Just don't ask how they got it in there.![]()
It's like that movie where Schwarzie is pregnant... You wonder how the baby will come out!!!
Just don't ask how they got it in there.![]()
What are you talking about..? I just took a quick look at the scene. Someone may have taken them straight to the ready room without showing them around or making introductions, especially someone not actually assigned to the bridge.I must be in the mood for a Voyager rewatch, because lately all I can think about is moments from season one. One moment stuck in my head is from Caretaker, when Paris and Kim meet Captain Janeway and she shows them to the bridge. Ensign Harold Kim walks onto the bridge, wide-eyed with wonder at his new posting. Then, I thought about it. Wait, didn't he have to pass through the bridge to get to the captain's ready room? Did he have his eyes closed so it could be a surprise when the captain gave the tour or was he just humoring her and acting surprised in an attempt to kiss the boss' ass and achieve rank faster?
I find this completely believable. Have you ever gone through your life without bringing up what year it is, well into the year...?Another moment I thought of qualifies as a "no shit" moment. In Eye of the Needle, Telek R'Mor states that by the human calendar, the year is 2351, to which Chakotay responds, "But, it's 2371!" Now, I'm aware this is for the viewer's benefit, so it's a shock to realize the wormhole leads to the Alpha Quadrant... but twenty years in the past, but for Chakotay to blurt out what would be blatantly obvious to anyone with a brain strikes me as funny. I imagine Janeway afterwards being like, "Thank you Captain Obvious, of the Federation Starship Sherlock."![]()
It's like that movie where Schwarzie is pregnant... You wonder how the baby will come out!!!
What are you talking about..? I just took a quick look at the scene. Someone may have taken them straight to the ready room without showing them around or making introductions, especially someone not actually assigned to the bridge.
I find this completely believable. Have you ever gone through your life without bringing up what year it is, well into the year...?
"Sub Rosa" admittedly had worse problems than the one I'm about to list, but here goes anyway. Ronin hooked up with a string of "Howard women," beginning with Jessel Howard, back in the 16th century, up through Bev's grandma, and finally Bev herself. If memory serves, there was some particular physical quality of the Howard women that helped to sustain him. Except that if all the Howard women, since the 16th century, were genetically related, the Howard name was passed from mother to daughter, through the female line. No woman in the line of descent, until Bev herself, ever took a spouse's name or allowed a child to carry Dad's surname. I can't emphasize this part strongly enough: since the 16th century. Yeah. Under cultural naming conventions, that just would not have happened.
Um... c-section? Seems obviously the only conclusion, for someone without a birth canal.
What? Which episode is that? The one where Kirk, Spock and McCoy end up having a threesome? ;-PThat weird moment where Kirk wants a back rub off Spock on the Bridge.
Riker strikes me as the type of guy who would want everyone to know when he was masturbating.
Its apperantly creepy and gory enough that we didn´t get to see the entire scene here in Germany until the DVD came out...Commander Remmick's exploding head. Far too cheesy to be creepy in any way, but still I'm weirded out by this level of gore, I simply don't expect that from Trek ...
What? Which episode is that? The one where Kirk, Spock and McCoy end up having a threesome? ;-P
Interesting if true, and would certainly explain the passing on of the female-line surname. I've been looking up Scottish naming customs and not finding this one, but I'd like to hope McIntyre wouldn't just make something like that up. Any Scots who would like to weigh in?Vonda McIntyre touches on this in her adaptations of TWOK and TSFS. Certain Scottish families have a naming practice that is gender-based, with the patronymic being only for boys, and the matronymic only for girls. That is, if Mister Smith marries Missus Jones, their sons will be named Smith, and their daughters will be named Jones. It's possible that the Howard women are and have been, since the 16th century, just such a family. Once again, I'm speculating about non-canon material, but the practice fits with what we see.
His "relationship" with Bev (and, by implication, his relationship with all of her direct-line female ancestors) involves dubious consent at best. That Bev is angry at him when she finds out what was going on suggests that she didn't consent entirely of her own free will.I don't like the way they're all on Ronin's case when there wasn't proof that he did anything wrong.
Sometimes it is, especially if someone is acting in a way that's completely out of character. And I would imagine that goes about triple in a universe where telepathy and actual possession are real and verified things.Beverly acting strangely is not proof of anything either. Love sometimes makes people act bizarrely, that's no reason to interfere.
Her guest? Ronin is possessing her.He enters Beverly's home like a thief and then proceeds to question Ronin who's her guest for all intents and purposes.
Ronin has taken control of generations of Beverly's ancestors, and now Beverly herself. He consistently lies about what he is and what he wants. And we have no reason at all to think that Quint was the first guy he killed. I think we could make a pretty good case for him actually being a bad guy. And the fact that he's pulling Bev away from her life and her friends reminds me rather too much of how abusers like to separate their victims from other personal connections.I know we're supposed to think that Ronin is the bad guy (and you could argue that he killed that guy with a strange accent) but still the way Picard behaved is inexcusable.
A little coherence would indeed be welcome, though I for one would have preferred their intentions toward the Crystalline Entity to be what changed. I couldn't believe they were trying to come to terms with it.I mean, they were prepared to treat the crystalline entity with more respect than Ronin and it killed THOUSANDS OF PEOPLE!! A little coherence would be appreciated, thank you!
I believe the threesome was with Kirk, Spock and Yeoman Tonia Barrows:What? Which episode is that? The one where Kirk, Spock and McCoy end up having a threesome? ;-P
What? Which episode is that? The one where Kirk, Spock and McCoy end up having a threesome? ;-P
Urgh...WHY would anybody WANT others to know that? I mean..if you´re not earning (extra) money by fapping it off in front of a webcam...
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