There's big band-ish music (I think it's a live band, but it might be a recording) at the party in "Colonial Day." And yeah, Roslin and Adama talked about some popular mystery novels in one of the first few episodes.
Boxed Set, Vol. II: "It's a Cookbook...A Cookbook!!"
A topic for the discussion of Farscape, Smallville, and Due South. Beware possible invasions of Stargate, Highlander, or pretty much any other "genre" show that captures our fancy. Expect Adult Content and discussion of the Big Gay Sex.
Whitefont all unaired in the U.S. ep discussion, identifying it as such, and including the show and ep title in blackfont.
Blackfont is allowed after the show has aired on the east coast.
This is NOT a general TV discussion thread.
To me the context of the article, and the fact that it's an arts-section type of piece, signal that it's not going to be hard journalism. I don't usually read the Times, so I may have a poor idea what they normally run in the magazine.
The features in the magazine are usually pretty good, at least compared to their arts/style coverage in the rest of the paper.
Heh.
Of course, it'd probably help if I had seen The Lion King.
There was that original series ep where they landed on the disco planet. That almost counts.
Hell, there needs to be a BSG opera....
Nutty, "Robinette"'s car in G vs E was an orange Volvo -- in fact, "Orange Volvo" was like the second episode where he related how he thought it gave him an advantage because the bad guys never suspected that such a cool guy would drive such a nerdly car.
Nutty, "Robinette"'s car in G vs E was an orange Volvo -- in fact, "Orange Volvo" was like the second episode where he related how he thought it gave him an advantage because the bad guys never suspected that such a cool guy would drive such a nerdly car.
sigh. such a good show. they really need to put it out on DVD
This is me being Cranky McBitchypants.
It is 2005. It is NO LONGER FUNNY for a woman to insult a man by calling him a lady. In particular, "Ladies first" -- motions at guy -- is not funny. Even as performed by Claudia Black.
In other news, how many feminists does it take to screw in a lightbulb: THAT'S NOT FUNNY!
It is NO LONGER FUNNY for a woman to insult a man by calling him a lady. In particular, "Ladies first" -- motions at guy -- is not funny. Even as performed by Claudia Black.
Really? It's such a military thing to do, I don't even think of it as humor.
Sometimes the capacity of men amongst themselves to become hidebound in their gendered humor is staggering. Try hanging out in baseball fandom some time.
I agree it's not funny, and without any ironic contextualizing, it's an exceptionally irritating reflection of reality.
They didn't want to know what made him tick.
Which, considering they still didn't have any definitive is/is-not test at that point, was the kind of thinking that gets people into Iraq wars.
Do you expect that kind of complete objectivity in a Sunday Times magazine article, though?
Well, not objectivity, but putting something debatable into a piece, where the debatableness is not the point of the piece, tends to distract from the point of the piece, whatever that point is. There is entertaining digression, and then there is digressive argumentation, and the latter doesn't fold as seamlessly back into the main narrative as the former.
As you can see, because we've been discussing the digressive argument, rather than the piece's main thesis, this whole time.