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

Nah, I buy it because they generally did try to fill their supporting roles with the best actors they could find. There were other situations, like Kasidy, where they kind of gave them a few episodes as a test to see if they would work in a much larger capacity. If Kasidy didn't work after the first episode or two,…

TOS: Titles often derived from Shakespeare
TNG: A mix of all of the other listed styles
DS9: Titles often derived from the Bible or mythology
VOY/ENT: One word versions of Big Bang Theory titles

I've often thought that the Cardassians are basically what the Romulans were supposed to be.

I think you're in for a treat!

SPOILERS

Troi sensitized him?

Imagine if Buck Henry made a show about that ragtag team of Section 31 misfits, a second chance at a sci-fi sitcom!

I presume Zack will have other shows, like the rest of Python?

It was a decent Bashir and O'Brien episode. My main problem with that one is that it didn't have the scope and budget that they wanted for it to work. But…SPOILERS, if it did, and the could go off the station into a surreal wonderscape, they wouldn't have built in the twist that pushed toward the end of the episode.

I just totally possessed that Romulan dude! [easy listening air guitar lick]

The first post in this thread has a tag. I hope he avoids the entire thread for that reason.

I did say he had a vaccine, not that he cured it. My point was that even that is quite an achievement for any doctor. But if that disease was based on the disease from "The Quickening," that doesn't seem like a good choice, unless they wanted Bashir to have a head start in curing it.

I hope the below isn't too much of a spoiler:

How many plague cures does one doctor have in him anyway? Even a genetically enhanced genius doctor like Bashir was lucky to get a vaccine in "The Quickening."

How about BoGi? As the precinct (Brooklyn 99, or "B") secretary (person who takes calls, or "Call"), it could be BoGi B-Call (or BoGi/B, Charles).

But a standard 22 episodes did air. They just didn't space them out like they used to.

At least Al got his wife back, I guess.

Does anyone remember a documentary on the silent era that might have aired on PBS in the 90s, narrated by Patrick Stewart? What I remember most was how dangerous it was to be a stuntperson back then; how it seemed like lots of people died during some productions.

I think I saw my fair share of Disney shorts I think, but Looney Toons were just way funnier. They had an anarchy that Disney could never reach.

I just saw this last week on a different release, The Harold Lloyd Comedy Collection, Volume 2. I think the Leonard Maltin commentary is taken from that. The other extras sound interesting anyway.