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That just has "six episodes, then out" written all over it.

You mean will it be cancelled after a handful of episodes, and develop a crazed fanbase that floods every internet poll until the end of time? No. Well, maybe the first part.

Reins. Reins. Hand over the reins.

They all got the same points for Return of the Jedi, though.

Did they magically make the story less crappy? No? Well, then, ignore it.

"It's much darker... It's a much more adult series. I think, thematically, in terms of characters and what they go through..."

The fact that it wasn't in HD was really the least of Encounter at Farpoint's problems.

I really like Caprica, too.

Because we're mammals. They're just mammal standard equipment.

I have that too, and I've been nothing but happy with it.

Those European explorers weren't privatized. And there's no evidence that privatization "reduces bureaucracy." Private companies can have massive bureaucracies. Ever seen a bank? Or Walmart headquarters?

I watched it over the break, too, and then I saw the fourth one on one of those marathons and thought, "what the hell. It's probably better than I remember." Oh god, it wasn't. Nothing highlights how truly bad Indy IV is like watching it immediately after Indy III.

Indiana Jones III.

Man, you seem really angry about this. Look, you're the one who kept bringing up the conceptual similarity to LoEG, not me. And, sure, I'm ok with random Victorian characters interacting, if it's done well. LoEG is a little gimmicky for me. I don't know where you were in 1999, but plenty of people criticized LoEG as

There's about a 60 year gap between Calvin and Christopher Robin. The League characters are all adults from the 1870s to 1890s. They could plausibly interact. They aren't from the same geographical regions but they're adult adventurers who can move around. League of Extraordinary Gentlemen doesn't require all the

The characters in League of Extraordinary Gentlemen were more or less contemporaneous. They were characters from Victorian fiction.

But it's not good fan fiction.

Well, even in fiction there are some rules and structure. This is as stupid as a story about Captain Kirk and his childhood nemesis Captain Nemo. Also, Moriarty is not a James Bond villain. If you put Moriarty in a Bond story, you might need to explain why Bond is battling a 160-year-old guy. If you don't, well, the

Our yellow sun keeps him from pooping.

But...Christopher Robin and Calvin aren't contemporaries. Or even from the same continents.