durandal1707--disqus
Durandal_1707
durandal1707--disqus

How about the Polish-Muscovite War? It's certainly one of the weirder historical events I've read about on the Wiki. Some highlights:

I want an easter egg I want an easter egg I want an easter egg I want an easter egg I want an easter egg I want an easter egg I want an easter egg I want an easter egg I want an easter egg I want an easter egg I want an easter egg I want an easter egg I want an easter egg I want an easter egg I want an easter egg I

The Foghorn Leghorn cartoons always bothered me as a child, because in so many of them, it was clear Foghorn was going to die soon after the cartoon ended, whether by Henery dragging him home for dinner or some other fate.

There's one thing I don't get about this episode. If they're not allowed to use things like phasers, tricorders, etc. because they're not period-accurate, how the heck are they allowed to use Odo's shapeshifting abilities?

How would Hurley have won that? Even if his answer had been counted as correct, he still would have had only $12,600. The kid on the left ended up with $66,600!

Ah, "Far Beyond the Stars", the episode that said, "Always stay the course and follow the Prophets, because if you do, you'll get mercilessly beaten down in life, lose everything including your sanity, and in the end accomplish nothing." That kind of experience would change my perspective, all right. It'd make me say

But if a potential timeline isn't "real", and then it is because they collapsed it, then something changed. It just plain doesn't work.

I'll take your word for it. I have no desire to watch that episode again.

He knows that it's a priceless, archaeologically valuable artifact. That alone should be enough to not break it over some vague feeling that "I felt I should do it."

So aim the thing at the evil one, then. They were separated by a really wide space, and they weren't moving anywhere.

Yeah, but she used it at the wussy setting and just drove it out. If the stupid thing's such a dire threat to the universe, just use the full setting and kill the thing. Or, I dunno, just don't destroy the (undoubtedly priceless and historically important) artifact it's trapped in in the first place. Any of these

The Reckoning is probably my least favorite episode of the series. Yes, I hate it more than Profit and Lace. Not only is the story awful (Sisko is willing to sacrifice Jake for the sake of some religious mumbo jumbo? That's just wrong, to say nothing of the cheesiness of all the glowy eyes and CGI light-show battles),

Amy and Rory don't count as deaths of beloved companions?

Tom or Colin?

I just realized something about this episode — it effectively means that the events of Day of the Doctor always happened. The Doctor never did actually destroy Gallifrey, since everything that happened during Matt Smith's run — the TARDIS exploding, the cracks in the universe, the anti-Doctor alliance, the Silence,

I'm a bit nervous about the change — I hope Capaldi doesn't end up being rude or unkind to his companion(s) the way his frightening demeanor seems to threaten.

Agreed about Wrongs. Gul Dukat, intergalactic dictator and war criminal and one of the most dangerous men in the quadrant, makes a dangerous journey across battle lines to… make a "Your Mom" joke.

Agreed, but it's a weakness of the first season inasmuch as its purpose is to introduce the show to new viewers who aren't familiar with the classic series.

…but it does make the Doctor look like a bit of a gullible idiot. But then, is that such a bad thing?