A Fistful of Datas ends with the Enterprise flying off into the sunset. At least "dancing" starships can be explained as fancy flying maneuvers. How does one even have a sunset in space?All the various crew... of various species, who most likely don't have the same dances... dancing in unison and synchronicity. Along with 'dancing' starships.
"Subspace Rhapsody" being a musical was already bad enough, but DANCING WITH THE STARSHIPS?
Just way past the point of ludicrous.
Me neither. I mean if they're going to auto tune why not use it on Mount?I didn't notice any

Didn't we already have a topic to discus this episode?
Jump the shark... what a fun 1990s/2000s term. I wonder if many younger people know what it means, much less the Happy Days reference.

"Jumping the shark" has nothing to do with how long a show lasts though.Or that Happy Days lasted for 6 more seasons after that happened?
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And one more season after the original theme song mix was abandoned, truly the series' greatest crime of all.Or that Happy Days lasted for 6 more seasons after that happened?
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Yep. I'd say The Simpsons jumped the shark in its 8th season and is on season 36 or something."Jumping the shark" has nothing to do with how long a show lasts though.
Same here.I love "Subspace Rhapsody."
Lots of autotune and the songs didn’t do much for me.
I didn't notice any
Recently, I played I Pity Inanimate Objects from Freeze Frame and I remembered how and why we actually did that. The idea was driven by a new piece of equipment called a harmoniser. It's used in studios all the time these days as a corrective device to get performances in tune, but this early version came with a keyboard. You could put a sound through a harmoniser and if you wanted an instrument or voice to hit a certain note that it hadn't, you could play that note on the keyboard. So we got to thinking, 'Let's forget about singing for the moment. What happens if I vocalize these words in a monotone - do an entire song on one note - and get Lol to play my vocal on the harmoniser keyboard?' That was the experiment. It worked pretty well. Predated Cher's digital gurglings by a few years. I don't know where the lyric came from. Maybe because the harmoniser was inanimate.[3]
Jump the shark... what a fun 1990s/2000s term. I wonder if many younger people know what it means, much less the Happy Days reference. I will have to remember to ask my classmates.
Or that Happy Days lasted for 6 more seasons after that happened?
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happy days is a tv show from the early 70s to early 80s that lasted like 13 seasons
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