A topic for the discussion of Farscape, Smallville, and Due South. Beware possible invasions of Stargate, Highlander, or pretty much any other "genre" (read: sci fi or fantasy) 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.
Of course, acting on the response is what separates the fidiots from the normal people.
This, exactly.
I know I've sais this before, but after I saw Martin Sheen as a pedophile in The Little Girl Who Lives Down the Lane when I was about eleven, I've had a very hard time watching him in anything else, because he really creeped me out.
If I saw him on the street, though? Not a word. If I was introduced? I would politely shake his hand. I'm sure he's a perfectly nice person.
I just don't get how that disconnect -- the acting on it part -- happens more than, like, once in a blue moon.
ita, it doesn't work if
someone moves a single one of them,
but
if you look at the orientation, each statue is being looked at by another statue (sometimes more than one). Because they are being looked at, they remain stone, and because they remain stone, they can't move out of a line of sight.
You have to accept that
their stony glares count as stone-inducing glares, but that was already set up when the Doctor explained the "weeping" pose.
PC, shouldn't
turning the light off
accomplish the same thing, though? And it will happen.
Dr. Who:
Maybe the statues have really good night vision?
Well, they did opt to
turn out lights in their final
attack, so perhaps. But the same thing goes for a couple of
drop cloths.
Lalala! Doesn't matter. Lovely ep.
Things aren't looking very bright for The Dresden Files:
The network was supposed to decide last week whether or not to give "The Dresden Files" a second season, and as time wears on, things are looking a little bleak for the show.
"SciFi mostly responds to their own internal marketing studies, several of which they've already done on the show," executive producer Robert Hewitt Wolfe told fans on author Jim Butcher's official Web site. "Their research hasn't said what we've been hoping for, unfortunately."
Does Sci-Fi make sure to actually talk to sci-fi fans? It seems like an obvious question, but judging from their programming decisions...
They only talked to wrestling fans.
I wonder what the ratings are for the wrestling and offtopic stuff.