talks like this, so we can deduce that some of these talks were Palpatine playing on Anakin's fears. Fear leads to anger, anger leads to the dark side.
Then, there were the visions. For myself there is the possibility that they were not really true visions of the future or Padme's death, but I think they were being sent to him. By whom i am not sure, but I believe it was Palpatine,a gain, playing upon his fears and manipulating his emotions, even if they did come true.
In short, there was a lot more manipulation and playing upon Anakin's fears and emotions more than people realized, and that was what led to him turning to the darkside, complicated by the actions of the Jedis and their distrust of him.
Side note: I am also of the opinion that Windu may have actually survived that fall, but I can't be certain. This is something i will never have any kind of official answer to.
And wouldn't it be something if an adult Snips appeared in either Rebels or the upcoming movies?
I don't disagree with Anakin's motivations per se, it's the writing and acting that made it out to be on the childish/ Whiney teenager side. They could have taken those same motivations and given it more depth with a better actor, writer and director.I don't agree with the criticism of the Star Wars prequels that Anakin Turned too soon. Some people like a lot of detail, me i like to keep things simple, and you really didn't need to show a slow process of turning to the dark side.
The first episode established that Anakin had emotional problems and was actually an insecure fearful child.
His greatest fear was losing people he loved.
This came to fruition when he lost his mother to the Sand People and he slaughtered an entire tribe of this. When palpatine learned of this, this was the weakness he could exploit, and he exploited it by telling him the story of Darth plagarus (sp?). And we know that he and Anakin had a lot of talks like this, so we can deduce that some of these talks were Palpatine playing on Anakin's fears. Fear leads to anger, anger leads to the dark side.
Then, there were the visions. For myself there is the possibility that they were not really true visions of the future or Padme's death, but I think they were being sent to him. By whom i am not sure, but I believe it was Palpatine,a gain, playing upon his fears and manipulating his emotions, even if they did come true.
In short, there was a lot more manipulation and playing upon Anakin's fears and emotions more than people realized, and that was what led to him turning to the darkside, complicated by the actions of the Jedis and their distrust of him.
Side note: I am also of the opinion that Windu may have actually survived that fall, but I can't be certain. This is something i will never have any kind of official answer to.
And wouldn't it be something if an adult Snips appeared in either Rebels or the upcoming movies?
I'm really amazed how similar a lot of the Marvel and DC characters are, and that one of them hasn't sued the other over it.
As for superheroes, I can be very hard to pinpoint the "first" anything, since there's almost always some earlier inspiration or influence, which probably makes such lawsuits problematic.
Super-strength? That goes back to Hercules at least, not to mention Philip Wylie's novel "Gladiator." A mysterious vigilante with a secret identity? Hello, Zorro and The Scarlet Pimpernel. Cyborgs, mutants, telepaths, mystics, mer-people . . . all very old sci-fi cliches that were around long before comic books existed.
Which might make it harder to prove that your super-powerful mutant cyborg ninja is a unique creation.![]()
Well I think by money Kirk just meant the traditional paper currency and coins. But they do have credits of some kind (even though I was never quite sure how those were earned).
Star Trek is always inconsistent on this. According to TNG, it is basically a socialist society yet there are still commodities on Earth that are produced in limited quantities, such as Picard's family's wine, and would presumably need to be purchased rather than replicated. In DS9 we see Starfleet officers purchasing things with their credits, maybe earned because they live in an area that still requires money. Yet, in order to issue officers credits Starfleet would still have had to make an economic deal with the Bajor economy.
I remember an episode of DS9 where Syskos dad had a restaurant where he had real food serving people. Did he have cooks and waiters or did he just replicate the ingredients and cook himself? Even if he did, the wait time would be horrible.
I've been doing a rewatch of Farscape and I really miss shows like this on tv. I know we're in the hard core comic book realm now but it would be great to get a space based show on tv again.
Speaking of comics I found out that cw was rerunning The flash this summer and I watched the first episode last night. Nice start but I was stuck by how fun it seemed. I'm looking forward to watching this series this summer and hopefully being caught up before season 2 starts.
I'll write about this more in the Orphan Black thread, but I'm really starting to think season 3 is much better than season 2. They probably had their best episode tonight, an Alison/Cosima show, finally.
Star Trek is always inconsistent on this. According to TNG, it is basically a socialist society yet there are still commodities on Earth that are produced in limited quantities, such as Picard's family's wine, and would presumably need to be purchased rather than replicated. In DS9 we see Starfleet officers purchasing things with their credits, maybe earned because they live in an area that still requires money. Yet, in order to issue officers credits Starfleet would still have had to make an economic deal with the Bajor economy.
I remember an episode of DS9 where Syskos dad had a restaurant where he had real food serving people. Did he have cooks and waiters or did he just replicate the ingredients and cook himself? Even if he did, the wait time would be horrible.
Another odd one is the Picard family plantation. Do they just produce it to give away to family and friends? Surely there is a demand for this unreplicated product.
I'll write about this more in the Orphan Black thread, but I'm really starting to think season 3 is much better than season 2. They probably had their best episode tonight, an Alison/Cosima show, finally.
I've been doing a rewatch of Farscape and I really miss shows like this on tv. I know we're in the hard core comic book realm now but it would be great to get a space based show on tv again.
Speaking of comics I found out that cw was rerunning The flash this summer and I watched the first episode last night. Nice start but I was stuck by how fun it seemed. I'm looking forward to watching this series this summer and hopefully being caught up before season 2 starts.
I'll write about this more in the Orphan Black thread, but I'm really starting to think season 3 is much better than season 2. They probably had their best episode tonight, an Alison/Cosima show, finally.
I miss Farscape too. I think it had such a unique feel to it. I agree we need something like on TV again.
I'll write about this more in the Orphan Black thread, but I'm really starting to think season 3 is much better than season 2. They probably had their best episode tonight, an Alison/Cosima show, finally.
I was a huge fan of this show in the first season, but the more the show focused on all the Leda/Dyad conspiracy stuff in season 2 the more bored I got with it. I don't know if it's just because I got burnt out on conspiracy storylines with X-Files back in the day, but this one just isn't interesting me in the slightest.
I tried watching the season 3 premiere earlier but couldn't even get halfway through it before becoming bored to death. Although I might give it another shot later and hope things eventually pick up a bit...
Here's another random thought.
In Star Trek 4 Kirk mentions that they don't have money in the future, but in Star Trek 6 Scotty mentions that he just bought a boat. What gives, do they have money or not?
Well I think by money Kirk just meant the traditional paper currency and coins. But they do have credits of some kind (even though I was never quite sure how those were earned).
Star Trek is always inconsistent on this. According to TNG, it is basically a socialist society yet there are still commodities on Earth that are produced in limited quantities, such as Picard's family's wine, and would presumably need to be purchased rather than replicated. In DS9 we see Starfleet officers purchasing things with their credits, maybe earned because they live in an area that still requires money. Yet, in order to issue officers credits Starfleet would still have had to make an economic deal with the Bajor economy.
I think part of the problem is the whole show takes place in such a self-contained world (it's never even made clear what country they're in), that it's hard to see what larger impact this conspiracy really has on anything... other than on the clones themselves. And there are only so many times you watch one clone or another get kidnapped or threatened before it just loses any impact.
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