jwdd
j5000
jwdd

Yes, that was my understanding, and before they know who he is, correct?

...Yeah, I can admit to that.

The Pink Ranger didn't have a Shogunzord because the Japanese series they took the zord footage from (you know this isn't really an American show, right?), Ninja Sentai Kakuranger, featured a red, white, yellow, blue, and black ranger, with only the white ranger being female. So really, if the translation had been

I'd say it's a virtual guarantee that Kirk being raised in a broken home drastically altered him (more than probably any other character up until the events of Star Trek). He should have entered the academy in 2250 at around 17 (presumably serving four years), whereas it took until 2255 (age 22) for him to be

Then I think we are in agreement (at least in part because I am just now realizing how my initial breakdown may have excluded any possibility of criticism).

I wouldn't put you in the "dick" category, at least not based on that. That's a perfectly legitimate remark about the movie, it's not complaining about canon, it's not bitching about JJ Abrams ruining the universe, just an observation about how the movie worked and how it could have potentially worked better. I'm

While it is a fine Star Trek film, and it may even be the the best one (it's definitely better in certain areas), give me Star Trek VI any day. Give me a villain quoting Shakespeare over the comm instead of a villain quoting Moby Dick any day.

Sir Ben Kinglsey.

I love the term "Cumbershot"... I just worry that it might already be in use, meaning something different, in Sherlock slashfiction.

1) Is that accurate? Without rewatching all of Space Seed, it appears as though the reference in the episode is that him being Sikh, from northern India is simply a guess (based on what, exactly, I'm not sure, appearance?) before they are woken up and long before we learn that this is Khan Noonien Singh. That was a

Well obviously!

I think the person asking the questions here is a bit of a dick.

Don't wander off, don't touch things! Rule 1!

Dalek was a fine episode. Rose was just being irresponsibly stupid. That was, kind of, a part of her character as she was learning to travel with The Doctor, but still, she could have saves many innocent lives if she had just done was she was told and not touched the murder-bot.

If he's threatening to destroy the universe, you've got to try. Even if he beat you once, if the universe is at steak, you've got to be willing to die trying to save it, not to just chill in the corner accepting your defeat quietly.

When the universe is about to be destroyed, even if you previously tried and failed, you've got to give it everything you've got to try to stop it, not just stand there and think about how you were already defeated once and might as well not try again.

That would mean that somewhere between The Doctor's Wife and The Dalek Asylum, we've crossed from watching one timeline to watching a completely different timeline. I'm not inclined to believe that because it's full of complications. More likely, he just picked a TARDIS at random, some Time Lady suggested another, he

There was a lot of, umm... "debatability" in that episode. There were a few things I kind of liked, a lot of things I thought might be really bad, and from somewhere around 25 minutes in, I knew that there wasn't going to be a satisfactory conclusion, but the ending cliffhanger/reveal, man, that has got me so excited

I take issue with the terminology on the image. That isn't the original version of the USS Enterprise, that is the refit version of the "original" Enterprise (what is "original" when dealing with divergent timelines is difficult, though I suppose the "new" timeline couldn't exist without the "old", so that may

If the Vulcans came knocking tomorrow, that would be about 60 years too early, and I think you know that.