They will definitely go over the top with the Imperial fashionistas, perhaps dressing them like the Capital residents in the Hunger Games.
Dune: The Miniseries says hi!

They will definitely go over the top with the Imperial fashionistas, perhaps dressing them like the Capital residents in the Hunger Games.
They will definitely go over the top with the Imperial fashionistas, perhaps dressing them like the Capital residents in the Hunger Games.
Dune: The Miniseries says hi!![]()
Fashion.
Every leap of 50 years has to look completely different from the last.
Although, fashion in he Empire should remain static for the entire 500 year span of the story because it's soul is dead?
Or should their rates of fashion be cycling 4 times as fast because of the decadence without morality and an obsession of form over function?
Hmmm?
Is it still going to be about preserving atomic power, or are they going to invent a super science like dark matter engines or quark forges? Because 50 years into the Encyclopaedia the four empires had already lost the specialism to use atomic energy.
Coal powered spaceships?
No, silly. They had the old tech, ships that were 80 years old, the Periphery just couldn't build new reactors or figure out how to look after what they had very well.
But as far as fashion goes, it seems like they need to get all the losers from a couple years of America's next top Designer and put them in a sweat shop.
Ah, of course. I thought you might have been talking about the first Ferengi episode-- I seem to remember the Second Foundationers communicating through body language.TOS or TNG?
How about "The Cage." Or, if you prefer, "The Menagerie."
Lotta telepathic communication going on there.
"We've got a Winner!"![]()
^Movie? This is an HBO TV series, isn't it?
Actually the head of the Second Foundation "broke" the Mule in just a few moments.
Actually the head of the Second Foundation "broke" the Mule in just a few moments.
I'd argue that it was more than just a few moments. The Second Foundation had been running a years-long psyop on the Mule, to get him to believe things that weren't true. The Mule was already worn down by the time the Second Foundation engaged him directly.
Actually the head of the Second Foundation "broke" the Mule in just a few moments.
I'd argue that it was more than just a few moments. The Second Foundation had been running a years-long psyop on the Mule, to get him to believe things that weren't true. The Mule was already worn down by the time the Second Foundation engaged him directly.
The direct confrontation was short. I don't recall the Mule as being a special protege that was more powerful than the Second Foundation, but perhaps my memory is fuzzy.
I'd argue that it was more than just a few moments. The Second Foundation had been running a years-long psyop on the Mule, to get him to believe things that weren't true. The Mule was already worn down by the time the Second Foundation engaged him directly.
The direct confrontation was short. I don't recall the Mule as being a special protege that was more powerful than the Second Foundation, but perhaps my memory is fuzzy.
I agree the direct confrontation was short. I was only arguing that the Second Foundation worked for a long time to get him into a position where, mentally, all they needed to make was a surgical strike. They chose the field of battle, and they were in control once they had him in position.
My one problem with the revelation in Foundation's Edge that the Mule was a renegade Gaian is that the Second Foundation was completely in the dark about Gaia's existence in FE. It seems to me that their confrontation with the Mule would have led them to the discovery of Gaia before the events of FE. In short, I don't really accept the retcon of the Mule's origins; I prefer the original, which was that the Mule was simply a mutant with extreme telepathic powers.
Asimov in 1950 is not the same person as Asimov in 1990.
The machine behind Asimov, his agents and editors and forces driving him to write for an audience local to two distant points of the 20th century, where their collective knowledge of psychology and technology where like chalk and cheese.
Isaac had grown, matured, and changed.
If Asimov had tried to write the sequels and prequels in he 1950s, it would have been for a 1950s audience and therefore completely different books, so he might as well be a different person to do what he did when he did. Similar, very similar but also very different.
I also said that Mick Jagger 2005 was in a cover band of the Rolling Stones 1967.
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