It's a podcast. Nothing personal.
Ah, thanks for the explanation. I was sure I was missing something in your post. Didn't even know that one existed.It's from Star Trek The Next Conversation.
He was a bit hyper in After Trek, but I actually rather enjoyed him as the host. He seemed like a genuinely enthusiastic fan, which is pretty cool to have for such a format. I never really got why people hated on him so much either.Matt is also Matt Mira from After Trek. Personally, I love TNC! But Matt is not super popular 'round these parts.
Seriously guys, he's really fun! He was just so nervous on After Trek, oh man. I felt so bad for him.
Ah, thanks for the explanation. I was sure I was missing something in your post. Didn't even know that one existed.
He was a bit hyper in After Trek, but I actually rather enjoyed him as the host. He seemed like a genuinely enthusiastic fan, which is pretty cool to have for such a format. I never really got why people hated on him so much either.
You lost me at podcast.
I think you should do a podcast. You could call it "0TheWormholeSpeaks"![]()
That sounds horrible.He hated himself on the show too
The usual suspects are claiming this episode ripped off a RedLetterMedia skit (which was mocking discovery), because they also did a situation where they had to release all the hull plating.
People scare me.
To be fair, that hologram was talking about his own ship, and also he was completely insane. I'm guessing his calculations shouldn't be taken as 100% reliable.Sometimes they say the dumbest things, like in Voyager's "Revulsion" the hologram says that life-support consumes 59.2 percent of the total energy output! Life-support consumes nothing! It should be like one-millionth of the total energy output. Boy, the less you listen to the technobabble the better off you'll be.
He might have also been referring to "Life Support" as everything that keeps humans alive that holograms don't need.To be fair, that hologram was talking about his own ship, and also he was completely insane. I'm guessing his calculations shouldn't be taken as 100% reliable.
But cliffhanger season endings are a Star Trek tradition!
Majel voiced all the cliffhanger and two- or three-part intros until ENT when Scott Bakula, I believe, took over recording them for his series' multi-part stories.
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