There seems to be a real disconnect between views of critics and views of general audiences.
Kor
That's easy. It's Princess Leia's home planet.And why the name "Algernon", is it a reference to the Norman French (an Easter Egg for the name 'Picard' too?) or is it less likely a reference to a novel from the late-1950s America?
Neither of which changes my headcanon that radiation from Praxis has altered the chemical composition of Klingon blood, much the way microwave ovens will do to our food.
Possibly you should have your headcanon examined if your headcanon thinks that Klingons could survive radiation intense enough to change the color of their blood. IMHO opinion radiation intense enough to change the color of Klingon blood would probably do so by killing the blood cells in the blood, thus changing the overall color of the blood, and thus making it impossible for the Klingons to survive.
Radiation that intense should turn Klingons into "Klung gones".
Klingon blood should be black like oil
It's actually the "Treaty of Algeron."Ah but does that also include the inverse ratio regarding the lesser amount of drool emanating from the more hardcore fan while watching?General audiences just want the whiz bang stuff. Hardcore fans, fastidious as they are, want the whiz bang as well as more structure and larger universe considerations that have to be met in order to be enjoyed. It's why fans ask why the Federation isn't allowed to develop cloaking technology while the Romulans have it and are well-behaved with it. Then the extreme fans -- think "Pac-Man after the MJ binge and craving the munchies", the hunger is rarely satisfied -- who, despite getting told the Treaty of Algernon stated the Federation wouldn't develop such technology, then go in for the most pedantic detail and yet they're not making a RPG the way Sheldon Cooper might after drinking a sip of Jolt Cola. And why the name "Algernon", is it a reference to the Norman French (an Easter Egg for the name 'Picard' too?) or is it less likely a reference to a novel from the late-1950s America?
it looked great in klingon honor guard!
that should've been blue, but the klingon blood looked great, and the zero g spinning blood stream looked amazing
that should've been blue, but the klingon blood looked great, and the zero g spinning blood stream looked amazing
I love pink, but it didn’t work there. It looked fake and Pepto-Bismol.I don't know. "Pink" wasn't their best choice of color and definitely not for a warrior people!
Would also make blood wine more interesting.I love pink, but it didn’t work there. It looked fake and Pepto-Bismol.
I like black not for any biological reason (maybe the Jem-Hadar should have that?) but it does with the theatrical nastiness of the Klingons. They’re ugly and brutal and enemy. Their language (when done right) sounds really foreign, they eat living food, and they killed their own gods. The black goes with all that. And it makes the development of their becoming allies all the more special.
I don't remember that in the DS9 episode im which our heroes disguise themselves as Klingons. You may be thinking of the "Scooby Doo ending" of the home video version of Star Trek VI, with Colonel West (Rene Auberjonois) disguised as the would-be Klingon assassin.It was also pink to determine that Odo wasn't really a Klingon when he bled red whilst disguised as a Klingon.
I don't remember that in the DS9 episode im which our heroes disguise themselves as Klingons. You may be thinking of the "Scooby Doo ending" of the home video version of Star Trek VI, with Colonel West (Rene Auberjonois) disguised as the would-be Klingon assassin.
I do remember when changeling Martok made everyone cut their hands to bleed and show that they weren't changelings (obviously results are falsifiable), his was red and everyone considered it normal.
Kor
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