breakingrad
ToddG
breakingrad

Also, how do they have any grounds for extradition?  Has a Klingon ever been convicted of a similar crime in one of their courts?  I highly doubt it, especially given that the Klingon lawyer's whole argument was basically "He was acting like a Klingon!  We need to judge him for it!"   Wait, what?

He starts to rebuild his father's criminal enterprises, then gets hired by the coal executive and makes that big town hall speech, then basically goes to war with the Bennetts.

I mean, I guess that's how he called Kinsey to set up his escape to begin with?  But how did he do that?

I agree with most of the review, but I think the analysis of Boyd is applied a bit too broadly.  I think he fit in to seasons 2 and 3 quite well (2 especially), so I think the problem isn't so much that they don't know how to use Boyd, but that they don't really know how to tell this story over 13 episodes without the

Well, and what's interesting about that is that the Federation representative is in sole position of that power so, through his absolute unwillingness to use it, he's pretty much neutralized the offending mechanism.  Problem solved!

Indeed not.

I'm not sure it's fair to say they look dumb.  The situation is endlessly complicated by the fact that their gods are real.  The Bajorans know for certain that they exist, and that they have spoken, quite literally, to the Emissary.  To rebel against his instructions would be to rebel against the Prophets themselves,

I get what you're saying, but if it's a specific sheep-like adherence to only one institution, and the individual holding that position literally never tells them to do anything, how would we know it exists?  I guess what I'm saying is that I find it plausible that a socialized blindness for the instructions from one

I thought they were throwing the darts they found in the bar.

I have not seen the B5 ep, but I vastly prefer Bar Association to the Battlestar union episode, which would be my least favorite ep of the series by a significant margin if it wasn't for Black Market.

Well, and aren't his adoptive parents still around, too?  GET OVER YOURSELF, WORF.

Set phasers to "miss"!

Well, he also saved Kurn's life twice.

Also, that scene was quite reminiscent of Aliens.

The biggest laugh of the night for me was actually the sheriff hanging up on Boyd.

Also, even setting its critical/commercial success aside, the accusation seems to be predicated on the bizarre notion that a critic's opinion of a film is some immutable thing that cannot and should not ever change over time, which I find absurd.

Also, even setting its critical/commercial success aside, the accusation seems to be predicated on the bizarre notion that a critic's opinion of a film is some immutable thing that cannot and should not ever change over time, which I find absurd.

Also, even setting its critical/commercial success aside, the accusation seems to be predicated on the bizarre notion that a critic's opinion of a film is some immutable thing that cannot and should not ever change over time, which I find absurd.

That article is regarding flat-fee subscription streaming services.  Not at all the same business model as Amazon MP3/ITunes, who still have to pay a significant per-purchase fee to the labels.

Why were you rewatching it in a cave?