melochromatic
melochromatic
melochromatic

I thought the same thing when Ed and Kelly were making such a big deal about the “relationship.” They were mad at Talla for not telling them about it, when it had all pretty much happened in the span of 20 minutes. Heck, they had kissed for the first time just 10 seconds before Kelly called Talla away. I liked the

It’s one of the most iconic lines in the whole show! They obviously wanted to slide the year in there early on but there were other places it could have been in that first scene. Bizarre choice.

Enemies in distress or holed up in a cave together stories are some of the best. There’s an episode of Star Wars Rebels that did a similar story and it’s absolutely perfect and ends up changing the course of the series.

The 20th century references are a total throwback to Star Trek, though. Particularly Voyager where as I recall Paris was obsessed with 20th century culture for no apparent reason.

That comment about contractions was one of the best things I’ve seen in sci-fi, and bless Seth for calling it out in such a natural way. I also liked the idea that the command codes would work but spit out useless info - that was a great touch I haven’t seen before (but has probably been used).

This was probably my favorite episode so far. The moment between Gordon and Ed in the mess hall was absolutely genuine (even Gordon asking if they’d “done it” didn’t ruin it) and I actually thought Gordon’s interest in joining the command program was well done and was pleasantly surprised that he didn’t abandon it at

I mostly enjoyed season 1 in spite of the jokes - I get it, it’s Seth MacFarlane blah blah but the timing and tone was always off, even for him.

Dreamland is bothering me too, especially after the Dreamland season of Archer (which was an appropriate name). Dankmire was a great name, and we’re stuck with Dreamland for the rest of the time? There were so many good planet names in Futurama.

It’s not really a fair comparison, though. In Westworld, decades and obscene amounts of money were spent trying to get the hosts to act as close to human as possible to create the most immersive park experience. In Extinction, the robots were created to do menial labor and it didn’t matter how obvious it was that they

I’ve been wondering if they were doing that with Lawrence’s daughter.

They’re still in prison, so to speak, particularly Philip as he never wanted to go back to Russia. They lost their children, they lost their home of more than two decades, and they’ll spend the rest of their lives looking over their shoulders for those they pissed off.

I’m leaning towards it. She looked just long enough at the agents across the street to make me think she was thinking “better them than me.”

Each character’s fate could be debated for ages, but I’m particularly curious about Paige because it’s the most unclear. Is it possible she could feign ignorance and go back to being a college student? I can’t imagine Stan turning her in, and he wouldn’t necessarily tell Henry anything because that would reveal that

Incredible ending to this magnificent show. I’ll be thinking about this for a long time. I don’t know what broke me more - the garage scene, the goodbye to Henry, or Paige on the platform. In particular, Noah Emmerich’s performance after he goes back to the other apartment, his attempt to look totally normal while

I listened to the podcast today, and thought it was funny when the one guy (Joel Fields maybe) said he was hoping people would complain about it being so dark.

Paige being loud, wild and opinionated would attract too much attention. If she’s trying to be a spy, her best bet is to try and blend in and fly under the radar as much as possible.

Yes! I noticed that too. Little disappointed in Gene, honestly.

To be fair, “chosen ones” in all media are often written as brats. Wouldn’t it go to your head a bit if you thought you were the great white hope for the universe?

Hell yeah the space whales were rad. I like the message on this show that when you’re in a fix, some magical animals or rock monsters will come along and save the day. Good reminder to my kids to try and not piss off nature.

The last season was great (except for lack of AP-5, I love that guy) and it ended perfectly, I think. Bendu was right about the arms wrapping Thrawn in a cold embrace - I definitely did not expect that to be literal. I liked the emphasis on mythology the past few episodes - the mural and the other dimension was one of