avclub-0ae7484a9f3bbd2a21df420050c032ae--disqus
Douay-Rheims-Challoner
avclub-0ae7484a9f3bbd2a21df420050c032ae--disqus

So, we've now had three episodes set in explicitly post-Sycorax invasion Earth (these two plus "School Reunion.") The invasion is only mentioned in two; there's no suggestion that public knowledge of an alien invasion might make Trisha a little more open to discussing her child, and apparently when confronted with a

Wilkins mentions it in the review. Euros Lyn apparently is his name.

Dude me too exactly. Last thing Farscape needs is a chosen one. When people on the other site were going 'well the Peter Dinklage thing sounds more interesting' I couldn't argue against it.

I am not surprised at all both episodes has the same director. They both feel so damn limp.

I was talking about this with Doctor Livingstone earlier today. Episodes that acquire a notorious reputation, and episodes that acquire a legendary reputation, are going to have a hard time living up to those. I went in this week expecting to see the worst two episodes of Doctor Who and at the end, well, they could

I dunno there's a difference between Cybermen and slab-life as the latter is obviously not a choice. The Doctor's actions make sense to me, but that the show chose to go with that kind of ending didn't.

It feels like it belongs in Lexx, where dark, often sadistically nihilistic humour was sort of the point of that show. It feels very odd as a note for this program.

It's also that. Jason Isaacs likened it to Modern Family once which sounds about right.

True but there's no chance of it being the same at this point (particularly with the death of Jonathan Hardy, the voice of Rygel.) The idea for the telemovie could lead to a kind of Next Generation-ish relaunch of Farscape, assuming Monjo doesn't want it to be a once off thing.

Honestly the unbeleivably corny Olympics announcer was probably the thing I liked least about "Fear Her" because his blandly hyperbolic description of the flame just felt so odd.

Some newbie thoughts:
Doctor Who is pretty unambiguously a children's show. I sometimes wonder to what extent the argument reflects a different branding in the US; that BBC America aired it last year in a block with Orphan Black (a sci-fi show with some nudity and thus aimed at an older audience) is something that

Masi Oka has tweeted about dusting off his sword, so yeah.

Farscape got a miniseries (and a new telefilm was recently a announced as being written.)

"Boom Town" wasn't bad, but their two-parter was the low point of that season.

I miss you too, Mr. Morden.

I'd second @nathanfordseviltwin:disqus's recommendation of visual novel type games as they are by definition not dependent on skill (they're largely story-driven, choice-based things.) I'd particularly single out Telltale Games' Walking Dead - it's weird that the game version of that franchise is so well written and

But it came out before the ninth!

Well there is still the occasional terrible article (the odd pro-singularity post) but you're right that the staff is very responsive and there are many, many good articles.

The blogger I am thinking about is hella conservative so yes.

You'd think how slow could a half hour show be? And then they'd find a way.