"LOOK OUT! MARK TWAINS GOT A GUN!" - Lt Cmdr Billips, lacking oxygen
@maxxjapan6195 ай бұрын
What in the sam hill are you quotin'? I thought I was the one supposed to be Twain!
@FromMyBrain2 ай бұрын
Seriously don't forget to drink water on the holodeck.
@jonahfalcon19706 ай бұрын
Twain's voice and inflections were legendary and people imitated it for ages. Then Hal Holbrook did his show for 60 years.
@JMimsey6 ай бұрын
Fun fact: Hal Holbrook who originated the Twain performance that Jerry Hardin used...played Deepthroat in All The President's Men. Also, both men appear in the underappreciated classic The Firm, starring Tom Cruise.
@AaronLitz6 ай бұрын
_The Deep Throat Connection._
@CaptainJZH6 ай бұрын
If I had a nickel for every time an actor who played Mark Twain also played Deep Throat and were also both in The Firm with Tom Cruise, I'd have two nickels which isn't a lot but it's weird it's happened twice
@docseamonster34916 ай бұрын
21:45 there's actually this really neat comic book called The Five Fists of Science inspired by that event. Twain and Tesla have a giant robot and they fight Cthulhu.
@TF2CrunchyFrog6 ай бұрын
That concept sounds like it could be either the silliest thing or the most awesome.
@docseamonster34916 ай бұрын
@@TF2CrunchyFrogIt's both.
@daviddiggens88416 ай бұрын
Damn... I knew you got fisted if you trusted the science but 5... Wow
@MrDj2326 ай бұрын
21:30 Tesla in the background looking like he's about to steal Mark Twain's soul.
@John73John6 ай бұрын
I like how they just blatantly violated the Prime Directive AND contaminated their own timeline at the same time by giving Mark Twain a grand tour of a starship.
@cbhlde6 ай бұрын
But who would believe Mark Twain? :)
@MKDumas19816 ай бұрын
Predestination paradox. Already cleared and approved by Temporal Investigations, and whoever Captain Braxton worked, works, and will work for. I have up keeping my tenses straight years from now.
@spencersholden6 ай бұрын
@@MKDumas1981same reason why no one stopped Admiral Janeway.
@MKDumas19816 ай бұрын
Braxton: "If I have to deal with Captain Insaneway - excuse me, _Admiral_ Insaneway, I'll just transport myself back to the late Twentieth Century. Even those post-industrial barbarians had a better grasp on reality than Katie O'Claire."
@zephyr80726 ай бұрын
Braxton would go on to finally lose it and take out his frustrations by forcing Johnathan Archer to randomly travel or "leap" if you will through time.
@zephyr80726 ай бұрын
If you stuck a Devidian in a tree, would they be a Branch Devidian?
@daviddiggens88416 ай бұрын
Wow... The weird nostalgia you just gave me is.... Well weird
@magical_catgirl6 ай бұрын
Time's Arrow was the first episode of Star Trek that I saw in full. I had seen random clips before while skimming through the overnight recordings on the VHS looking for what I had recorded. Oddly, given how Australian network TV of the time treated science fiction, it was being aired in prime time rather then at random oclock overnight.
@DeconvertedMan6 ай бұрын
Guinan used connections to get them on the base, she mentions it in a toss-away-line.
@BlackDoveNYC6 ай бұрын
I like this two part story though the criticism is mostly valid.. I think of it as one of the “comfort food” episodes of ST:TNG fun and light.
@paullunsford89216 ай бұрын
Great review. All your criticisms are completely valid, but this is still one of my favorite TNG episodes to throw on while I'm doing something. It's just such a fun episode, carried entirely by the competency of the cast. I also enjoy the Mark Twain impression as campy as it is.
@Zeithri6 ай бұрын
_Mmrmrmm, Ya! Woh! Ha!_ The Devidians show up again in Star Trek Online and they are a pain to bother with. They also like to hang out on Drozana Station for some reason.
