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#201
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Here we are on Page 11! At least, if you use default page view settings
Thank you everyone for helping me reach 200 replies!Quote:
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If Glen Larson does indeed seek out Gene Coon's advice, it certainly won't move him away from them.Quote:
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I've decided to add a third rule to the That Wacky Redhead drinking game: Any time you find a link to TVTropes, take a shot! (I apologize for inebriating most of you with this post.) In other news, it looks like the 1970-71 season overview will be ready tomorrow. So until then!
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That Wacky Redhead: Big Dreams Have Big Consequences! Find out more on the Alternate History Wiki or TV Tropes |
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#202
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I wonder if GR's The God Thing concept will make it to the big screen ITTL.
On an unrelated note, I could see some TV exec for a less well funded company going with Avimov's Caves of Steel story for a series to jump on the sci-fi bandwagon without having to pay for so much special effects. The overcrowded Earth stuff would also fit the environment conscious times. Also the buddy cop formula would be familiar to them more. R. Daneel Olivaw lives!
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Sarah - That would cause a very big change in the space-time continuum. Turtledove Winning Dominion of Southern America & Nike! |
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And there was at least the pretense of non-Earth civilizations in TOS, while the very goal of "Galactica" was the "mythical lost planet of Atlantis". (Oh, wait... That also had the stupid "evolving into energy forms"... ) TOS at least had a major, pivotal character who was obviously alien, & other recurring aliens. "Galactica" had Lorne Greene, John Colicos, Richard Hatch, Terry Carter, & a character from Moby Dick. (Who was no better in "The A-Team", where his inability to actually act was less important. ) They spent the whole budget on the miniature for Galactica & forgot they needed writers...Quote:
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(Soles was the only one I recall, & that in part because his daughter, P.J., was in "Humongous". )Quote:
Chris Reeve was not my ideal Superman, nor Clark, tho IMO Gene Hackman made a superb Lex. (For a continuing character, tho, I'd pick John Shea {"Lois & Clark"} or John Glover {"Smallville"}, I think.) I still put Dean Cain at the top of my "Clark" & "Superman" list. And I can't picture anybody better than Christian Bale as Bats: he's the only actor I've seen credible as both Bruce and Bats. (Clooney is the best Bruce, but there's no way in hell he'd put on that stupid suit; he'd hire somebody. And Keaton would put on the suit, but he's not a credible Bruce. Val Kilmer we shouldn't even mention, except maybe as Jason Todd, or somebody. And Chris O'Donnell has proven a much better actor than I thought from "Batman & Robin", judging by "NCIS:L.A.".)Quote:
I found no less than 5 shows I watched, & loved, from Episode 1 on that list. (Care to guess which ones? Feel free to save any of them you guess right. ) I'll say this: "The Cape" isn't on it. Nor "Airwolf" or "Blue Thunder".Quote:
I do think "NYPD Blue" made it only because, for the first two seasons, I didn't notice how good it was, because all I wanted was to see Amy Brenneman's butt, so the curse never landed. )Quote:
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Even now, shows I watch fairly faithfully, like "Stargate", have their weaknesses, which I'll overlook for the sake of their good points. I won't recommend them as good SF, but they're better than some of the junk, & at least they're watchable. There's scant chance anybody will see, or has seen, "Journeyman" or "The Dresden Files", or even "Human Target" (which is extremely different from the DC concept, as I understand it). (And I'm frankly deeply thankful the Sable adaptation![]() got cancelled swiftly.)If something about a show grabs me, I can often stick with it even if the rest is pretty awful. And sometimes, I'll completely flip: I watched the debut of NCIS, because I liked the backdoor pilot they did in "JAG" (not least because I liked Harmon as far back as "Reasonable Doubts", with Marlee Matlin; another of the short-lived ones I liked... Along with "Shannon's Deal", while I'm thinking of it, for which Jamey Sheridan deserved an Emmy