yatabyad
Son of Mogh
yatabyad

Yeah, I remember the discussion of this twist, and I, like you, hoped it wouldn’t be. But alas, our concerns were well-founded.

I’m still hopeful that they’ll make Lorca more than just a one-dimensional Mirror Universe villain, because Lorca is charming and clever enough to be so much better.

Tom Petty’s death still gets to me. I had the opportunity to catch him in concert and I passed on it. Now I’ll never get that chance.

This has been a lonesome sundown for me.

Well hey, it’s been almost two weeks now, and not a word of accusation. Maybe you just don’t give a shit when women and children are sexually abused.

Yeah, I figured out the math myself once. Obviously it was very rough math, and the best we can come up with is an approximation, but I think it was at least two hundred years or something. Like, they spent centuries being tortured. Which ostensibly makes this show set in the future, except time is meaningless when

This was a really good episode. And while I didn’t laugh out loud, because this isn’t really guffaw humor, it was really funny. The twist at the end might be the best twist of the entire season.

That said, nothing’s really coming out of left field like in the first season. Maybe it’s because we already know the jig.

Nope. Peter Parker’s all right.

What I want to know is, how fucking hot was Jolene if young Dolly Parton was worried?????

Honor means nothing to this p’takh.

That’s because Icelanders understand what makes good television.

I haven’t watched much of the show, so I can’t say. But as for the books, the second book was a lot better than the first.

Oh god, that cheesy little rap was awful. Fortunately, that was the worst part of the episode.

This was hella good.

Anthony Rapp has a legitimatly tough role to play, but the actor has enough charisma to sell it at least.

You’re half correct. After roughly 15 seconds in space, the body loses consciousness, but it can survive for several minutes in an unconscious state.

Lt. Ash Tyler does exist, or he did at one point, at least. He was almost certainly taken as a POW by the Klingons, and served as the blueprint for the physical modifications Voq received. I’d say the chances are pretty good that the real Ash Tyler is dead.

I’ll have to check this out tomorrow.

The problem is evidence. There is no evidence that Mudd tried to kill anyone because those timelines no longer exist. The only person with any actual memories of the events is Paul Stamets, and his claim of being able to see 80-something previous incarnations of time is not likely to hold up in a court of law.

What

L’Rell is an opportunist. She sided with Admiral Cornwell because she saw an opportunity and because she did not trust Kol, not because she admires humans. Don’t forget that she is a member of T’Kuvma’s cult, and T’Kuvma was a religious xenophobe who believed Kahless is guiding the Klingon people to galactic

CBS All Access is legitimately awful. However, I suspect Star Trek has pulled enough subscribers to justify its existence. But if they want their service to be a success, they need to fix their buffering issues and have more than three exclusive shows. Because, like you said, they don’t even have all of BBT. However,

No, it wouldn’t, because he didn’t actually attempt to murder anyone. There is no legal basis for charging him with murder, attempt or otherwise, because those events no longer happened. It would only be the word of a convicted mutineer and a potentially unstable scientist with a dubious claim that could convict him.