@sirrliv6 ай бұрын
It just popped into my head: There actually was a catastrophic disease outbreak in San Francisco starting around 1900. Only it wasn't cholera: it was the Bubonic Plague. It started among Chinese immigrants and spread throughout the city by rats. Attempts were made to quarantine and research the outbreak, but these were hampered by self-serving politicians and the general anti-Asian racism of the time. Ultimately what largely stopped the outbreak from growing into a national pandemic was, kind of ironically, the Great Earthquake of 1906, because sometimes you need a city destroying disaster to stop a city destroying disaster. Not sure if that's what the writers were referencing here; the fact that there was a Medieval plague in San Francisco has only largely come to public light fairly recently. But it's possible, and the writing team just got the disease wrong because cholera is more strongly associated with the 19th Century than the Bubonic freaking Plague.
@ThePiachu6 ай бұрын
Probably if they'd say it was the plague too many people would think that's a silly thing and what were the writers thinking since reality can be stranger than fiction...
@YouTubecanfuckagoat6 ай бұрын
When using your time dilator actually causes a temporal cortex, causing a massive earthquake, that ironically, eradicated the reason you tried to hit those coordinates because “the great death” wipes out almost half the world in your reality. Now, you’re stuck in a past that has spiralled off, from your own perspective, from the main timeline. Everything is now a butterfly effect. For us. It’s history.
@HilaryPea6 ай бұрын
@@ThePiachu And as silly as it sounds, I remember hearing about more recent, but smaller, bubonic plague outbreaks in the last couple of decades.
@TF2CrunchyFrog6 ай бұрын
True about the San Francisci Bubonic Plague outbreak. But the year 1900 was also near the start of the 6th global cholera pandemic. Cholera originated in the subcontinent India and only arrived in the Western hemisphere in the early 19th century via port cities, first reaching London in 1830 and the USA (via Quebec, Canada) in 1832. Early outbreaks in the Indian subcontinent are believed to have been the result of crowded, poor living conditions, as well as the presence of pools of still water, both of which provide ideal conditions for cholera to thrive. Seven global cholera pandemics have occurred since the early 19th century; the first one did not reach the Americas. - The first cholera pandemic occurred in the Bengal region of India, near Calcutta (now Kolkata), starting in 1817 through 1824. The disease dispersed from India to Southeast Asia, the Middle East, Europe, and Eastern Africa through trade routes. The disease first spread by travelers along trade routes (land and sea) to Russia in 1817, later to the rest of Europe, and from Europe to North America and the rest of the world (hence the name "Asiatic cholera"). - The second pandemic lasted from 1826 to 1837 and particularly affected North America and Europe, due to the result of advancements in transportation and global trade, and increased human migration, including soldiers. - The third pandemic erupted in 1846, persisted until 1860, extended to North Africa, and reached South America, for the first time specifically affecting Brazil. - The fourth pandemic lasted from 1863 to 1875, and spread from India to Naples and Spain, and to the United States in 1873. - The fifth pandemic was from 1881 to 1896 and started in India and spread to Europe, Asia, and South America. Spanish physician Jaume Ferran i Clua developed the first successful cholera inoculation in 1885, the first to immunize humans against a bacterial disease; out of the 30 thousand people he vaccinated only 54 died. The Russian-Jewish bacteriologist Waldemar Haffkine also developed a human cholera vaccine in July 1892. He conducted a massive inoculation program in British India. Persons who survive an episode of cholera (which if untreated has a mortality rate of 50-60%) have long-lasting immunity for at least 3 years. In the 21st century, a number of safe and effective oral vaccines for cholera are available, as well as one injectable vaccine. - The sixth pandemic started in India and lasted from 1899 to 1923. These later epidemics were less fatal due to a greater understanding of the cholera bacteria. - The seventh pandemic originated in Indonesia in 1961 and is marked by the emergence of a new strain, nicknamed El Tor, which still persists (as of 2018) in developing countries. A cholera outbreak started in Yemen (in nthe south of the Arabian peninsula) in 2016 and is still ongoing due to the civil war in Yemen (which started in 2015), the wide-spread poverty in Yemen and lack of access to clean drinking water... or water in general, as ground water is the main source of water in Yemen but the ground water table has dropped dramatically from 30m to 1200m, beyond the reach of normal wells, from massive overuse due to lack of government regulations, and the war destroyed most civic infrastructure.
