USS Cole. October 12, 2000. https://en.wikipedia.org/wi…
Remember the Canterbury — and the Cole.
USS Cole. October 12, 2000. https://en.wikipedia.org/wi…
Remember the Canterbury — and the Cole.
You're right. Holden and Naomi were remembering the Canterbury in a conversation. OTOH, I don't think remembering it as a rallying cry.
Nobody remembers the Canterbury any more. I like how that Belter rallying cry faded away against the greater outrages of S2. Or was the Canterbury destruction an unsaid justification for spacing the inner planet refugees from Ganymede?
Any modern DVR has the options to pad out the end of a recording. We set the series programming on Elementary to record an extra hour. That's almost always long enough padding; it would have been last week if they had allowed it to run.
It was a sport with bouncing balls where the object is to get the ball through a circular ring. The only difference is that there's no net, no defenders, and the ring is a bit closer to the ground. If you squint just a bit it looks just like basketball.
A modern-day Sherlock would have comprehensive search alerts set up on his name. If Sherlock didn't already know that he was listed on the NYOOPI website, then something is badly broken. The entire upset between Sherlock and Watson about this organization listing is hopelessly contrived.
Nobody noted the brief appearance of "Moonrise Kingdom" actor Kara Hayward in this episode. There was nothing remarkable in what she did, but it was a thoroughly convincing job.