and that is exactly why I never want a sequel. :-)
This show is making me like Nicole Richie, and I’m becoming resentful of it.
I’m surprised no one has mentioned the obvious: Kevin is trying to manipulate two children together so he can advance on the combined whole. Isn’t that a little... um... sick?
This episode’s technobabble was heavenly. It made no sense what-so-ever, and I loved the episode more for it. :-)
I hope we never, ever get a sequel to San Junipero. I don’t even want an unrelated episode to hint at a connection to it. It’s hard to imagine anything not diluting it’s power.
Do you know how hard it is to mount a sanctimonious high horse? I’m riding this thing all the way home!
We know that Louis’s victims were bullied into staying silent, and that this silence allowed CK to victimize other woman. My question is whether Jon and others knew this was happening, or at least appreciated it could be happening? Did they know their loyalty (or willing ignorance) was adversely affecting these women?…
Hey, I was right! Sorta...
More Christopher McDonald roles: Lt. Richard Castillo on the classic Star Trek: The Next Generation episode “Yesterday’s Enterprise,” and federal agent Kent Mansley in The Iron Giant.
Make it so.
It’s a fun idea, but there’s only one problem: Voq is a naive dumbass; I don’t he could pull off a con, long or short. In fact, every Klingon on this show is so stupid they couldn’t find their own ass if they had a special ass-detecting wand set to warp speed.
For anyone interesting, my review of Samus Returns: http://wp.me/p8wVHj-4x. A great game despite it’s halting combat and repetitive boss battles.
I thought this was a great episode, but maybe not a great episode of Star Trek. But like Mario Mario would say, “trust the fungus!”
Is anyone NOT named Mike Johnson allowed to write Star Trek comics?
Am I the only one sad that Eph didn’t just die, but had his soul destroyed by The Master thirty seconds before the end?
But his memory will live on in us all.
If season 4 is a political analogy, and the show ends with a nuclear blast, does that make our heroes North Korea?
Yes, yes, a million times yes. Thank you!
The book was still plenty useful. How else would they have known to kill the people working for The Master, then blow the bastard up with a bomb. You can’t teach that kind of logic.