@TF2CrunchyFrog6 ай бұрын
@@HilaryPea Yes, various types of bubonic plague and pneumonic plague (of the lungs) are still around, esp in developing countries in Africa and Asia where access to the suitable antibiotics is scarce. Although the virus strain that was responsible for the medieval Bubonic Plague no longer seems to be around, thankfully, according to genetic sequencing done on virus particles found in mummified remains of medieval plague victims. The medieval strain, from historical accounts, had rapid onset and could kill within days or in some cases a few hours, as some victims allegedly got up in the morning feeling fine, but then the swellings of the lymph notes (buboes) appeared and the black spots on the skin and the victim died of massive sepsis before the day was over. Historical accounts mention both the bubonic symptoms but also pneumonic symptoms, so either it was a virus strain that affected multiple body systems or multiple strains that affected victims at the same time. Not uncommon if the virus was a new mutations and rapidly mutating, as we've seen recently with Covid-19.
@Norvo826 ай бұрын
Wonder why the writers decided to set Time's Arrow after Twain wrote A Conneticut Yankee in King Arthur's Court. It would have been another neat little nod if his experiences on the Enterprise inspired him to write his own time travel story.
@spartacus365266 ай бұрын
Yea Guinan, you may never meet. Unless it’s in your bar or whatever in 2024….
@zephyr80726 ай бұрын
Now now, let's not bring fanfic into this.
@Jokie1556 ай бұрын
That's not their first meeting, from any perspective.
@maxxjapan6195 ай бұрын
Oh god, I hated that soooooo much.
@JanRademan6 ай бұрын
A convaluted plot that would have been sorted immediately if they had just plugged in the head they found on Data's body and asked it what happened.
@MaxDoll6 ай бұрын
The Mark Twain voice was gratingly strident. And you brought up very good points regarding the alien villains. But I've always liked this episode. And I have a soft-spot for the reading of Midsummer Night's Dream. Especially with Data reading Puck's lines, when Brent Spiner voiced Puck in Gargoyles. And Mrs. Carmichael's giggle is adorable.
@JerryListener6 ай бұрын
That Cosby impression just roofied me.
@nathanbrown86806 ай бұрын
It sounds like an impression not of Cosby but of Cosby doing an impression. Specifically the drugged out bum from the bus station announcer sketch.
@YouTubecanfuckagoat6 ай бұрын
You’ll forget all about it.
@stevemanart6 ай бұрын
The overlap of "Knows about Football in the 1990s" and "Watches reviews of old sci-fi for entertainment" feels like it should be pretty small, but here I am getting a Joe Montana joke in 2024.
@Willpower-742056 ай бұрын
I hope that I'm not the only one who noticed that the Data's head prop looked a bit off. It's likely due to the materials they were using at the time, but it still gave my much younger self the creeps.... 😳
@marshallhuffer47136 ай бұрын
28:04 - Billups: "Mark Twain's got a gun!"
@maxxjapan6196 ай бұрын
I say I did understand that reference, sir!
@adiuntesserande68936 ай бұрын
"Did someone do an iconic Twain?" Yes. Samuel Clemens. And there are indeed surviving recordings.
@kw7378a15 ай бұрын
Pretty sure existing recordings are of an actor doing a Twain impression, not Twain himself.
@adiuntesserande68935 ай бұрын
@@kw7378a1 There are a couple of wax cylinder records of him from his last days.
@kw7378a15 ай бұрын
@@adiuntesserande6893 no there aren't. Just Google it. Any wax cylinders of his voice were destroyed and no longer exist.
@kevinramsey4176 ай бұрын
I have a theory that every William Shatner impression is based on Kevin Pollack's William Shatner impression which was actually about how Shatner, at least when he plays Kirk always seems to.....pause in the middle of sentences.
