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I know that's the real answer, but based on what's happened so far, I'd say forgetting Ray's name and such was just a fake-out. Krieger did have the most apparent head-wound in animation since the Warner Bros. heyday. He was probably just concussed from falling 40 feet on to a concrete launch-slab.

I wonder if all the people who were super-pissed that five minutes of the episode was taken up by an ostensibly-genuine trailer (see comments to the review of that episode. I won't because I'm about to go to sleep and don't have that kind of time, but they were there. I saw them.) feel better that it was only half or

For most of the run of the series, Archer and Mallory generally call her "Carol." They say "Cheryl" from time to time, and the others use "Carol" occasionally, but that's the general pattern.

A couple weeks ago at work the boss remarked on the sea of "clicks" as we all worked on our computers with our headphones in. I immediately found a clip of that line and posted it in our office chat.

I know I'm tough on the Tenth Doctor, but his little grin at the beginning of "Utopia" when it looks like he's successfully ditched Jack again is totally the worst thing he ever did. Loves his enemies and hates his friends, that's him in a nutshell.

He probably could've thought of anything. What if his name was Professor Bob? Then the Face of Boe could've said, "Beware of Bob." Though the Doctor probably would've figured it out before it was nearly too late.

Polarization is a real problem in disagreements like this, though. Sheridan doesn't say it explicitly, but it's implied heavily when he lays out the Vorlon/Shadow conflict for the rest of the cast in "The Summoning" that the Vorlons and Shadows both became more extreme over time, and that their original arrangement

Now that you mention it, I remember on a Myst fan-forum I frequented a long time ago, someone actually went to the trouble of completely mapping out the maze, including all the wrong turns and blind alleys.

I had a similar problem when I was little. My dad had won Myst as a door prize at the local Mac User Group (is there a place we can talk about MUGs? Now there's something that got stomped by ubiquitous internet), a year or two before we actually got a machine with a CD-ROM. I'd wanted to play it when we did, and I

There are only so many times you can track down one of those crazy globes-on-sticks chairs before you decide to just nut up and deal with the soft, cushy furniture designed for humans.

Honestly, I think if I could get an iPad for, say, five bucks, I'd probably accumulate them to a ridiculous degree and pass them around by hand and not really care if someone kept one to read whatever was on it. You could also fanwank some sort of cyber-security, DRM, or chain-of-custody policy thing for not

The Defiant II did have a slightly different bridge. New carpet, the Captain's side consoles were replaced with larger, blockier models, and the table in the back was replaced with a standing station. I don't remember specifically what, but I think O'Brien mentioned something about having to readjust the new engines

Creepy brother! I'll never forget that little gem, even if both of them do.

And the more times they said "lost an arm" rather than "died," the more likely it became that Quarles inexplicably survived.

My guess is episode-stealing cameo-scene where he testifies in the Trial of Boyd Crowder. Possibly straight-jacketed and wheeled in on a hand-truck.

Now that I think about it, I doubt the File is something official that's been accruing since day one, but a side project that Raylan's been putting together more recently. I'd guess it was after Boyd let Arlo take the fall for killing Devil, since I doubt Raylan would let him go after that if he happened to have a

But, seriously, Boyd's army buddy killed Tim's army buddy. That probably gave him a more-than-professional interest in Crowder Criminal Enterprises and Dairy Queenery, Inc.

The only thing they have in common is that the Kziniti were half the inspiration for the name. So little was established about the Tzenkethi (they had a war with the Federation, and they are led by an "Autarch"), they could go in any direction. Robert Hewett Wolfe imagined them as reptilian, and the novel-verse has

The splitting one-book-into-two thing was kind of a thing for a while. It mostly stopped once the publishing schedule slowed down to one book a month rather than two (which was partially a result of a tendency towards longer books. You'll soon reach David R. George's first DS9 book, which is such a doorstopper the

If anything, I'm disappointed this gimmick didn't start earlier.