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Liron
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The witch could say, "what? You changed your mind, Klaus? Oops! too late!"

I have to agree on Elijah. I don't know why he's so scary. Objectively, he should be the least scary of all the brothers, since he's the most reasonable and mentally stable. Logically, he should be the one I should less fear to meet. Why is it then that he's so terrifying, when crazy, murderous Klaus and Reb are not

Babies can also gestate in 24 hours, be born as fully grown shadow/smoke monsters and go stab King Marcel on their very first night, never to be seen again. …it has happened.

It's even worse than that:
"I've only known you for two days, Ollie, and you're a worthless sissy-boy, and the other guy here is freaking Crixus.  Let's make out."

I can't begin to express just how thankful I am to the show because Ollie did not become a bow expert in a day just be being told "not to think about anything but the target and try again."

Because bosses and CEOs are actually people! almost as much as rich guys!

…since he returned to the US.

It's not damaged; it's still under construction.

2) Occam's razor: The St. Louis arch crumbled early on. Then, the terraformers buried the entire city. A whole new city was built right on top of where St. Louis had been. The Earth community built a new arch on the new town in memory of the human city that once stood in that spot and a symbol of their defiance to the

Although, from a plot perspective, having the nanothings be able to do almost anything is pretty horrible, from a technological perspective, if you build nano-sized robots that can replicate, cover the world, and cover the entire population inside and out; it definitely makes sense to make them programmable and

I think that the fact that "Jeremiah Crichton" is so universally reviled by Farscape fans, speaks volumes about this show. In lots of sci-fi shows, an episode with these effects and entertainment value, which, on top of that, added so much background to one of the main characters, would never be considered a bad

The reason why I'm not sure if she did it or not, is that, I think, Chiana would have given that same mischievous smile if she hadn't killed him, just to mess with Crichton.

I don't see how Irisa's makeup being easy is a negative point, considering it totally works. She looks defiant, scruffy, slightly wild-animalish, and commanding while still being likable and retaining some clear child-ness.

Are you sure about the "invertebrate" part?

I think Crais's offer was genuine-sounding; not really genuine. The review makes it sound like "honorable retirement" implicitly points to radiation-induced heat death for Peacekeepers. I think it genuinely describes something as pleasant as what Crichton thinks it describes.

To be fair, I think we all sort of realized that Moya was likely pregnant when we saw what Crichton saw… and we know that he's seen at least as much sci-fi as we have.

Her reaction to marrying D'Argo would have been one of disgust whether she was a Peacekeeper or a Peacekeeper's sister. For her to follow her heart like that shows equal greatness of spirit whether she was conscripted or not, since she was immersed into that culture through her immediate family anyway.

Plus, they're not only pop culture references. He also drops historical references, references to the classics, geographic references. So it's more "Earth references which include pop culture" than pop culture references for pop's sake.

"Evolution happens to populations, not individuals" as long as there is no vehicle to transmit a genetic change to every genetic unit (ie cell) simultaneously (or nearly so).
On a technological level advanced enough to inject you on the foot and precisely alter your brain for very specific and expected results,

Considering that the heroes killed dudes by pulling their lungs out their backs and shoving them over their shoulders, a pit of snakes might even seem kind of tame for the villain.