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Whats especially interesting is that this speech was used against Chaplain during the McCarthy era trials/witch hunts that ultimately led to Chaplain being exiled from the US.

Now they should have Martin Freeman, Ian McKellan, and Orlando Bloom cosplay as Stephen for his farewell next week.

The last episode of Enterprise is not what historically happened to the First ship , it is rather a interactive holo-novel that Riker was using

Ahsoka Tano

Not gonna lie, when Ben Linus was parading as Henry Gale, I wasn't a fan. It wasn't until his soliloquy after giving Ana Lucia the map to the hot air balloon that he reeled me in as a huge fan.

There were hints of Neville's badassdom from the very start, when he stood up to Harry, Hermione, and Ron in the first book before they went down the hatch. One of my all time favorite scenes is Dumbledore giving him a shout out for his bravery against his friends.

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Rory Williams: From annoying side character to the Lone Centurion

Neville Longbottom

One of the weirdest things for me is to think that all of that is completely sterile. Like, cleaner than a surgical theatre or a top of the line clean room, or isolation lab. Cleaner than the inside of a bottle of bleach. Here, life is everywhere. You can't get away from it. The concept of a completely lifeless planet

I wouldn't object to Wright... but man, would I love if they gave Nicholas Meyer another go. Of course, I seem to recall he had some issues with Into Darkness (I cannot fathom why, I typed sarcastically), so that may not endear him to the current producers of the series, or for that matter, endear them to him...

Go fetch Nick Meyer. I'll wait.

Avatar: The Last Airbender showed that a modern, ostensibly-aimed-at-kids show can still treat that audience as being smart, with well written characters and a developing story with deeper themes, and which isn't afraid to get darker at times. And everything's topped with fantastic visuals and music.

Before this, everything was pretty much Superfriends...

Star Trek: The Next Generation ushered in the golden age of sci-fi television in the 90s. It also proved that syndicated television can be a profitable model. Without it we wouldn't have Farscape, the Stargate series, Hercules, Xena, Babylon 5, Mutant X, Earth: Final Conflict, Andromeda, seaQuest DSV, Space: Above &

Deep Space 9 was one of the first shows to experiment with season long arcs AND it showed a darker side of the Trek universe specifically and scifi in general. BSG, Firefly, and alot of other shows that came after owe A LOT to DS9.

We are animals, but we are also MORE than animals. There is something quantifiably different about homo sapiens. I think we should embrace this more often; it means that we are more responsible for our actions. You can't blame non-sentient species for doing whatever their genetic programming tells them to do; our

They did a new IP, Watch Dogs. It was really boring.

Rome is an interesting case in terms of historical accuracy, because they played pretty fast and loose with the timeline, historical events and characterizations of real people while staying extremely true to the look and feel of the time period.

I'm not sure Xena is portraying any period in history in particular. It could just as well be a dark age in our future.

Rome did a great job with just about everything. That series was phenomenal. Gone too soon.