80srobot--disqus
80sRobot
80srobot--disqus

I know, I've been saying that, too. But the dog bled. However, yes, that dog could have been the latest tech.

I'm not a fan of the William is MIB in the past theory, so I went back and skimmed through the previous episodes. Now, I have to admit: it could fit.

They were running over budget, and had to shut down to rewrite the scripts for 7 to 10 to save money.

CHET…. NOOOOOOOOO…!!

About 100 years in the future sounds about right. Nolan and Joy hinted that the series is set sometime in the 21st century. I think it's the late 21st century (the 2080's or 2090's). I also think the $40,000 a day figure is not in our present-day value, but inflated value in the future. Thus, it could be "only" the

William and MIB are *not* the same man in different time periods. William is playing through a level that MIB has already played through — Lawrence's resurrection establishes that William is interacting with Lawrence in an earlier moment of Lawrence's narrative loop (before he might be captured and hanged).

So the Wild Bill-bot's return appearance has made me ask: Who's the Lady with White Shoes?

This is how I've been describing WW to friends: It's a sci-fi mystery drama. It's not sci-fi action. It's not even really a western. The park itself isn't a strictly historically accurate depiction of the American Old West.

You mean Arnold, not Arthur.

I want to see an extended flashback (perhaps an entire episode) that is set when the park first opened and was populated by those janky-moving robots. Creepy!

I doubt there will be an uprising. I don't know what will happen, but there's gonna be a WTF final moment to end this season.

Freak Show crossed over with Asylum.

This episode feels like a sneaky backdoor pilot for a TV series. I can easily imagine another episode with these characters.

What if… Barbara Keen will not be the future Barbara Gordon. Instead, Jim meets and falls in love with another woman who happens to be named Barbara, too. (Hey, in real life, most of us know several people with the same first name.) This would of course cause B-Keen to become even more jealous, and eventually she'd

Speaking as someone who likes Family Guy, the funny thing is that Chick's depiction of that show wasn't inaccurate.

Imagine being a Gen-X'er. The two leads are X'ers in their late senior years at death's door, and reliving their teen youth (the 80's). For me (and I bet many of the viewers of Black Mirror are also X'ers), this episode is bittersweet, a sobering dose of reality. One could see another layer with this episode:

This is the best episode of this season. (Yes I know many will contend this, but I'm declaring this.) I think "San Junipero" will get the attention of the Emmy voters next year.

My theory: that memory flashback that Maeve saw of the town street littered with dead people — those weren't hosts. Those were guests — actual humans who had been massacred by the hosts.

You have to remember that the narratives that are being played out in the park by the robots are kinda trite. This isn't an accurate realistic simulation of the Old West (which in reality wasn't much like what we're used to thinking it was like due to Hollywood).

Jurassic World and World War Z.