IMO), & stopped watching after that, because it was "6 characters in search of a show". I came back at the end of Season 2 on the strength of a solid story & a really interesting new character (& the fact Cote is so hot ). "NCIS" has kept me on the strength of those same characters (tho, even this long after, I still don't think they have a show: there isn't that unifying something; "JAG" had it). I will also confess I started watching "Buffy" only because I wanted to find out who Charisma was, after catching the end of an episode out of curiosity how bad it was, knowing the movie was dreck, & "X-Files" after catching a glimpse of Gillian. I stayed with "Buffy" on the solid writing (&, yes, the hotness of Charisma for an episode or 2 ), & with "X-Files" for the writing & the mature partnership without turning it into the "JAG"-style soap opera (or the absurd Picard-Crusher "romance"![]() ). (Yes, "Buffy" suffered from that a lot, too; it had other things going for it. Like vampires. And the coffee ad guy.![]() And Charisma.![]() ) (50 points to anybody who can name the sizzling blonde in the Michael J. Fox "Apartment 10G" Pepsi ad. She later became famous in a TV cop show. No Googling allowed. )Quote:
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Sometimes a butterfly is just a butterfly. ![]() Economic Left/Right: -7.50 Libertarian/Authoritarian: -8.00 Join GPRO Last edited by phx1138; December 28th, 2011 at 12:06 PM.. Reason: thunder island?, JAGged edges |
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#204
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The End of an Era (1970-71)
"Who can turn the world on with her smile?
Who can take a nothing day, and suddenly make it all seem worthwhile? Well it's you, girl, and you should know it, With each glance and every little movement you show it. Love is all around, no need to waste it, You can have the town, why don't you take it? You're gonna make it after all. You're gonna make it after all!" - "Love is All Around", aka the Theme from "The Mary Tyler Moore Show", written and performed by Sonny Curtis, 1970 [1] The 1970-71 season was, in all respects, one of transition. It was the first full season in which a fourth network, PBS, joined the Big Three on the airwaves; it was the first in which the two prevailing genres of the early 1970s – far-beyond-the-stars science fiction and down-to-earth situation comedy – made themselves apparent on broadcasting schedules; it was the last season in which the primetime schedule began at 7:30, and, partly as a result, the last season for a larger proportion of shows than ever before in broadcast history. Desilu Productions, for their part, were producing four series during this season, returning to an output level last achieved in 1967-68. However, they would only maintain it for this one season, just as they had before, because it would mark the finale of Star Trek, one of their most successful series. The rookie show on the Desilu lot, "Night Gallery", was able to take full advantage of the elaborate sets built for the other three shows, keeping overall costs down and providing some interesting settings for showrunner Rod Serling. In terms of ratings, all three of the studio's returning shows remained in the Top 30, though only "Mannix" saw ratings improve from the previous season. Lucille Ball, always one to give credit where credit was due, decided to reward the man she felt was most responsible for Desilu's success: Herbert F. Solow, the Vice-President in Charge of Production since 1965. He was promoted to Senior Executive Vice-President and Chief Operating Officer [2], effective as of the end of the production season, so as not to interfere with his ongoing commitments. Meanwhile, across the lot, and just next door, Paramount Television was facing a rougher, more uneven road to success, much to the chagrin of Charles Bludhorn. However grateful he had been at the time to evade the exorbitant operating costs that came with buying Desilu, he had since spent a great deal of time lamenting his inability to convince Ball to sell her studio. "The House that Paladin Built" had become the toast of the town; Paramount's struggles, on the other hand, had become the subject of derision throughout Hollywood. He had little choice but to stay the course, hoping that what he had already set into motion would eventually yield good returns. And indeed, this season, Paramount Television finally found itself with a genuine success story: "The Mary Tyler Moore Show", a hip and relevant star vehicle for Division President Grant Tinker’s eponymous wife, cracked the Top 30, in a first for the studio. "Mary