douayrheimschalloner--disqus
Douay-Rheims-Challoner
douayrheimschalloner--disqus

He's British, where gun control is just the commonsensical view, and Morgan's a great exporter of 'this is something all us Tory chaps seem is right and proper and therefore it is proper for you all.'

I don't care if it plays into his hands.

I played the original Digimon back when it was still more of a Tamagotchi clone, and no other Digimon, and no Pokemon, so I guess that makes me a Digimon guy.

The only thing they have in common is they're gay white men who get published. Wilde's poems contain classics, Milo's contain plagiaries.

But part of Milo's rise to fame isn't just being protested, it's inserting himself into controversial stories. He decided to be one of the principal journalist defenders of GamerGate (having expressed contempt for gamers mere months before and then rebooting himself with intern help as a man who has an opinion on the

He planned to aid them in exposing undocumented students, and has previously doxed a trans student at campus. This argument would have a logic to it if all Milo did in colleges was act like an asshole, as opposed to actively trying to hurt the student base.

No doubt, but I assume Farscape was also adjusted for inflation. It seems a better metric, anyway, stuff on at the same time.

It was two sets of 1 million dot something, with Farscape's being higher. But, as you say, a decade apart and a different standard for SFX.

Yeah, I wasn't comparing it to TNG. I'm using my braintrust of 'stuff I heard online circa 2001,' which told me Voyager was two million, and Farscape was one million.

Not that I've heard, but it is technically accurate.

Nichols is doing a movie. Previous flash-in-pans reboots have been either, best I recall, but more typically TV.

Well, we'll see. I was kinda hopeful about the Tim Minear thing.

True, but the war somehow 'ended' in the season four opener, because of them stopping the space nazis from the future.

Ah but Daniels specifically says it's coming to an end! …somehow.

Eh, it had its moments, ups and downs and all. Enterprise was about three different shows and was a little messy (with the first iteration, bridging the gap between Star Trek-type space opera and something closer to the space program, probably getting the shortest shrift from fans.)

They've said they'll be changing the design look a lot, but whether or not they explain any of it, who knows - they may just introduce these new Klingons and act like Klingons have always looked like this (which, of course, is exactly what Trek did about the forehead bumps for decades.)

Every few years somebody announces a new remake (most recently from Jeff Nichols.)

No, the Klingons looked essentially the same from 1984 to 2005.

Yeah to be clear I'm speaking regulars (and recurring characters who were, well, close enough, like Jool and Sikozu.) The series continued to have a medley of unusual character designs for the guest stars.

There wouldn't have been!