avclub-6a1a328b6784003444d96cc2c0a80a7a--disqus
Scott Hardie
avclub-6a1a328b6784003444d96cc2c0a80a7a--disqus

The alien conspiracy storyline was concluded by "Two Fathers"/"One Son" back in the middle of season 6. There were a few elements still remaining like CSM and Krycek, but the Syndicate was dead and the conspiracy was over, and the show actively sought a new direction. The "humanity originated from space" revelation in

There was one official "Choose Your Own Adventure" movie already, where the DVD menu system presented the choices after each scene. Netflix has it, and a couple of off-brand imitators as well.

Good points. I hadn't thought of Trek that way, because for us, DS9 aired at 11:30pm on Saturday nights. You could always tell when you reached the second half of the episode, because after midnight, the commercial breaks were saturated with corny ads for phone sex hotlines, with lusty women in lingerie begging you to

If Giancola was truly only interested in his film's commercial prospects, I would think he would be secretly glad that Smith died, because the wave of news coverage and the chance to label this her last film would only have helped it sell.

If Giancola was truly only interested in his film's commercial prospects, I would think he would be secretly glad that Smith died, because the wave of news coverage and the chance to label this her last film would only have helped it sell.

Sometimes the similarity is due to a single company churning out the same commercial for different markets and hoping that nobody will notice.

Sometimes the similarity is due to a single company churning out the same commercial for different markets and hoping that nobody will notice.

Even if they wrote out Walt in seasons two and three for Malcolm David Kelley having growing too fast, the show's main timeline then jumped ahead several years. By the time John Locke met Walt on the streets of New York, the character's age had caught up with the actor's. He could have easily returned to the island on

I'm glad to see that I'm not the only one who found the moral reasoning in this two-parter a little fishy. Worf obsesses about Mogh's potential dishonor at allowing himself to be taken prisoner rather than ending his own life, and explains this Klingon "virtue" to everyone who will listen. Then Worf is taken prisoner

Hooray for DS9 coverage! If you didn't cover TNG so well, there wouldn't be such a groundswell for the other shows. Your work is appreciated.