avclub-b3fe4f5a8793b5499e143cdf1253caff--disqus
ECheung
avclub-b3fe4f5a8793b5499e143cdf1253caff--disqus

Protruding from a Ferengi forehead, or with a mouth full of Ferengi teeth?

I wonder if part of the reason he doesn't carer is because Weyoun knows there'll be a Weyoun 6 along soon enough.

He's Felix's ex-wife?

Maybe not lax exactly, but a different type of maintenance.  If there's a tear in the carpet, pull the carpet up and place some "deck plating" underneath it.  If the paint chips, touch it up with something suggestive of what might be underneath.

I thought that comment was about JJ's movies.

By "The first movie" I assume you mean Star Trek 11, from 2009, not Star Trek: The Motion Picture?

Ira Stephen Behr's review of the pilot was that he would have ditched the Starfleet uniforms, certainly on the Maquis crew members.  Ronald D. Moore said he would have developed the crew of Voyager as a culture that might return home.  They'd hang paintings on the walls, have alien plants in the hallways, but wouldn't

Serialization is still considered risky by studio and network heads.  They still don't want to do it.  Just because it's common nowadays doesn't mean it's not something that's hard-fought or exactly safe.

It might not have been specified on screen that the Borg were from the Delta Quadrant for a while, but I remember that it was generally accepted as their location even before Voyager premiered.  I considered them encountering the Borg as inevitable.

The filmmakers claimed they were interested in opening up the international markets.  So, casting someone from the second largest film industry on Earth would do so.  Even is someone isn't known outside of Bollywood that still means they're massive stars.

Well the comments threads here (and so much of 21st century speech) are basically like the Tamarian language in TNG's Darmok.

Each "part" will be split up into several installments of roughly one hour each.

And Gary X thought this was unrelated.

Doesn't pre-JJ Trek tend to get called the Prime Universe (unless it takes place in the Mirror Universe or some other alternate timeline)?

I have a feeling JJ Abrams will be a better fit for Star Wars anyway.

At the time it was thought that TWOK took place in the early 23rd century, as it was never officially pinned down.  And the line was something like "200 years before you were born," which gave them further leeway.

What I mean is that the interesting things to do or interesting places to go must be fueled by the characters, that the show must be written with where they want to go in mind, otherwise it would likely be arbitrary.  The fact that you would watch a show with the characters from The Office on the Enterprise suggests

I'd say it was kind of the most Trek of all the Treks that ever trekked because it took a look at Gene Roddenberry's ideas and tried to tackle them with honesty.  The whole show was built upon one motive: show the consequences for anything that happens or anything that did happen.  And in doing that, not only did it

1. He seemed okay about it.
2. It was kind of fair, since he did so much without telling her.
3. She only showed the house.  It wasn't sold until after the scene in the front yard.  We heard the guy say they'd take it, but Jim could have refused right there if they weren't all on board.  That's the most important point

Robert California wasn't in "Goodbye, Michael."