There are nine Blue Guys at the end, not twelve (in the scene).
There are nine Blue Guys at the end, not twelve (in the scene).
Cole (our Cole, not the younger version of himself) can now team up with Young Jones, basically doing what Ramse is doing for the other side. Thus, kind of reminiscent of the DVD Easter Egg bit in the best ever Doctor Who episode Blink, Cole can feed information to his future self and to Jones — who will then know…
Only, this time, the criminal is Gottfried Wilhelm von Leibniz.
"Pain is all in the brain. When we break a leg or pull a muscle, millions of nerve cells in our brains fire to release chemicals telling us it hurts. To fight the pain, our brains release their own natural painkillers. The problem is, these homemade medicines aren't enough. Herbs, willow bark and poppies were used by…
You may be right. But then, Finch isn't as almost inhumanly smart as he is in so many other ways. Without him, I don't see how The Machine can defeat Samaritan. You don't win a war by, in effect, giving up the use of your main weapon.
Finch swallowing the poison was total BS. There's so much more at stake than one life, as he well knows. He might sacrifice himself for his fiancee (real-life wife), and maybe for Reese, but even then the formula holds: the future of the world versus a life.
A full butterscotch Harvest Moon set on the Pacific (no clouds or fog), as seen at 2am from a hot tub at Esalen on the Big Sur coast. You could feel the Milky Way moving [no drugs required].
From today's New Yorker Magazine ...
Esther—
as long as they don't bring back Beth Childs.
The invention of The Infinite Improbability Drive.
Better Python than a Ruby on Rails or C++ invasion.
The view from above the bridge was wonderful, and the disappearing scratch on the watch was really something.
I don't mind inconsistencies in the time-traveling mythos. Show runners can screw with my brain all they want, as long as the resulting drama is surprising, entertaining and gets me thinking.
Um, like ya forgot Person of Interest, s04e17, "Karma"
science of materials and biochemistry (nano, synthetic biology, etc) will lead to the most radical changes. they are old favorites, as are many on the list (few are new), but they are central to what technology can do that we've never been able to do before. to boldly go ..
got me — i watched the trailer, early waiting for the action scene. oops, when in doubt one should always read the instructions first!
#8: They have not yet perfected the Infinite Improbability Drive.