Also a final opportunity to emphasize anything that went well in the interview, or downplay/explain anything that didn’t.
Anyone who’s judgementally dismissing applicants for not sending a thank you is an asshole, but this does not change the fact that sending a thank you is a good idea if you actually want to get the job.
I think it’s great fun to try and puzzle these things out, as a fan. I also think it’s mind numbingly tedious to sit through an entire professionally produced episode designed to do it for us. Trials and Tribble-ations handled the matter perfectly.
Nick Locarno was a name Tom Paris went by for a while to distance himself from his father. I don’t care what Lower Decks had to say about it.
Q was Trelane all grown up. We’ll see if this holds up after SNW season 3 comes out.
Data always had emotions, he just didn’t understand them. Lore never had emotions, he was faking it.
Spot was a robot who underwent a series of upgrades throughout the series, and Data applied the lessons he learned from that to the development of his daughter.
Still better than Musk Junior High.
I adore SNW, but honestly, "always trying to 1-up itself and becoming a bizarre comedy because of it" seems like a better description of it than it is of Disco.
The Enterprise.
I mean, her or Yvonne Craig.
What?
It’s spelt M’egh.
Us Canucks have been boycotting U.S. products since the first round of tariffs.
If artist would have only cared what fans think, we would not have gotten TNG. That show was seen as blasphemous to star trek fans before it released. “A show without kirk and spock? NEVER!”
Yup. Hell, we wouldn't have even gotten Star Trek. Roddenberry would have made a bog standard Western series, like the audience was asking for.
No, he’s a good boy. My pup would have pulled that boot right off and ran away with it.
Krypto was adorable in the trailer. Give me all the Krypto.
We’ll never stop standing with Quebec. No foreign power is going to dictate our culture. Canada strong.
The cinematography is definitely a high point, as is the sound design. And Williem Defoe shows up about halfway through, if that sweetens the deal for you!
Whoo, we have extremely different taste in movies. I adore Robert Eggers, and Nosferatu just might be my new favourite vampire film. I’ll have to give it some time and more viewings to be sure though.
Agreed on Dracula 2000. Some good ideas there, but overall pretty weak. Also a criminal underuse of Jeri Ryan, who could have killed it as a vampire if given something to do.
AIDS thinks Reagan is killing the right people?
Except Canadian tariffs have, so far, been targeted so as to cause maximum harm to red states and minimum harm to Canadians. Unlike Trump’s sloppy across-the-board approach.
It's no more limiting to TNG era stories than the TNG era itself was to TOS era stories. They can't blow up the Earth or genocide any major races, but beyond that we've been given very little information about any character's future. I didn't find Star Trek VI any less exciting because I knew the Klingon empire would still be around 80 years later, and I'd say SNW is flourishing under far tighter restrictions.
You need to have your hearing checked. Carney has declared that he will not waste his time talking to Trump. You agree talking to Trump would be a waste of time. Where’s the problem?
I certainly don't think they'd continue to move at a high speed. Inertia wouldn't really apply, because the objects were never really "moving" at all. Space was moving around them, but they were stationary relative to the space inside the bubble.
So I'd say that if they survived crossing the threshold from the space inside the bubble to the space outside the bubble, they'd basically instantly become stationary.
The question is can you survive exiting the bubble like that, or would the bubble's edge tear you apart. But I think we might actually have an answer to this, from Discovery's last season. Didn't Burnham survive exiting that enemy ship's bubble in that first episode, before Discovery beamed her back aboard?