Psst! Hey Sydney, would you like to see a trick?
Early ,'Objects In Space'
Spoilage Lite - The Return
[NAFDA] The place for casting and other vague spoilers, for those who merely want to wade, not drown, in the spoiler sea. Episode titles, writers, and preview speculation in black font. Exiting cast, TV Guide and other entertainment articles and their discussion white-fonted. Hard core spoilers are not allowed.
I don't want to go to Spoilers Outright, because I'll get spoiled for other things.
Um, the rumor about Enterprise is that the finale, written by Berman and Braga, will Dallas the entire series. That the entire run of Enterprise was actually a historical holo-novel being watched by Riker and/or Troi, from TNG. IOW, none of it actually happened.
Full discussion here: [link]
I can't imagine a more sincere way of saying "fuck you" to their fanbase. No wonder they lost 11 million viewers since the pilot.
OMG -- I read that rumor somewhere else (WX) too . . . a Newhart or St Elsewhere type ending.
I really didn't know it was still on.
The thing is that it's actually been pretty decent this season.
I can't imagine a more sincere way of saying "fuck you" to their fanbase. No wonder they lost 11 million viewers since the pilot.
It does explain how they are going to address the issue of having new style Klingons pre-TOS. Not that it's a GOOD way to address it.
Would it turning out to be all the fantasy of Benny in the hospital be better or worse? At the very least, it would have some basis in canon. Again, not that it would be any less craptacular.
It does explain how they are going to address the issue of having new style Klingons pre-TOS. Not that it's a GOOD way to address it.
Actually, they did explain the old style Kilingons a few episodes back. They were the result of an experiment grafting augmented human DNA onto Klingon DNA.
Actually, they did explain the old style Kilingons a few episodes back. They were the result of an experiment grafting augmented human DNA onto Klingon DNA.
Ah. I had heard it was going to be explained, but I didn't realize they'd already done it (I haven't watched an episode since the first season).
The effect was also reversible, which is no doubt to retcon the appearance of Kang, Kor, and Koloth over the years.
I don't understand why the ST people didn't just go with the explanation I had always assumed when Worf had ridges and the old school Klingons did not:
that all Klingons don't look the same and that some Klingons have ridges while some don't.
I mean fuck. Does it have to be that complicated?