Exactly.
Exactly.
It really was an amazing scene. But Patrick Stewart has so many amazing moments that picking a favorite is impossible.
The article is literally called “A brief history of swearing on Star Trek.” You can nitpick and say those words aren’t considered swearing, but you’re commenting on an article discussing the history (and evolution) of swearing in the franchise. You can’t talk about the history of swearing without pointing out that it…
How did I never notice Spock swearing before?
I never realized what he said until Danette pointed it out. Picard does say “damn” and “hell” a lot though.
Nothing will ever be better than when Kirk says, “Let’s get the hell out of here” at the end of “City on the Edge of Forever.”
This is not a perfect history. Contrary to popular belief, McCoy never actually swears on TOS. Those famous, “Damn it, Jim, I’m a doctor, not a -” one-liners were never preceded with “damn.” It’s actually a case of the Mandela effect.
Swear words were only used twice on TOS, both in the first season. In “Mudd’s Women,”…
You forgot Ben Hur. Almost four hours long, won 11 Academy Awards.
I thought he did a great job in Ender’s Game. But I think he liked the opportunity to play a bad guy.
The first season of The Office was also pretty terrible.
Me too. It’s actually pretty funny.
Ghosted is pretty funny. It’s getting better with each episode, but it’s not great yet.
Craig Robinson’s guest character on Brooklyn Nine-Nine is the greatest ever. Anything to put that smug face of Andy Samberg in line.
Sure. But The Good Place just had an hour-long season premiere a few weeks back.
totally curious too. I feel like that’s probably going to be an underlying story arc that’ll carry over for at least part of the season. at least, I hope that’s the case.
I’m really looking forward to watching this. I’m just waiting for the next four episodes to drop so I can watch them with a free week.
“It involves a few remarriages and a whole bunch of lesbians.”
“Florida is for people who don’t know about Hawaii.”
Fair enough. The first Star Trek was good at isolating the crew to escalate danger, but the others weren’t.
Eh. I think it’s annoying as heck. To each their own, I guess.