I have a bruise on my knee. Can I play?
The Minearverse 4: Support Group for Clumsy People
[NAFDA] "There will be an occasional happy, so that it might be crushed under the boot of the writer." From Zorro to Angel (including Wonderfalls and The Inside), this is where Buffistas come to anoint themselves in the bloodbath.
Also, I'm taking out some issues I've read around the net, here.
I've seen in two places now, one you'd expect and one you might not, where people seem to want it to be more than just a cop show and take a supernatural spin! Like they want to catch Web putting on a helmet in his hyperbaric meditation chamber. Ok one of the places was the X-Files board but the other wasn't!
I think eventually hidden agendas, ulterior motives and all that good stuff will make it's way toward the surface and that may help people think differently.
putting on a helmet in his hyperbaric meditation chamber.
To ensure that his head wouldn't explode?
...I always wondered what people with headcolds would do if they had to be in hyperbaric chambers. Every time you want to blow your nose, boom!
...What a great idea for a crime show! Head-exploded corpse, locked-room mystery! I am genius!!
She's unprofessional. She goes off on her own, disobeys superiors, and jeopardizes investigations not because of inexperience but because she thinks she knows what's best. I don't think that's a fault of the show; she's Mulder to Paul's Scully.
Dang, you made me think. You're right. She's unprofessional. To try to make some sense, she's internally consistent and Web's use of her is consistent to both characters, so I have no problem with her being kept in the group.
Going back to the 4 at the door nit: My husband didn't understand why the 4 of them all pointing their guns at the little girl dropped me out of the story. He laughed at that point. I think I was too caught up in the tension to be able to see the funny. I wanted them to be smart, professional, successful, and to catch the bad guy. I wanted to have some proof that they were covering all the doors (Danny used his walkie talkie to have the outside guys give their 20, but they didn't all speak up before the door was opened, which had me expecting that their perimeter had been compromised and they were DOOMED!) I think at that point I was so immersed in the story that I couldn't see the joke for worrying that the bad guy was going to somehow beat them and bad ugly death that the kids would find first would be the result.
This is Allyson's point, though. People harp on stuff like this:
Most notably, the assertion that Rebecca is too unprofessional at her job, and shouldn't be an FBI agent and therefore the show is ridiculous.
when that is in fact a Key Plot Element, not a failure to appropriately portray the FBI.
This is Allyson's point, though.
Really? I wouldn't call that a nit -- I'd call that a misreading of the source text. To me, nits exists, but aren't relevant to the story.
I'd call that a misreading of the source text. To me, nits exists, but aren't relevant to the story.
Oh yeah, agree. I think (and I don't mean to keep speaking for Allyson, I just happen to agree on this point) that this particular post was a separate complaint from the one about nits. And it read to me like some people were reading that post as though the problem was whether Rebecca is or isn't professional. There's no question that she's not. But it's not a show flaw.
I don't think she's particularly unprofessional either, I think it's just a man's world and it's easier to see big lumpy guy who was on Firefly (HILARIOUS with the gun instruction, btw) as a professional, hard-core G-man than dainty rape-victim Rebecca as a bad-ass. Her hair is awful pretty and she's doesn't have the bravado (yet, and maybe never will) of the red-haired girl, so she tends more toward the model-actress archetype than the mad, bad and dangerous to know archetype.
I don't think it would be hard to change the perception tho, with a few training montages (whoo! who's with me?!) and the no-doubt pending exploration of how Becky Thatcher or whatever her name is became Rebecca Locke.
the no-doubt pending exploration of how Becky Thatcher or whatever her name is became Rebecca Locke.
Oh, nitpick! In the article about her disappearance, the caption described her as Becky Locke, not Becky George.
Just watched the third episode.
I think it was my favorite one yet. I may have a few piddling complaints about it to make, eventually, when I have time and have read all the comments made by everybody else, but for now, just want to express that show still good.
So very good.