Tyler Moore" was a landmark sitcom, which emphasized appealing, believable characters placed into a realistic setting and dealing with relevant situations. Most importantly, a new emphasis was placed on supporting the strong cast with intelligent, naturalistic, and consistent writing, rather than relying on the actors to carry the show in spite of the sub-par writing; a paradigm which had dominated sitcoms of the previous decade (with a few exceptions). It also deliberately avoided escapism, attempting to depict a close facsimile of the lives of their ideal viewers: relatively young, living in urban markets, and receptive to the societal changes taking place in this era. On all these fronts, it was remarkably successful; though like most pioneers, it would later seem cautious, even quaint, in its ambitions. Among the other new programs on the air was "Monday Night Football", which aired on ABC. Certainly, the risk of ceding prime airtime to a sporting event on a regular basis was a calculated one that only that network – still the lowest-rated of the Big Three – was willing to make. There was definite upside to such a risk, however; football had already superseded baseball as the most popular spectator sport in the United States, and regular television broadcasts – the pet project of National Football League commissioner, Pete Rozelle – were seen as the logical next step to challenge the supremacy of the National Pastime. Certainly those sporadic broadcasts of the late 1960s had been largely successful [3], in particular the annual championship game, known as the Super Bowl. And as for "Monday Night Football", it became an instant hit, particularly the dedicated colour commentary provided by an especially colourful individual named Howard Cosell. PBS, in their first full season on the air, inherited several of the programs produced by NET, including "Mister Rogers' Neighborhood" and "Sesame Street", both of which would become mainstays, and receive credit for helping to raise generations of children across the country. Their modus operandi was providing educational and informational programming to American audiences. As was the case for most public broadcasters [4], they were commercial-free. Government funding subsidized some of their exploits, but they became famous for their pledge drives, during which they would interrupt on-air programming with telethons where they would attempt to raise money for their continued operations. Each network affiliate would generally conduct pledge drives independently, as PBS was far more decentralized than the three privately-owned networks were, with programming generally funded and produced by individual affiliates. [5] Naturally, this resulted in shows that were especially sensitive to the interests of local communities. With regards to ratings for the networks, CBS had 13 shows in the Top 30, down one from the previous year; NBC had 11, up one. ABC was level, with only six shows in the Top 30. However, the Top 10 was far more evenly distributed; CBS and NBC had three shows each, and ABC led them both with four. One of those four was "Marcus Welby, M.D.", the #1 most-watched show on television. This marked the first time in broadcast history that the #1 show was on the Alphabet network. Monday was again the most-watched night of the week, with eight of the Top 30 shows, though none of the Top 10. Other widely-viewed nights were Thursday and Saturday, with five Top 30 hits apiece. Tuesday was a phenomenal night for ABC, with all three of the shows it aired that night in the Top 10, but it was a quiet night for the other networks. Finally, Friday had a Top 30 hit for the first time in three years, with "The Partridge Family". At the Emmy Awards taking place that May, Star Trek won Outstanding Dramatic Series for the third and final time, with Leonard Nimoy also winning a third trophy for Supporting Actor. For the fifth consecutive time, Barbara Bain won the Emmy for Outstanding Lead Actress in a Dramatic Series, a record for the category that still stands today. [6] Bain finally removed her name from consideration for the role shortly thereafter. On the Comedy side of the ledger, the Series award went – for the second year in a row – to a low-rated but critically-acclaimed series; this time it was the CBS program, Those Were the Days [7], which also won Lead Actress for Jean Stapleton. And then, only a few weeks later, to close out the season, came the biggest television event in broadcast history to date… --- [1] IOTL, the lyrics for the first season's theme were somewhat more tentative, more cautious, before they were reworked in the second