Verily, in article <
UBI20260313@dont-email.me>, did
weberm@polaris.net
deliver unto us this message:
I watched:
Family Guy's Most HATED Episode:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ed-wAB37IJM
That's a polarizing episode. I enjoyed it until the end, when IMO it
fell apart. The gag of the voice actors and characters interacting
didn't work for me.
What did you watch?
I watched more Star Trek Continues. s1e09, "What Ships Are For," has a fascinating premise: the team finds a world which is in black and white. There's an explanation about their sun, though it doesn't really make
any sense. This one was a little weaker than most, IMO, but it did
feature John de Lancie as Galisti, the leader of the inhabited asteroid they're supposed to help. At one point, Kirk launches into a Captain
Speech, and Galisti stands up and hands him his butt in a sling. That
was a lot of fun to watch. More people ought to cut off these
pontificating captains.
Gur crbcyr sebz nabgure nfgrebvq ner gelvat gb farnx ba gb guvf bar. Gur angvirf frr gurz nf vainqref, ubcvat gb cnegnxr bs n crnpr naq
cebfcrevgl gurl unira'g ohvyg sbe gurzfryirf. Xvex cvgpurf gurz nf
ershtrrf vafgrnq, gura erirnyf gung n ohapu bs gurz unir nyernql fahpx
bire -- ohg ab bar pna frr gurve checyr unve, orpnhfr gur jbeyq'f va
oynpx naq juvgr.
Na bqqvgl urer vf gung gur Srqrengvba nqzvgf guvf cbchyngvba pbafgehpgrq
n hgbcvn va bayl n srj praghevrf, juvyr gur gnfx gbbx zvyyraavn ba
Rnegu. Jr'er gbyq gung guvf vf orpnhfr gur cbchyngvba jnf vafcverq, ohg
V pbhyqa'g uryc guvaxvat gung guvf pbhyq or cvgpurq nf n rhtravpf
fhpprff fgbel. Gurl tbg evq bs haqrfvenoyrf naq npuvrirq va praghevrf
jung hfhnyyl gnxrf zvyyraavn? V pna frr jul gurl qba'g jnag gur bguref
onpx. Nobody considers that, of course; this is Star Trek and the
world's a nice place.
Kirk left Lt. Smith in charge of the bridge for a while. Can he do that?
I figured one had to be at least a commander to have control of the
vessel. Maybe it happened because Kipleigh Brown wrote the episode.
I also watched s1e10, the first part of "To Boldly Go," the two-parter
which wraps up the series. The Enterprise returns to the setting of its premiere, "Where No Man Has Gone Before," where the godmaker raises
humans to a more powerful state. A bunch of people have already used
it, and two dozen of them have now been kidnapped by the Romulans.
That's not good, but it gets worse.
I found it odd that the Romulans were even able to capture twenty-four
Gary Mitchells, but apparently they came in great force. I suppose it
seemed worth great risk for such a great reward.
What did everyone else watch?
--
The True Melissa - Canal Winchester - Ohio
United States of America - North America - Earth
Solar System - Milky Way - Local Group
Virgo Cluster - Laniakea Supercluster - Cosmos
--- PyGate Linux v1.5.13
* Origin: Dragon's Lair, PyGate NNTP<>Fido Gate (3:633/10)