Apparently there is also a reference in season 3 to "Elegius" (according to the Wiki,) the reason for creating the nightblood in the first place.
Apparently there is also a reference in season 3 to "Elegius" (according to the Wiki,) the reason for creating the nightblood in the first place.
I found a clue in the Wiki.
The "13th" station was blown up, That was Polaris.
Yeah, but these stations had no RLV's (Reusable Launch Vehicles), they had to make those drop shops that ultimately only one was launched (which started the series) and the rest destroyed.
Baby bait-and-switch.
No. Murphy is an asshat, but his redemption was really when he stole the medicine earlier, but that only redeemed him as not being heartless. Saving the scrubber before Monty also showed he knows what to prioritize, if he didn't save the scrubber, they all die. So I give him the benefit of the doubt.
The last two episodes were certainly something.
Admittedly I expected the bait-and-switch, because otherwise there would have been no reason to make the obvious excuse to show the glamour-widget in the previous episode.
You're right, I kept typing Kryptonite when I meant Krpyton.
Everything is radioactive, it's just a question of how stable something is. The kind of radiation that kills humans is ionized gamma radiation (emissions of energy and not stopped by materials of low density (hence the reason for lead-based shielding)
At least the lead idea is less stupid than the "world engine" from the Man of Steel movie. It's fairly stupid (as per any superhero show) TV logic. The Daxamite's "allergic to lead" is basically stupid, especially how everyone escapes except Rhea, and Rhea basically disintegrates like she had been in an oven. Really…
Given if a super-smart computer existed, and found humans to be the problem, it would likely just research drugs to put in to water and food to promote healthier food, but at the same time degrade fertility in violent populations or fast-breeding populations that are a drain on resources. Yeah a computer would likely…
From what I get from the season finale trailer bit at the end:
- Clarke stays behind (likely winds up being the only person who can stay outside, thus ends up being the errand-girl.)
- Murphy/Emori are a couple. Monty/Harper are a couple. Bellamy originally rescued Echo, and Echo returned the favor here, so that…
ALIE's solution was the same as Skynet.
I like Samantha Bee, though sometimes the delivery feels more "I'm so mad about this but trying to put a happy face on it for your sake" in the same way a parent talks down to their child.
I think there is an implication here that Raimy's threat about not giving Robbie a good death maybe sends him to go "have a good death" like the Deacon did in one of the alternate realities.
I think most people clued in that there was something more to the Good Place, but we were given classic misdirection and told to focus on Elanor and later Jason so that we would miss the clues that would suggest it was the Bad Place all along.
I've finished watching the first 8 episodes (that comprise Season 1) on Netflix, and there's two concerns I find:
- Comparisons to the movie. The Netflix series expands on things that were glossed over in the film, the one I was expecting from the start was the Bad Beginning being substantially different since the film…
I think the actual numbers themselves were just staged to screw with the characters, especially Tahani. That said, the difference between a "good" selfless person and a "bad" selfish person is not very grey at all. Which is why the "medium" place apparently exists.
You're overlooking how Tahani's motives were Selfish, as they were about promoting herself.