season to the more familiar lyrics written above. ITTL, given this more optimistic society, these lyrics are used from the outset. [2] Solow was, for all intents and purposes, already the #2 guy at Desilu – this promotion rewards his years of faithful service, gives him a big, fat raise, moves him to a nicer office, and of course, removes him from directly supervising the production of four series at once. [3] Note that by far the most notorious NFL broadcast of this era IOTL, known as the "Heidi Game", has been butterflied away ITTL. [4] Other examples include the BBC, and the ABC in Australia. A curious exception to this rule is the CBC in Canada, which has always been a commercial network - not that it's prevented them from running into financial trouble on a near-constant basis. [5] For example, "Mister Rogers' Neighborhood" was produced by WQED, the Pittsburgh affiliate of PBS. More ambitious (read: expensive) productions were often co-produced by two or more affiliates. [6] The most Emmy wins by any actress in this category for a single role IOTL was 4, by Tyne Daly for "Cagney and Lacey". Michael Learned also won 4 Emmys in this category, for two separate roles (three for "The Waltons" and one for "Nurse"). [7] The series was known IOTL as All in the Family; Those Were the Days was a working title. The Emmy category for Outstanding Lead Actor in a Comedy Series was not introduced IOTL until 1974; the inaugural winner was Alan Alda for "M*A*S*H", which will not exist ITTL. --- Welcome to the 1970-71 season, which is going to involve some long and hard goodbyes. It's out with the old, and in with the new!
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That Wacky Redhead: Big Dreams Have Big Consequences! Find out more on the Alternate History Wiki or TV Tropes |
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#205
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Brainbin, I'm sure there will be a Heidi Game equivalent in this TL.
Good update, though. |
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#206
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I loved watching Battlestar Galactica as a child, and have rewatched it fondly in recent months (I've been rewatching a lot of old shows with my children, now). I did think the acting on the show by and large was strong, especially in the first episodes. The opening show (made into a movie) included some very moving scenes and really made you believe these people were fleeing for their lives, leaving behind many dead loved ones. Lorne Greene was, in my opinion, outstanding at portraying a real leader that I could imagine people following out of the ashes. I have always thought the world of Jane Seymour, and her character in this show was also a great role. Apollo I did find a little forced (Hatch later proved his acting chops to me in the reimagined BSG as Zarik), but Starbuck (yes, the name is discordant in this show) was played with zest by Benedict as a philandering ladies-man flyboy (and yes, he played a character with much the same temperment in the A-team, but I even enjoyed Face in that, though it doesn't say much about his range as an actor either way). I also found John Colicos' Baltar one of the most deliciously despicable characters ever (and actually appreciated his high drudgeon performances even more on rewatching recently). Terry Carter (and Herb Jefferson Jr.!) were the first African American men that I can ever remember seeing in positions of authority in an American television series (or movie for that matter), and they were so as a matter of course, and their performances were strong in their roles in my opinion. I found the whole concept behind BSG fascinating and original for the times. I do agree that the writing was uneven with some episodes really being groaners and others quite good. The fact that the show was alien lite was okay in my opinion since they were trying to find refuge with other humans and thus were following a human blazed trail, not trying to seek out new life and civilizations (though I would point out that there were a few alien species in the series). What I want to say here is that the original BSG had a lot to recommend itself, and for one who watched it when it first came out, it was great and fired the imagination, and still is a show I consider a classic for my own children to know. I also have some differing opinions (not all, just some) on the Superman and the Batman movies you mentioned, but I don't know that they are as relevant as I see those projects as likely further in the future of this timeline and also likely to be realized in a different fashion.
