"Are you okay, Dad?"
"I am now, Jake. I am NOW."

"I am now, Jake. I am NOW."

Okay. The music in "The Way to Eden" is fun and actually not bad, even for made-for-TV hippie tunes written and filmed in 1968.![]()
"Are you okay, Dad?"
"I am now, Jake. I am NOW."
![]()
If you don’t cry watching The Visitor, you’re dead inside.
That's true. Granted if Sisko had failed to not be hit by the beam when he bounced back the entire cycle would start over, only Sisko would know about all of this from the start. I wonder what would have happened if during this second loop Sisko killed himself when in the regular universe so Jake wouldn't someday kill himself.Actually, old Jake told Sisko that they had to be together when Jake died or Sisko would end up untethered and lost for eternity. He was not only saving his dad's life, but giving his younger self a second chance of having his dad around longer.
Okay. The music in "The Way to Eden" is fun and actually not bad, even for made-for-TV hippie tunes written and filmed in 1968.![]()
For purpose, it's great music. Stepping out to Eden illustrates the dangerous naivete of the group, innocent but misguided, but then rearranged to show their dangerous turn.Okay. The music in "The Way to Eden" is fun and actually not bad, even for made-for-TV hippie tunes written and filmed in 1968.![]()
The Visitor wouldn’t work as well as it does without Sisko coming out of it carrying the weight of what happened.The way Avery delivers that line sends me over the edge one last time. There’s so much emotion in it those six short words. If he hadn’t delivered it in such a way the ending probably would have fallen flat; it would have felt like a complete reset. But Sisko clearly remembers everything that has happened.
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