haha... this is exactly what I thought of.
haha... this is exactly what I thought of.
I found it interesting that perhaps they were able to prevent this particular event because Peter was there. He's not supposed to be in this universe.
The first people turned out to be Walter and the gang. They built the machine and wrote the book to give clues to the parts of the machine and sent it back in time as explained in last season's finale.
Olivia not telling Peter was somewhat understandable. What I don't get is Olivia and the entire Fringe team not getting Peter to tell them everything they know about the Observers.
I meant to say they are both double amputees. So both the man and the woman are each missing both legs (i.e. four missing legs). But as written, it means that both the man and the woman are at least missing one leg each.
I thought you were going to say he hid the fact that they are both leg amputees.
Regarding telescopes on the moon I reference "One Thousand Dollars a Plate".
haha.. me too. My mom always watched that show and all I can remember about it was that plot line.
I couldn't see Sutherland as anyone but Jack Bauer in this show. Running around with cell phones, punching people in the gut, that fast loud whisper talking trying to convey a sense of urgency. Yelling "Dammit!" just sealed it.
Saw this last night and thoroughly hated it. All the characters were so frustratingly annoying I just wanted to punch them all. But worse than that, Danny Glover appeared as the "magical negro" to present the worst kind of pseudoscience: That which confuses numerology for mathematics and twists quantum mechanics…
Half way through this show and I just want to punch everyone. Every character is so frustratingly annoying.
They were pretty annoying to begin with...
Who else cringed at the very end when he sat on the hood?? Seemed like sharp sheet metal might be sticking up from had hand axing and could have severed his gooch.
Video is now private?
I mentioned in another thread, but regarding the second episode: I don't think using humans to generate electricity is particularly efficient. I doubt people could generate enough power to offset the energy it takes to power their entertainment or even to produce the food they eat.
I would agree that the first episode wasn't really science fiction. Everything shown in "The National Anthem" is very much today. It focused on our interaction with media and the technology that brings it to us, but you're right; it's not science fiction.
Just watched all three episodes. Good, but rather depressing. Glad I stopped reading the article after the spoiler warning. The perpetrator in "The National Anthem" isn't revealed until the end credits, and it's much more interesting to watch wondering who it is.
yep
Step 3 Return