Wu and Adalind were the two that didn't get a partner in the mix. I think Trubel chasing Adalind would have been great.
Wu and Adalind were the two that didn't get a partner in the mix. I think Trubel chasing Adalind would have been great.
Nick fell for Rosalee.
Orphan Black better be here.
She's only 3 or something, despite how she looks. She's got the manners of a toddler, with the appearance and diction of a 10 year old, and the powers of… well who knows?
That would be one way it could work and assuming he planned it out. If it was more random, Hank could always have been going to get his own hair, and picked up Adalind's or Wu's too, off Rosalee.
When Holly bumped into the tray something dropped into one of the glasses, the one Wu drank from, because we saw it flash purple as the others had earlier. That's why Wu falls in love with Holly, not someone in the group. Can't say if it was his own or Adelind's because the other was 'wasted' on Hank.
While I'd have loved to have seen at least one same sex pairing, and Julievette-Adalind could have really caused repercussions long term, Hank not catching a break in his love-life is an on-going joke now, so I kind of liked it continuing here.
It could be a case of preconceptions - I've read the books, so I know what happens and I was expecting physics bending not a weird perspective shot. You weren't, so you saw it differently.
I'm not sure it's that high. It was common, certainly, but a lot of the time the couple would know each other because the alliance was one to be firmed up, so it wasn't a purely political thing like we see in the Eliot's case.
Yes, but you can use asteroids as gravity lances (or whatever you want to call them). You point them towards a gravity well with a tug or similar and let them go, and gravity does the work. You put the tug on the next one along…
SaoMagnifico is right, but yes, if Diogo didn't fire thrusters, the spin would have moved them apart. Diogo would basically stay still, Miller would move away as Eros spun.
While, to a quick eyeball, your maths looks right, we see Miller observing the angel on the prow of the Nauvoo about to ram, then the Nauvoo missing. There wasn't an hour's worth of acceleration - the Roci would have caught it as they were keeping station - Eros just "jumped" half its width and a bit more so the…
I don't remember the exact line, but they sent Bobbie and her squad off to boring guard duty somewhere last week. She bitched at the lieutenant about it.
it's just spinning under you, trying to push you out and off. If you want to see how (or just imagine it) put water in a bucket on a piece of string and spin it around horizontally and the water stays in the bucket. That's spinning and being inside. Now try and put something weakly sticky (like a post-it note) on the…
Spin gives you the feeling of gravity by pushing you down and out against the walls/floor. If you're outside, the station is moving but it's not pushing you down against anything, it's just moving under you.
I agree with a lot of what you've said here. The one moment, the marriage, I could have accepted. What they've done since, really no.
She doesn't suckle her young? She's an immortal, magical construct, not a natural creature, so you can't say anything about evolution really.
The marriage itself I kind of understood: in fantasy stories royalty always marries for politics not love, this was just an extension of that trope. I've got to say I would have been just as happy if they didn't go there too, but it did seem like a trope lying around to subvert.
I've got to say I think you've missed two points in your review, Brandon.
I watched it on UK time, some months ago, but there was a line about "given your situation we felt this therapist may better suit your needs" or something - so I think there are synth therapists and human therapists and they're assigned on need rather than cost (although there may well be cost implications too).