Yeah, I don't see anything either. I forget where I heard it. If not here or SyFy wire, it must have been some random blog. Hopefully it's not true.Any links? I see nothing via Google.
That';s the thing about creating a TV show and having your wife or girlfriend play a character on it, regardless of hoiw she got the position -- it becomes our business. For forever.
Because of this thread I just did a Google News search on Halston Sage, and instead found a bunch of celebrity gossip sites claiming her and Seth MacFarlane are dating due to them being seen in public in an apparent good mood.
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/tvshowbi...arlane-Halston-Sage-spotted-going-dinner.html
Even if this isn't true, I'll say that the two of them having a good time in public rules out the possibility of Alara leaving the show any time soon.
If you like Orville, you'll probably like Voyager and Enterprise too. They have plenty of episodes that ended in convoluted bollocks that left the viewer feeling like they'd just wasted an hour of their lives.You're more familiar with later Trek than I'd be comfortable admitting.
Because of this thread I just did a Google News search on Halston Sage, and instead found a bunch of celebrity gossip sites claiming her and Seth MacFarlane are dating due to them being seen in public in an apparent good mood.
Just saw "Firestorm"
It was about on par with that Hoshi episode where it was all a transporter hallucination all along.
I absolutely loved "Firestorm".![]()
Alara refuses therapy but instead gets her crewmates to build a holoprogram out of their worst fears, goes inside mindwiped and uses a security override so nobody can help her if her life is in danger? Soooo dumb.
But they weren't even the characters for the most part, but holographic duplicates. So anything learned about anyone was for nought, any character progression reset to zero at the end.The character interaction more than makes up for plot shortcomings. I'd be a Discovery fan if their characters were half as interesting as those on The Orville.
I'm not a fan of fakeout episodes.
So anything learned about anyone was for nought, any character progression reset to zero at the end.
In the most ridiculously over-the-top and least believable manner imaginable, yes. Her character had, until this episode, appeared level-headed.That, of course, isn't so if you paid attention. The show was about her character, her approach to dealing with her own anxieties and shortcomings and how she resolved that.
Which she did.
The best holodeck episode I ever saw was Rick and Morty's "M. Night Shaym-Aliens!"Granted, using roleplaying simulations to solve interpersonal problems is a lame Star Trekism and we don't expect to see better shows doing it, but at least these folks can do it entertainingly. Star Trek can't and doesn't.
I hate holodeck episodes in general. One of the most annoying things they did on DS9 was use the holosuites too much.
In the most ridiculously over-the-top and least believable manner imaginable, yes.
We use essential cookies to make this site work, and optional cookies to enhance your experience.