Nope.Here's a useful tip: if you want to find episodes that break the rules, look for the bad ones.
Nope.Here's a useful tip: if you want to find episodes that break the rules, look for the bad ones.
It's a starting point for SAM's journey.So the episode doesn't lean heavily on what happened to Sisko when he disappeared then?
Actually, she DIDN'T write the character for herself. She wrote it for someone specific, but there wasn't the budget for that person. It's in one of her numerous interviews. (Don't ask me which one!)Tawny Newsome has proudly said she is a fan of the series. She created an episode based around her fandom. She created a character for herself that had obvious characters traits in common with revered figures of the series. The character holds key artifacts for the main character's journey. "Mary sue" is constellation of traits referencing a phenomenon of people whose characters and selves are not well separated. While there is no precise fit, I would hope people would laugh rather than be pendantic.
Well, that's a disappointment.Biggest news from Tawny's livestream is she's no longer in the writer's room for season 2, though she did freelance an episode.
Curious who that was.She wrote it for someone specific, but there wasn't the budget for that person.
Wouldn't that depend on the writers brought in?Well, that's a disappointment.
Guess that means S2 is going to be more Discovery slanted instead of what we're getting now.
Well, that's a disappointment.
Guess that means S2 is going to be more Discovery slanted instead of what we're getting now.
The only real question is whether you believe in the legend of Davy Crockett or not. If you do, then there should be no doubt in your mind that he died the death of a hero. If you do not believe in the legend, then he was just a man and it does not matter how he died.Feels like this episode is a bit like Indiana Jones, when you realise he's not integral to the plot in any way.
Doing an episode about the fate of Benjamin Sisko, only to end (essentially) with "fuck knows" feels like an enormous waste of time.
Some Treklit says girl, some says boy, with a variety of names.Was it ever mentioned in DS9 that the unborn child was going to be a girl?
Also from lit.Also, am I correct that "Anslem" being the Bajoran word for "father" was never mentioned in DS9--that's new to SFA, right?
In canon yes, but it comes from a novel.am I correct that "Anslem" being the Bajoran word for "father" was never mentioned in DS9--that's new to SFA, right?
Because that wasn't Jake.Anyway, one thing I keep thinking about with this episode: I thought it was odd when SAM opened Anslem and Jake appeared, greeting her as "sis." But after thinking about it, given that the name of the book is the Bajoran word for father, could the story have been written to Ben and Kasidy's unborn child to explain their father to her? Which is why the holographic Jake addresses the reader (SAM in this case) as "sis?"
The episode doesn't say what he was. SAM was just as confused as he was.It was a holographic recreation of him based on the information SAM had gathered.
Yes it does? It shows her digitizing the information in the book and then has him appear hologram style.The episode doesn't say what he was. SAM was just as confused as he was.
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