My first name is Edgar. The list of fictional characters with that first name is…generally unpleasant.
My first name is Edgar. The list of fictional characters with that first name is…generally unpleasant.
One of the frustrating things about "Sleeping In Light" coming after Season 5 instead of Season 4 is that the fifth-season episodes preceding it leave everyone in the places/positions they occupy in the finale.
In my continuing attempts to become a fan of this franchise, I watched all the way to "Sleeping In Light," plus all of the spinoffs.
I'm the author of a Hoshi-centred story (which also heavily features Travis) in one of the official Star Trek tie-in anthologies from Pocket Books, and my motivation in choosing them as protagonists was precisely to counter the lack of development of their potential in the series itself.
Actually, his look always reminded me of an anime character come to life.
Regardless of where you stand on the issue, shouldn't this analogy really be sponsored by the letters S and C and the number 9?
Those were epic tits. I'll remember those.
This episode will forever be well-known here in Winnipeg for that one line—repeated endlessly in local commercials for The Simpsons for years afterward.
Not that I feel the series themselves are at all similar, of course, but Patricia Tillman basically did this on Babylon 5.
SNL goodbye messages were better back when Tina Fey left.
How is an accidental incest joke "non-sex-related?"
One of the only Wal-Mart locations in Canada whose employees managed to organise was simply closed by the company. The last location to still have a union finally decertified when Wal-Mart refused to negotiate a collective agreement with them.
As long as the Jupiter-Sun maintained the same mass, its gravitational pull would be exactly the same as Jupiter's is now.
Those issues are a potential problem in both directions—imagine how often that would come up if Idris Elba played The Doctor.
The historical accuracy of such racism is probably a factor in why the current series hasn't had any ongoing companions from the past.
"Polo!" is currently missing, believed wiped.
To be fair, that was the style at the time (much like hanging an onion on your belt). Louis also has his T-shirt tucked in.
They dealt with this to a certain extent on The L Word, when one of the regular characters started transitioning.
She wasn't, but David Duchovny was…
The term "Browncoats" as an identifier for the fans emerged while the show was still airing—within a few weeks of "The Train Job" (which aired first), if I remember correctly, given that I was already frequenting Fox's official forum for the series at the time.