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Sarah - That would cause a very big change in the space-time continuum. Turtledove Winning Dominion of Southern America & Nike! |
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#207
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When it was...![]() You're entirely right about "MTM". I remember it being pretty daring when it debuted, but looking back, it's "Waltons"-level tame. Mary is so damn nice. ("I hate nice!" {And I only remember that because it was a clip from one of the TV retrospetives PBS did. })Quote:
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Of course, CBC in early days broadcast "enlightening" programming like opera which you couldn't pay people to watch. (They did figure out, long before ABC-TV, to set aside one night for sports. )Quote:
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{It took "Tenafly" to ovecome that, for me.}) How much was just bad writing, I can't say. (BTW, a passing reference to why he's named Starbuck, or even uses callsign Starbuck {which makes as much sense}, would have cured that problem in a second. Again, fix it in the typewriter. )Neither do I mean to say there should, necessarily, have been more aliens in "Galactica", tho if these were human "tribes", a better eplanation of how they were so more advanced than we would have been appreciated. (I had the same problem with the "Ancients" nonsense in "SG-1" & "SGA", but they made less an issue of it, since the Ancients had disappeared.) Something as simple as changing the destination to a semi-mythical world that wasn't Earth would have cured my biggest conceputal problem with it. (A variety of "future history" where they'd all originated from Earth in a distant past, & where Earth had become mythical, sounds good on its face, but as Norman Spinrad once pointed out, destroying enough records to make that credible stopped being possible generations ago. And they're still left with the damn silly space battles & weak scripting...)Quote:
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Sometimes a butterfly is just a butterfly. ![]() Economic Left/Right: -7.50 Libertarian/Authoritarian: -8.00 Join GPRO Last edited by phx1138; December 29th, 2011 at 01:12 AM.. Reason: r to Glen, Hollywood calling Mav |
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#208
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As intriguing as I'm finding Brainbins' excellent TL, the conversation taking place around the Posts is illuminating and engaging. Is it a TV Trope, I wonder, if I just mention Muppets for the hell of it? As you can see, Glen, there are those determined to drag the tone of that conversation down. ![]() Falkenburg |
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#209
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Mary Tyler Moore! Monday Night Football! And That Wacky Redhead!
![]() *** Incidentally, is the Spassky-Fischer chess tournament in Reykjavik going to be successfully pulled off? It nearly failed to happen in OTL. |
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Why does the Heidi Game get butterflied away? Is it matter that network policy changes differing from how its developed in the OTL?
And while we are broaching on sports just a little bit. Can we assume that the NFL-AFL merger pretty much went as OTL? Although I could see a wrinkle here and there based on the different climate being fostered within the networks. Also with that in mind, I wonder were Roone Arledge would be in this timeline. ![]()
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The Colors of War. The Hopes for Peace. The Trial Of The Prairie -- Land Of Flatwater...May 30, 2013. |
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Another day, another dollar. And by dollar, I mean another set of responses!
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But I never actually bought him as a legitimate threat. Even in the climax of the first movie, he almost won more because Superman wasn't being very smart than because of any inherent ability on his part. And in Superman II, he was full-on comic relief, though he was very funny. I don't doubt that Hackman could play a truly menacing Luthor, of course, were he given the chance.Quote:
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Glad you're still reading. I do value everyone's comments. Especially when they're relevant to the timeline ![]() Quote:
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LOU: You know what? You got spunk. MARY: Well, you... LOU: I hate spunk! Quote:
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Thanks again to all of you for your continued input. Feel free to continue discussing the pop culture product of this era. I'll read along ![]()
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That Wacky Redhead: Big Dreams Have Big Consequences! Find out more on the Alternate History Wiki or TV Tropes Last edited by Glen; December 29th, 2011 at 07:12 PM.. |
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The other supermen mentioned were good in their way, but I'd place Reeves then Reeve above them, personally. Quote:
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So...I would actually say my favorite Batman performance might in fact be Michael Keaton's, with my favorite Bruce Wayne performance actually going to Kevin Conroy! Quote:
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Frasier I wasn't as addicted to, but I really enjoyed it, especially when they started ramping up the romance between Niles and Daphne - really, I watched it for those two characters, they were great! Quote:
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Sarah - That would cause a very big change in the space-time continuum. Turtledove Winning Dominion of Southern America & Nike! |
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You already indicated that Gene Roddenbury's career would take a different course, and of course I will trust to you what way that will go. However, I do wonder if we might actually see The Questor Tapes made as a series ITTL. It had both Roddenbury and Coon involved in it, so it might still be a possibility. If it doesn't get made, maybe it's star, Robert Foxworth, gets a role in that Caves of Steel series we talked about - playing another sci-fi robot....
