What was his response? Generally I don't do Twitter as much as possible.Anson's take on the Oscars Will Smith thing.
What was his response? Generally I don't do Twitter as much as possible.Anson's take on the Oscars Will Smith thing.
Oh, there is personal beef alright... it wasn't the first time he went after Jada Pinkett Smith on live television. He roasted her for boycotting the 2016 Oscars in his opening monologue by stating that as a TV actress who wasn't even invited, her boycott of the Oscars was worth exactly as much as him boycotting Rihanna's panties would be, then attacked her husband by saying that while it might be unfair that he wasn't nominated for Concussion, what's really unfair is that he managed to get paid $20 million for something as bad as Wild Wild West.Off topic, but I presume there's personal beef between Rock and the Smiths... whereas (just for instance) Ricky Gervais is laughed off for targeting individuals in an audience and taking the joke about them too far.
her boycott of the Oscars was worth exactly as much as him boycotting Rihanna's panties would be,
Nope. (0:25)Assuming you meant "parties"
Not really. The individual episodes were definitely better on their own, IMO.Were the stories actually different? If you have only watched the actual episodes, is there any reason to actually watch the "movies" spliced together from them?
Nope. (0:25)
It was the Graham Norton show.I recall Tom Hanks being on a talk show (I forget which one) a few years ago where they asked him how he felt about turning down First Contact, to which he denied ever being asked about it, and was subsequently surprised to see it pointed out on his IMDB page.
We are starting to gear up for the premiere of the show itself. And that’s really exciting… There are a few things in the offing which I can’t really discuss, but I’m going to [Mission: Star Trek] in Chicago in a couple of weeks and I’m going to be seeing people there. And we’re going to be doing a lot of press. And I think we are putting together a premiere for New York, but obviously a lot of that is going to depend on how COVID rolls. That all would be happening in the week prior to launch, which is May 5th.
It's wrong to say that people criticizing Will are ok with what Rock did. We're saying that we can fight Rock publicly, call out his actions, with nonviolence, filing a complaint, etc. Then the focus would be on Rock's actions, not Will.Making a cheap shot at a woman's medical condition is tacky as hell, and Rock deserves what he got. That said, I'm certainly not going to let the fact that some people thought he shouldn't have done it bother me. Anson Mount is as entitled to an opinion as anyone else.
It's wrong to say that people criticizing Will are ok with what Rock did. We're saying that we can fight Rock publicly, call out his actions, with nonviolence, filing a complaint, etc. Then the focus would be on Rock's actions, not Will.
Jeri Ryan gets it, and I don't believe for a second she's ok with what Rock said, as she retweeted https://twitter.com/mkguliford/status/1508416504978628610 and https://twitter.com/EverCarradine/status/1508505465843376128 . So does Anthony Rapp: https://twitter.com/albinokid/status/1508303920896094210
We're all out of fiddles. We're just down to kazoos.Oh my God, the Twitters are aflame!
Where's my fiddle?
I'm Asian and minority and got bullied severely as a kid, including physically (punched, slammed into a wall, sharp object jammed into my neck--these by various bullies in 7th grade, choked and almost killed by an African American kid in PE, for no reason other than just because they felt they could). I maintain violence is not the answer. Reporting to the teachers and principal was the answer. The last incident got the kid involved in that one put into juvenile detention. They also took action to the perpetrators with the wall slamming and jamming a nail into my neck.
The compilation telefilmswere a way to recoup the series production costs as they didn't have enough episodes for a proper syndication rerun deal in any Market.Not really. The individual episodes were definitely better on their own, IMO.
It's been decades since I've seen any of them but, for the most part, while TOS BSG was mostly episodic in nature, there were a handful of episodes that were 2- and 3-parters that they basically put together all in one larger "movie". The "Mission Galactica: Cylon Attack" compilation was somewhat different, as it put together the excellent "Living Legend" 2-parter with the somewhat contrived "Fire in Space", two completely different stories that somehow managed to work together, albeit in a somewhat clunky manner.
One of the Galactica: 1980 telemovies was quite difficult to watch (as was most of G1980, if I'm being honest), to my recollection, as it put together elements of the 3-part pilot episodes with later episodes in the show's single and only season - causing a bit of a continuity problem with Adama's mysterious Seraphim-originating child prodigy, Dr. Zee. This character was played by two different actors (Robbie Rist for the pilot, James Patrick Stuart for the rest of the series), forcing a quick and sloppy retcon for the movie, vis-a-vis phoned-in Lorne Greene voice-overs, making them twin brothers, Dr, Zee and Dr. Zen.B+ for effort, Epic Fail for execution.
At the end of the day, the telemovies were just another money-grab opportunity to extract cash from the sponsors by Larson and Universal. They are largely ignored by the TOS fandom.
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