Masks is the one set in a closed down Pottery Barn, right?

Masks was trash.

Masks is the one set in a closed down Pottery Barn, right?
Masks was trash.
In TOS the Enterprise damages itself in an attempt to destroy an asteroid before it hits Mirimanee's planet. In TNG fires multiple torpedoes to partially destroys an asteroid before it hits Tessen III.
In contrast, Slave 1 does the same thing pretty quickly and with more destructive force
So does a Star Destroyer
If I remember correctly, because of the WGA (writers) strike circa 2008, Moore left it where the season 4.0 finale (i.e., the Earth which is a wasteland) could have been the series finale if Syfy had decided not to bring back the series and would have let the show end on a Planet of the Apes ending.IMO this is for me just a plot hole at this point. The idea of the "real" Earth being a nuclear wasteland & them giving "our" Earth the name for hope came obviously later & created this inconsistency in retrospect. But imo was totally worth it.
The best way I can explain the difference between BSG and Star Trek is this:Yeah. BSG received the "How I met your mother"s of endings.
The characterisation of the characters in the final episode was one that could have made sense in the pilot. But was wildly different than from the characters these person became to be in the last several years.
Also "god did it" is a pretty lame "answer" to narrative mysteries (see also: "Lost" ending).
And then it didn't even explain anything. They could have put god in there if they really wanted to do but STILL at least give some answers (e.g. was Kara an angel? A prophet? A Cylon? A cylon angel?). "Just 'cause" is a pretty shitty answer after years of build up & teasing of a resolution.
Except ...No, it makes sense to abandon it, they'd pretty much used everything up and can't actually make anything new.
If you reduced the population of Earth to 50k random people that tiny number isn't going to have the knowledge or ability to restart a single major industry, let alone an entire technological civilization. They were always destined to be subsistence farmers within a generation, might as well burn the ships, because you can't go back anyway.
No, it makes sense to abandon it, they'd pretty much used everything up and can't actually make anything new.
If you reduced the population of Earth to 50k random people that tiny number isn't going to have the knowledge or ability to restart a single major industry, let alone an entire technological civilization. They were always destined to be subsistence farmers within a generation, might as well burn the ships, because you can't go back anyway.
I mean - they literally showed the survivors converting their starships into housing & utilities the season before. Sure, a lot of them were destroyed/abandoned. But that's a thing that was shown on the series itself, how humans would build a colony.Except ...
You have to believe no one in that fleet objected just on the idea of liking to live with air conditioning. My issue is that in the ending the human survivors basically commit to a situation that goes against their self-interest in a way where SOMEONE should have objected and resisted.
The amount of people that realistically would have died from disease, exposure, predatory animals, etc., would have been absolutely awful. 6 months after putting their starships into the sun, and having to endure a winter on Earth with no significant technology and running out of supplies like antibiotics and pain meds, Apollo's idea of "breaking the cycle" would have been cursed by many of the survivors.
To me, it would have always made more sense for some of the characters to commit to the living off the land plan on Earth, and others to go with the centurions on the basestar to attempt a new community.
That seemed an explicit, unavoidable conclusion, not an unintended one?I do however love the (unintended) implication that we are all partly descendants from Cylons, and that all our religious soul-out-of-body experiences might be some remaining backup-related Cylon functionalities![]()
Star Trek is creatively dead. It is simply feeding on its own carcass now.
What made it thus?Masks was trash.
Ben Cooper.What made it thus?
Give the kid a break. She was four.
The best way I can explain the difference between BSG and Star Trek is this:
In Star Trek, the characters question the absurdity of: "What does God need with a starship?" and instantly reject the idea that it can be anything worthy of listening to or following, where in BSG the entire plot depends around the idea that God complicitly allows entire civilizations to fall, watches over the wholescale destruction and murder of millions of people, because it needs one starship for the main plot to deliver a single child to a certain planet to breed with cavemen.
Ben Cooper, maker of all the classic Halloween costume of time past!Now I'm confused. Possibly due to my missing the MASKS episode.
Edited by Moderator
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