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Sarah - That would cause a very big change in the space-time continuum. Turtledove Winning Dominion of Southern America & Nike! |
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(supervillain plan, what do you expect? ), but he sold it well IMO. With better material...?Quote:
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I was treating it on its own... That, again, may've been a flaw in scripting. I suppose I'm of the view really good actors can make even bad scripting credible, & the number of those is pretty damn small.![]() Quote:
First-run. AFAIK, none on the list were ones I've seen anywhere else.Quote:
I meant how it survived the curse of my liking it from the very first episode. And seeing them all. (No other show I can think of managed it. Except "NYPD Blue", & I explained that. )Quote:
Watch good shows, shows you used to really like, in syndication after it's been awhile. You know what to expect. A lot of the "good" wears off because there isn't the "newness", & I bet it surprises you how few really good episodes there were. Those are the ones that will still stand out. (I think of "Magnum", which I did like for all it's problems: I will never forget "Did You See the Sunrise?"![]() And that's really on the strength of the ending.) And when it's a show that's hitting on all cylinders, every episode will be like that, ones you'd watch in repeats in preference to almost anything new. "West Wing" does that for me. Offhand, I can't think of another show that does.Quote:
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They completely changed Bats into a more kid-friendly guy. (About doubled their sales, so... ) And helped produce a plague of kid sidekicks.![]() Quote:
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) I do have a sense, from vague recollection of the concept (it's been years since I saw it), something like "The Fugitive" (or "Route 66") is inevitable, if he's on a search for origin.
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Sometimes a butterfly is just a butterfly. ![]() Economic Left/Right: -7.50 Libertarian/Authoritarian: -8.00 Join GPRO Last edited by phx1138; December 30th, 2011 at 01:11 AM.. Reason: r Glen |
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#216
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One reason I liked that awestruck Lois Lane is something that I probably couldn't name as easily right away, but which I noticed and discussed often with friends during the other ST series. There was the opposite of awe on some of those shows. Now, granted, they can probably program computers to simulate all sorts of amazing things, and growing up with computers and such now, just like growing up with alien cultures all around in the ST universe, does tend to make you less amazed by things. But, there sometimes doesn't seem to be the sense of awe with anything in the ST universe. I mean, it's like4, "Oh, well, we just travelled through time, no big deal," or, "Just another strange creature." Now, granted, keeping a straight face helps to sell it, but not all humans are going to be so used to thigns that they just act like it's no big deal. So, I think Lois Lane, for the first time, seeing Superman is very appropriately in awe. Should it wear off over time? Yeah, that I can see. But, there still should be some amazement at the fact a man can fly, etc. Something skin to the famous play-by-play call from then-40year veteran Vin Scully, "I can't believe what I just saw", if only for a moment. And for someone like Lois Lane, for a while longer. (Kirk Gibson's home run in '88 whenh e could hardly walk is a lot different than a man flying, after all. Though maybe not to some Dodger fans. )
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My lulu.com books (2 AH) Union win 1863, mostly US history + Baseball integrated from start, some US history Sweet Lands of Liberty Created Equal |
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So much time and so little to say! Wait a minute... strike that, reverse it.
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The next update should be ready on or before New Year's Day, to ring in 2012!
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That Wacky Redhead: Big Dreams Have Big Consequences! Find out more on the Alternate History Wiki or TV Tropes |
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One thing I forgot to mention in regard to suspension of disbelief...
