Don't get mad, get MACOChristopher said:
No, it'll be called Uh-Oh, Better Get MACO.
Xeris said:
David Mack could write the story of the Enterprise C at Narendra III, for example. - I say DM because everyone dies!
Trent Roman said:
Xeris said:
David Mack could write the story of the Enterprise C at Narendra III, for example. - I say DM because everyone dies!
I think that was covered in one of the Vulcan's Noun books.
What, you think Mack is the only writer who can blow up an entire ship full of living beings? You think the rest of us don't have what it takes to commit mass murder on that scale, leaving only a trail of cold bloodless corpses in their wake? Well, you go ahead and keep thinking that, but I'll show you one day! I'll show you all!!!Xeris said:
David Mack could write the story of the Enterprise C at Narendra III, for example. - I say DM because everyone dies!
No, but to borrow the words of Will Smith in Men in Black, "The difference between you and me is, I make this look good."William Leisner said:
What, you think Mack is the only writer who can blow up an entire ship full of living beings? You think the rest of us don't have what it takes to commit mass murder on that scale, leaving only a trail of cold bloodless corpses in their wake?[/b]
Back in the carefree days of 2007, this comment had seemed innocent enough, a playful gauntlet thrown down by the wisecracking David Mack. Sure, everyone knew he had an inner rage that was kept in check by his spouse and the liberal use of alcohol, but most writers do. Perhaps now, looking back twenty years later on the infamous Trek writer killings of 2010, a gangland-style bloodbath that shook media tie-in writing to its core, it seems obvious that this was the first link in the chain that inevitably led to increasing internet smackdowns, as writer after writer claimed that he or she would be the one to kill more characters in more gruesome ways, which of course led to the occasional fistfights at conventions, and then to that terrible night of gunfire after bar closing at Shore Leave 32, which left only a wheelchair-bound Marco Palmieri, surrounded by dozens of orphaned cats, to complete the 2011 Star Trek line. But hindsight, as they say, is 20/20, and it is, perhaps, more likely that we will never know for certain all the variables that caused that horrible tragedy. As for Marco, the closest witness to the entire affair, he remains mute on the subject--literally. The steadily blinking light on the front of his chair serves as his only poignant comment.David Mack said:
No, but to borrow the words of Will Smith in Men in Black, "The difference between you and me is, I make this look good."William Leisner said:
What, you think Mack is the only writer who can blow up an entire ship full of living beings? You think the rest of us don't have what it takes to commit mass murder on that scale, leaving only a trail of cold bloodless corpses in their wake?[/b]![]()
Scott Pearson said:
Back in the carefree days of 2007, this comment had seemed innocent enough, a playful gauntlet thrown down by the wisecracking David Mack. Sure, everyone knew he had an inner rage that was kept in check by his spouse and the liberal use of alcohol, but most writers do. Perhaps now, looking back twenty years later on the infamous Trek writer killings of 2010, a gangland-style bloodbath that shook media tie-in writing to its core, it seems obvious that this was the first link in the chain that inevitably led to increasing internet smackdowns, as writer after writer claimed that he or she would be the one to kill more characters in more gruesome ways, which of course led to the occasional fistfights at conventions, and then to that terrible night of gunfire after bar closing at Shore Leave 32, which left only a wheelchair-bound Marco Palmieri, surrounded by dozens of orphaned cats, to complete the 2011 Star Trek line. But hindsight, as they say, is 20/20, and it is, perhaps, more likely that we will never know for certain all the variables that caused that horrible tragedy. As for Marco, the closest witness to the entire affair, he remains mute on the subject--literally. The steadily blinking light on the front of his chair serves as his only poignant comment.David Mack said:
No, but to borrow the words of Will Smith in Men in Black, "The difference between you and me is, I make this look good."William Leisner said:
What, you think Mack is the only writer who can blow up an entire ship full of living beings? You think the rest of us don't have what it takes to commit mass murder on that scale, leaving only a trail of cold bloodless corpses in their wake?[/b]![]()
Hold on... a hotel bar full of, what, 30, 40 gun-wielding authors... and the editor is the one to survive?? Come on...Scott Pearson said:
[...] and then to that terrible night of gunfire after bar closing at Shore Leave 32, which left only a wheelchair-bound Marco Palmieri, surrounded by dozens of orphaned cats, to complete the 2011 Star Trek line.
Trent Roman said:
Xeris said:
David Mack could write the story of the Enterprise C at Narendra III, for example. - I say DM because everyone dies!
I think that was covered in one of the Vulcan's Noun books.
It will not avail you when I let go of the dead-man's switch....Dayton Ward said:
^ A set up like that, and it includes me? With firearms? Sorry, dudes and dudettes, but the smart money's on me and Rich White.
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