short takes
You know it's a bad snow-driving night when you get off the
highway and increase your speed. Yup, very
cautious people on the parkway tonight. Somewhat cautious
people on the local streets.
Silly
cats (very funny!) from
ian_gunn.
Overheard in the office: "The solar system consists of the sun, Jupiter, and assorted debris".
I finally watched last week's Enterprise tonight. Are we about to get an explanation for the change in Klingon appearance between the original series and the modern shows? Sure looks that way. I also noticed the background music in several places, which I rarely do with this show, and it was effective. Nicely done. I wonder what changed.

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Yup about the explanation on Enterprise although they cancel the show as it finally gets interesting? Although in a way I am glad they did, I am getting fed up on the T'Pol/Trip interactions.
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cock
(Anonymous) 2005-02-25 06:49 am (UTC)(link)no subject
I stopped watching because T'Pol irritated the life out of me. ;-)
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Re: cock
14 sl-bb21-ana-6-0.sprintlink.net (144.232.1.61) 227.546 ms 165.700 ms 207.501 ms
15 sl-st20-la-13-0.sprintlink.net (144.232.20.67) 99.650 ms 112.729 ms 109.348 ms
16 sl-sbcint-5-0.sprintlink.net (144.232.154.230) 95.693 ms 92.698 ms 91.108 ms
17 bb1-p6-0.cranca.sbcglobal.net (151.164.41.30) 91.910 ms 91.971 ms 90.391 ms
18 core1-p9-0.cranca.sbcglobal.net (151.164.40.93) 91.107 ms 89.545 ms 94.704 ms
19 core2-p8-0.cranca.sbcglobal.net (151.164.241.226) 89.850 ms 102.633 ms 90.120 ms
20 bb1-p5-0.irvnca.sbcglobal.net (151.164.41.17) 230.836 ms 211.814 ms dist3-g9-2.irvnca.sbcglobal.net (151.164.41.220) 142.599 ms
21 dist3-g9-2.irvnca.sbcglobal.net (151.164.41.220) 89.868 ms 91.809 ms 98.174 ms
22 rback29-g3-1.irvnca.sbcglobal.net (67.114.50.34) 114.320 ms 90.840 ms 92.978 ms
23 adsl-69-235-164-180.dsl.irvnca.pacbell.net (69.235.164.180) 110.459 ms 117.399 ms 113.292 ms
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Actually, my observation is almost the reverse -- in my experience, series of any sort (TV, comics, whatever) tend to get better *because* they have been cancelled. From DP7 to DS9, I've seen it happen over and over again -- the last season is the best precisely because they know that it's ending.
It's not hard to understand why. Once the cancel order comes down, the creative types are suddenly freed from the shackles of sameness. Most serials require that the universe be "cleaned up" at the end of the story, which prevents anything truly dramatic from happening. But if you know that this is your last shot, there's nothing to lose. Under those circumstances, a truly good writer will often step up to the plate and produce their best work. The result is often a great climax.
It's a really common syndrome. Doesn't happen if the cancellation in unexpected, but when a series is going to go away in 6-12 months you often see what it can really do...
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As I suspected after last week's episode: there is a plague that modifies one's genetic code (ahem -- hey, I just report this stuff) that has gotten loose in the Klingon empire. It specifically resulted from failed attempts to create augments. Anyway, in one of the early stages of the disease, there are physical modifications, including the ridges fading back quite a bit. In later stages bad things happen to you internally and you die.
In this episode, we saw the development of a partial cure. It can't do anything about the first stage, but it stops it from getting worse. The plague has infected "millions", and (we are told) the genetic mutations will be passed down to children.
Um, yeah. Genetic mutation doesn't really work that way, but that's their story. Presumably, at some point between the end of the original series and the time of TNG, someone came up with the the rest of the cure. Either that, or the mutated Klingons were such an embarrassment that the others eventually killed them off in a purge or something. Of course we won't be told in the Enterprise timeframe.