They’re all good dogs, Tippi.
They’re all good dogs, Tippi.
It’s a shame that so few people seem to still be watching Killjoys, because underneath the cornball exterior, it’s a hell of a lot of fun, and it has some pretty interesting takes on a lot of common sci-fi tropes.
Why would the Stormlands get involved at all? With the Baratheon heirs gone and the Lannisters on the back foot, it’d seem like the perfect time to pull a “We’re going to wait and see how this plays out”. Maybe that’ll be a plot point later, who knows; it just seems like the Lannisters are due for a bit of betrayal…
To be fair, it’s entirely possible that he wasn’t the only person to experience this issue, he was just that 1 in 10 annoyed enough by it to write in. I bet what happened is that it was a bizarre enough request that someone decided to look at it and realized removing it would in fact improve the map.
I dunno. It feels like it definitely had potential, but with how utterly they were squandering the talent they had, it kinda seems like something was just terribly wrong in the writer’s room or the show-runner had no idea how to make comedy happen and was just forcing it.
Judging from that episode... probably because it’s so bad they’d lose advertisers. There were some moments, and all of them were because of Adam West. I’m flat out amazed that a show with both Alan Tudyk and Danny Pudi could be so bland and unfunny.
Forgone Tragedies; there’s something really cool about stories that completely give away the ending but manage to tell a compelling story of how things get there.
That’s awful.
Although, as much as Apple loves new features, somehow I don’t think that new Macs increased the amount of sunlight they receive per unit area.
I want Cosmo to speak.
That’s a possible read on it, but I disagree with it. He seems to me quite animated about the topic in Star Wars, and then regretful about it in Jedi when talking with Leia about his/their mother.
No, my argument is that while he did seem to be raised by them he also seemed to still regard them as aunt and uncle and displayed very real yearning to know more about his biological father. Of course the nature of parenthood is very complicated, but implying that he didn’t feel the absence of his biological parents…
Yeah, that’s definitely why he called them “aunt” and “uncle”.
I do like how the reveal at the end neatly defuses concerns over whether it had just taken a slightly dark turn.
It’s not that hard to fix: two of them are involved in the scam, and two of them are paranormal scientists trying to do their own research into paranormal activity that they meet at the franchise event and rope into going into business together.
You could actually still do both of these: a post-Dominion War series set on a ship that was due to be retired but kept in service due to the severe losses faced during the war, with a recurring element being the strain rebuilding is putting on the post-scarcityness of the Federation. We only ever really saw bits of…
The green lieutenant was there expressly for the purpose of handicapping them in-universe. Note that it’s Burke that introduces Gorman as his pick of competent officer. The same Burke that explicitly sent colonists to check out the derelict uninformed, and that tries repeatedly to get live samples to take back to…
I have bad news for you about Eschaton, though I suspect you probably already know it. He’s never going to do a sequel, because he broke the universe’s logic in the second book, and he hates the inconsistency too much to go back and have to retcon it.
TJ Miller is notorious for doing improv bits more or less constantly. Him staying “in-character” for an interview is probably more likely than him speaking 100% honestly. I’m not sure he actually ever does that.
Anecdote: apparently he once hired a man to follow him around as his “bodyguard”, and made a big deal out…
That’d be great, if they promoted that either. But they tend to just promote the big crossover events, which are usually terrible entry points into reading comics, because they’re so crammed full of baggage that the reader has no clue about.
I had virtually the exact same results.