That's a nice shot.The teeps' holiday continues...
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That's a nice shot.The teeps' holiday continues...
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Part of the point of the Reebo & Zooty thing was that something that's hilarious one moment is annoying very shortly. JMS had never intended to actually show R&Z, only have them known by their catchphrases.Rebo and Zooty are Penn and Teller? Couldn't they find anyone actually funny for the rolls? Some beautiful shots of B5 with the lights and all. Those visual comm channels just popping on could be quite embarrassing. Not much privacy. The least they could do is point them away from the bed.
Did someone force him to cast Penn and Teller? That would explain it.JMS had never intended to actually show R&Z, only have them known by their catchphrases.
Not in that way, no. But Neil Gaiman wrote the episode that featured them.Did someone force him to cast Penn and Teller? That would explain it.
<Jan sits firmly on hands>Just watched the telepath rebellion episode. I believe this is the first time we saw Bester as an out and out murderer. I don't like it.
JMS mentioned it in a post and that's quoted on the Lurker's Guide page for this episode.Once again I almost started a post with "I remember reading from..." My first thought was Jane Killick's B5 guide books, but checked it and this is not from those interviews. Anyway IIRC JMS said that Rebo and Zooty was intended to be something that we don't necessarily get. Comedic stars are pretty much a product of their time and they come and go. We should share the Lochley's annoyance. I believe he mentioned Steve Martin and his "Well excuuuuuuse me!" as an example - at the time everyone was saying it and most found it really damn funny.
Zooty zoot zoot!
He also said something along those lines in the B5 script books when talking about R&Z.JMS said:Neil kept the humor sort of off-base...operating on the assumption that there are some things that become au courant or funny because of context: Steve Martin's "excuuuuse me," for instance. Now, it ain't funny, it's just annoying...at the time, EVERYbody was saying it and laughing. R&Z are similar cultural phenomena...their "with a machine" catchphrase, for instance, which the crowd new and reacted to. To us, and Lochely, it didn't mean anything. Lochley's reaction was tailored to be EXACTLY the same as most women's (and some guy's) reaction to the Three Stooges: either it's funny, or you can't figure out why people are laughing.
Yeah, my reaction to Monty Python has always been much like Lochley. I don't get it and the rest of the world gets annoyed when I don't catch their references to it.I get the same reaction from my son when I show him Monty Python. He can't even figure out why it's suppose to be funny.
Once again I almost started a post with "I remember reading from..." My first thought was Jane Killick's B5 guide books, but checked it and this is not from those interviews. Anyway IIRC JMS said that Rebo and Zooty was intended to be something that we don't necessarily get. Comedic stars are pretty much a product of their time and they come and go. We should share the Lochley's annoyance. I believe he mentioned Steve Martin and his "Well excuuuuuuse me!" as an example - at the time everyone was saying it and most found it really damn funny.
Zooty zoot zoot!
I can sympathise. While I'm definitely a Python fan (mostly just the two good movies & the live show, the series I find very hit and miss) when it comes to the Stooges, I'm a complete Lochley. Totally don't get it. Not even a little. Same goes for Benny Hill (*shudders*) or any of the 'Carry On' films and yet there's a *lot* of people who go nuts for it.Yeah, my reaction to Monty Python has always been much like Lochley. I don't get it and the rest of the world gets annoyed when I don't catch their references to it.![]()
Finished Al's episode "The Corps Is Mother, the Corps Is Father". Not bad. It was nice to see Koenig featured. He's really very good on this show.
While at IMDB I saw this...
Phoenix Rising
In the year 2776, the now-aged Centauri Emperor Londo Mollari recalls the never-before-revealed events of the cataclysmic Earth/Minbari War, which almost destroyed the human race ... and led to the creation of Babylon 5.
That's not right. What episode are they really talking about?
Just watched the telepath rebellion episode. I believe this is the first time we saw Bester as an out and out murderer. I don't like it.
I never saw him that way, as a flat out villain. I saw him as a guy who would do whatever necessary to do his job, even killing. But I never thought of him as someone who would commit mass murder for no real reason. I think it takes away from the character. Makes him less complicated, and more 2 dimensional.Why not? Bester always struck me as someone who could easily kill someone whenever it suited him.
I mean, he was a Psi Cop, after all. I'm sure killing people (particularly non-telepaths) comes easy for people like that.
Psicorp is a power to itself as we learned way back. Humanity doesn't trust telepaths and still doesn't. Honestly, who'd really react as well as Trek folk do with Betazeds casually dropping into their minds? B5 is a lot closer to how humanity would likely react. In turn, Psicorp has bred an attitude of us vs the world 'Corp is mother Corp is father' and it works because of the prejudices they face from ordinary humans. Bester and Byron believe telepaths are superior humans and evolution will out and see non-telepaths extinct. They're proponents of straight up biological racism created out of the fear folks have of telepaths. Bester simply sees mass murder as an unfortunate necessity. He's not the first to have come to such a conclusion.I never saw him that way, as a flat out villain. I saw him as a guy who would do whatever necessary to do his job, even killing. But I never thought of him as someone who would commit mass murder for no real reason. I think it takes away from the character. Makes him less complicated, and more 2 dimensional.
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