I always preferred the Doctor to solve problems by just having a few moments to push every button on an enemy console.
I always preferred the Doctor to solve problems by just having a few moments to push every button on an enemy console.
It is every nerd's knitting project. In college, three friends took up knitting, and all three of them built Doctor Who scarfs immediately. Its like the Who equivalent of building your own lighstaber to be a Jedi.
Well, people espoused the healing and enhancing effects of radiation back when it was first discovered in the early 1900s. People drank water with it, put it in their gardens, etc. I wouldn't be surprised if its origins in fiction started back then, or was rattling around in peoples heads.
The original Godzilla definitely has some slower moments that you wouldn't expect from a giant monster movie… when I watched it when it came on Netflix, I was surprised that they did a whole scene where a children's choir sang a memorial to the dead.
Or that it only works for shows that are watched by people so old they can only change the channel ever hour. Which explains why CBS's sitcoms are mostly all renewed.
Maybe it should be "It pays to have a random company subsidizing your TV show"
Yeah…. all good things must come to an end sometime, and I worried that another season would hemorrhage more of the core cast. I enjoyed having a John Oliver and Mike from Breaking Bad, but I did miss Troy a bit.
It would be cool to get Andy Serkis motion captured as the World's Smallest Horse.
You know what I realized just now? Coven totally missed out on doing a Lesbian version of the Reanimator decapitated head going down on a lady scene.
Or Letters to Timothy, where Paul spends a few hours shouting at women to just shut up and never try to have an opinion on anyone.
"Well kids, in the end, it was all in my head, but isn't that more real than actually meeting Jesus?"
Its also one of the more morally nebulous as far as God's own morality goes. God's best friend kills a dude and marries his wife, so as punishment, God aborts his children. Cause that's totally fair.
It was a fair shake for something that really never was able to live up to its premise. Its hard to replicate the Terminator feel in a show that just doesn't have the budget for a huge fight every episode.
Speaking as someone who lived out where there was barely a neighborhood, much less neighbor kids, a certain amount of organization is understandable. I may have roamed around in my yard, but I'd have to travel at least 4 or 5 miles to find another kid.
I remember my issue with it was that, for several episodes, the Federation and its allies had been pushed, pushed and pushed. And then suddenly they just pull up a huge fleet and head off to Cardassia in a big "Fuck it" move. Where'd those ships come from?
It was a gamble that the should have lost (and, looking at…
I'm still sticking with my dream ending to the Dominion War. All seems lost, and then, a hail from a huge group of unknown ships. "Gandalf, in the East, on the Third Day".
I'm still amazed we got 5 seasons of Fringe. And, really, 2 for Terminator and Dollhouse, as weird as those shows got.
I'm honestly not surprised. Pretty much every activity kids get into happens Saturday mornings. All my siblings children always had some game or another going when they were in prime cartoon age.
According to wikipedia, while its is legal to be gay, and you can serve in the military, that's basically the extend of LGBT rights, with the caveat that that there is the same dramatic difference in opinion between young and old people, so it could change rapidly in a few years.
The Hulk is just such a depressing superhero to anchor a movie around. Bruce Banner can't exactly cure himself, or there would be no sequel, so he's always running around trying to prevent the thing we all really want to see, and ultimately failing and feeling really sad about it later. Its not necessarily a recipe…