Teal'c also managed to stay up when the deceleration from hyperspace occured the first time they showed it.
Ilona Costa Bianchi ,'The Girl in Question'
Boxed Set, Vol. 1: Smallville, Due South, Farscape
A topic for the discussion of Farscape, Smallville, and Due South. Beware possible invasions of Stargate, Highlander, or pretty much anything else that captures our fancy. Expect Adult Content and discussion of the Big Gay Sex.
Teal'c has principal character powers.
Teal'c is da Man.
Teal'c is da Man.
Indeed.
Okay, I did watch Century City and it wasn't as terrible as I thought it would be (I watched it because there were quite a few actors that I liked in the cast.)
Maybe the genetically engineered son that turns out to be gay story is later -- because it definitely wasn't in the pilot.
(There was a guy who was suing the government for the return of a vial that was taken from him by customs -- turned out he had cloned his son for medical reasons. . . but there were further twists -- that was the main story. And one of David Paymer played the father.)
Saw this on lj:
Canadian History Television newsletter item: Richard Sharpe returns to the network with swords swinging and canons blazing. Set in the midst of the Napoleonic Wars, Sharpe is based on Bernard Cornwell's best-selling books.
The mini-series begins Friday, March 19 at 9 pm ET/PT.
Teal'c has principal character powers.
And? Superglue.
Jeri Ryan (or is it Jere?) up for a part as a witch in a new tv show.
(Kim Delaney is playing the other role!)
An interesting post on merits vs. tastes in fandom selection in light of the discussion here yesterday, link gacked from metablog.
I don't know. I'm as sick as anyone of people proclaiming, "My show/my BSO/my OTP is better than yours because... it's better! Mines rule and yours suck!", but there *are* objective standards, surely. I mean, am I being unreasonable when I boggle at someone from SV fandom who accuses Buffy/Angel of lack of depth?
Well, yeah, there are objective standards. But they don't always influence our emotional response to something. I can watch something that's brilliantly written, acted, and filmed, and yet still leaves me cold.
My love for Farscape has managed to withstand the objective mess of the fourth season, whereas my love for TXF didn't survive the catastrophe of seasons 8 and 9.
There's a great John Carroll column I once saw, about how life is too short to hate what you love.