@stepped_pyramids:disqus "I find that remark…insulting."
@stepped_pyramids:disqus "I find that remark…insulting."
Plus it would have spoiled a major plot point towards the end of the episode.
Sometimes she's on Wait Wait Don't Tell Me and CBS Sunday Morning.
What they need is a PADD with a flexible and expandable screen that could be used as and iPod Touch, a tablet, or a data projection screen.
Not that this counts, but I bet the Scalosians from "Wink of an Eye" and Kelemane's species in "Blink of an Eye" were short-lived, from our point of view.
The first thing that came to my head was that English in Star Wars is called Basic.
I agree. It seemed like the type of thing that might have been too much even for the stage, but on TV it was a little ridiculous.
SPOILERS
The Companion suggests there is at least a bit of a statement SPOILERS when they return when the producers say they kind of think the idea Hollywood has of the mentally ill is crap.
It's more like saying "ice cream is a frozen food."
Maybe Bashir doesn't know or care what the name of the Vorta language is and made something up? It sounds made up because its root is a real word in English, so to just throw a suffix on it makes it lose some credibility in my book. I think it's logical that the Vorta, Jem'Hadar, and the Founders probably all have…
Unless you think Dukat convinced him to spare humans so they could worship him. Weyoun "had no idea."
Why do you think they like baseball so much?
It's a hard life rocking out to raging Jem'Hadar six nights a week.
Just like Dhani Harrison.
Dukat's Head. They should have gotten Yeardley Smith to play Kira.
Marauders is probably a better western than North Star though.
I was thinking about this, but I think the problem would still be there if his PADD multitasked. I think it would have been more effective for a lecture if he used the Ward Room screen and had multiple windows (or uh, LCARS heading bars).
Those dogtags from the Galactica?
The nits are part of the process after the movie. The audience for the tweets were the very same people who watched the movie and were curious about the veracity of the technical data in the film.