Who says that we have to know everything. Other media also leave thigns unanswered. True, books can tell us more becuase they have more time, but not everyone is Charles Dickens painstakingly telling us what color everything is and where it is in the room. I mean, sure, there is more of a need for suspension of disbelief with some things, like Star Trek's transporters, and inconsistency in that can be a little annoying. When Voyager was on the joke I remember hearing was that Voyager was canon to Star Trek in general, but not to itself. The same could have been said for Space: 1999 in the '70s, from what little I recall thei played very loose with time and distances.But, people do tend forget that in a typical sitcom, drama, or whtever, we see less than 1/2 of 1% of their lives each week! (1/336 for a half hour show, 1/168 for an hour long one, not counting commercials.) Even of their waking moments, there are 8766 hours a year, take a third of that out for sleep, we have 5-6,000 hours in which to do stuff each year. So with these people we see on TV, we only see very little of their lives.What does that mean? It means people can have cars int he shop and need to borrow one, people can have thigns happen that are off screen, between scenes, or whatever. I admit it could be a touch of Asperger's Syndrome, but i have always watched TV like Columbo; and a poll I put on sitcomsoline.com once shows I'm not alone. Why would people complain about an inconsistency when 9 times out of 10, there is a logical explanation that would work in everyday life. Sure, some of them have to be more elaborate - take for isntance the very in character bit about Uncle Jesse's faked graduation on "Full House" - but i can usually come up with ideas for those faster than Columbo seems to be able to find out the killer, simply by seeing little patterns. Then again, I probably do take it further than some (farther than most with the "Full House" Chronology I helped put together); I vividly remember watching MTM reruns as a child, and one episode ends witha question Murray asks. He's chosen not to cheat on his wife but he does buy a piano from this woman. And, he asks, "How do i explain to my wife I bought a piano while watching 'The Sting'?" And, I rembmer thinking of what the scene might have beena t the end right after that, because somehow, i knew that it wasn't the end, that their lives kept on going between episodes. (Granted, my mom or grandparents might hve *told* me that but I still knew it.) So, all that blabbering is to say, I don't know how unique I am, but most of what people complain about is not only inconsequential, but is in fact explainable, if the person is willing to doa little puzle solving. (I ran a different poll wondering if the "you can find out anything" Internet age led to more ciomplaining; a number of people voted that it6 did.)
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#219
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Even if he really is the right choice.![]() Quote:
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![]() ![]() ![]() That leaves me speechless. I count it one of the best shows TV has ever seen.Quote:
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One right: "Police Squad". (Hint: I've dropped mentions of some of them...) I've never even heard of "Keen Eddie".![]() Quote:
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(I also wasn't sure how much you knew about the show... )Quote:
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In the "ST" case, broadly, I think you're underestimating something: these people deal with the peculiar ever single day, & are specially trained & selected to do so. (It's also why I'm troubled by the stories treating peculiarities as potential mental problems: wouldn't they expect alien oddities, first? ) IMO, they shouldn't be weirded out by anything. Indeed, even the "youthened" Picard, frex, shouldn't have been a huge issue, certainly not for Worf or Data: whatever his age, Picard was Captain, & Worf should've followed him, while Data could detect the unchanged voice & retina patterns... For others? Get over it. (I'm deeply disappointed with the writers they didn't explore that aspect. )For Lois (& that may've been Margot as much as anything), it didn't work for me. (Nor was I a big fan of the adoration in "L&C". ) If the first encounter had been the interview, & not the rescue, awe might have made sense. By that time, tho, in the film, she should have had time to get used to him. And she's supposed to be a top reporter, so dealing with presidents & kings & billionaires (including Lex, IIRC) & movie stars should have made her more jaded IMO. Maybe it's the cynic in me. Or the inability to separate out prior knowledge: I really can't get to what a first experience with Supes would be like, 'cause I'm so used to it...![]() Quote:
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#220
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Who's heading Universal's Television division in the early 1970s? Looking at the history of the development of Kojak, it is by no means certain that we see the same chain of events that led to the creation of the character, Kojak - on the other hand, we might.
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