A topic for the discussion of Doctor Who, Arrow, and The Flash. Beware possible invasions of iZombie, Sleepy Hollow, or pretty much any other "genre" (read: sci fi, superhero, or fantasy) show that captures our fancy. Expect adult content and discussion of the Big Gay Sex.
Marvel superheroes are discussed over at the MCU thread.
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.
Defying Gravity: Huh. Now that's eeeennterresting.
Anybody else seen it?
Having the mission based on
guilt
and having everyone challenged to
overcome something very personal, how will this spool out
?
I'm wondering about the
outliers. The religious 'fanatic', the one who sees nothing but is fascinated by it anyway
and
the one who sees it differently and is angry about it
.
Again, I say 'huh.'
Yes, I saw it and I was actually irritated. I think episode 9 should have come MUCH sooner (like the pilot), because to hang on to all of these for 9 episodes is patently ridiculous. Who laid out the plot of this series anyway?
I'm not sure I find it as interesting that the mission is based on
guilt. But I'm wondering what the writers had planned for the other members of Beta's family. I do like the fact that two members of the crew can't yet see Beta. I do wonder why Jen is there.
le n, if I were the
psychologist,
I'd suggest that Jen
might be connected to one of the other entities.
I agree that the core
of the story ought to have come much earlier in the plot unfolding.
In a way, it feels like a
whole different show now.
Perhaps that is
purposeful. Put the viewers as off their footing as the crew members
.
I don't think that
two of the crew can't see Beta--Wass knew it was fractal right away. I think it's just Jen that can't see it.
I'm glad this didn't happen very early on. If it had they'd have had to tell it very differently to keep my interest--I found the first half of this episode very boring. It's not great sci fi. I'm there because I like Ron Livingston and Malik Yoba and some of the other actors.
yes, sorry. I meant that 2 didn't get hallucinations.
this show is barely hanging on to my interest now. If this showed during the regular tv season, I wouldn't have made it past the pilot, I don't think.
(notice that the first victim was watching XF?)
Yep but did you also pick up the second XF reference. When
Broyles was facing the senate hearing, the agro Senator actually referenced the X-files as being "real" when he said, "the old X designation"
.
I hate what they did to Charlie. I really liked the character. Unfortunately, the way they handled it was also stupid and clumsy, with plot holes you could fly the Enterprise through.
There's no way the soldier could've transformed into Charlie in the time alloted. "He" needed to strip Charlie, then divest himself of the nurse's uniform. He then had to redress in Charlie's clothes, and then redress the nurse in her clothes, before hiding Charlie's body
.
I won't even mention the forensics and bullets.
Unless there is a
second soldier who killed the first one and took over Charlie's body.
Although that still has a fair-sized plot hole.
You don't need to white font, jimi. It's aired in the US.
last year, Harvard was offering nearly full rides to people who were low-income and lower-middle class. This is not happening post-October 2008 crash, but they were doing this before then.
Getting back to this (re: Zoe on Eureka), Harvard is still offering those generous financial aid packages. Post-crash, they've been doing their budget cutting elsewhere: [link]
well, good to know! I heard they were limiting these...
Well, that was a tight hole Warehouse 13 just wrote itself into. Could they really have killed Artie? And I'm disappointed that Leena was a traitor--primarily because I didn't think she was well enough drawn for me to care. She was just an airy fairy mumbo jumbo good guy. The others were much more real.