@Philbert-s2c6 ай бұрын
Was he the first guy to do it? I know his is probably the best known.
@Blimbus-Blombo3 ай бұрын
It’s a good example of how impressions become Flanderized over time.
@Mike-420696 ай бұрын
Sometimes I like to think everyones life is just the universe trying to experience itself through us. All of our experiences now matter how exciting or mundane is still a unique experience and therefore important to the universes collective consciousness.
@stephenippolito97935 ай бұрын
Yes. William Gillette was supposed to be the "best" imitator of Mark Twain in the early 1930s. Love your channel and SFDebris website channel!!
@TALCOLMINTHEMIDDLE6 ай бұрын
Wow you dropped this just a couple of hours after they played the episode on Pluto TV. Don't think I ever watched an episode and then one of your reviews in the same day
@river_acheron6 ай бұрын
That only happened to me once as well. ^_^
@owlsayssouth6 ай бұрын
Federation has a firm "no vampires" rule.
@s.henrlllpoklookout50693 ай бұрын
The real reason why they carry phasers on every away mission & hide them in so many nooks and crannies aboard ship
@tipulsar856 ай бұрын
11 years later I can safely say, yes there is a version of Mark Twain that most go for. And that is from the one hander, "Mark Twain Tonight!" as perfected by Hal Holbook. By the time of Time's Arrow's airing, it had been on the air for a quarter century, and would take a decade more for it to be on home media. Why take that long? VHS was available, but still kind of expensive compared to DVD.
@daverapp6 ай бұрын
3:34 It's weird seeing a clear shot of the uniforms from the back.
@KingoftheJuice186 ай бұрын
This is my first viewing of your channel. Early on, your observations made me think of MST3K (surely a fine compliment), and then you go and mention them! I didn't catch all your references, but I especially appreciated the allusion to the Golem.
@invictus25786 ай бұрын
In a previous episode, I think it might be season three somebody asked why Guinan and Picard are so close and Gan said I don’t know. Old man was nice to me once long ago.
@MKDumas19816 ай бұрын
"Booby Trap". Geordi talking to Guinan about romance. She says she's attracted to bald men because a bald man was kind to her once, when she was hurting. I had a similar experience worth redheads.
@ravenwilder40996 ай бұрын
Why does Crusher's outfit include a pair of glasses? Dr. Crusher doesn't need glasses, and it's not like it's meant to disguise their appearance - no one in this time period knows who Beverly Crusher is.
@KingoftheJuice186 ай бұрын
It's because everyone knows that smart people like nurses wear glasses...
@daviddiggens88416 ай бұрын
@@KingoftheJuice18except Dr. Crusher is the least intelligent doctor in star fleet... So perhaps the glasses were a last resort to be taken serious in a time where people were more competent
@daviddiggens88416 ай бұрын
That was weird: YT removed an entire sentence from my comment and posted it anyway rather than deleting it. Is that new. I pointed out that Crusher at least is better than phlox with the idea of keeping species alive at least and used a word that began with G. Seriously is this a new algorithm?
@KingoftheJuice186 ай бұрын
@@daviddiggens8841 Wait, don't tell me-and Janeway is the worst captain in Star Fleet (or maybe Burnham) 🤣
@alexneff6 ай бұрын
Data's pimp hand is strong
@BrianS19816 ай бұрын
the Kansas City Chief gag has a whole different meaning these days.
@CybershamanX6 ай бұрын
(3:25) A simple (somewhat exaggerated) nod of acknowledgement from Picard would have been sufficient. But, no... We get... "Type ARRR!!!" 😬
@MKDumas19816 ай бұрын
This episode has uncredited writing from Hideo Kojima.
@tbeller806 ай бұрын
Always bothered me since the episode first aired. Like Picard knows the difference between those components.
@zephyr80726 ай бұрын
@@MKDumas1981 Did you say nerd?
@daviddiggens88416 ай бұрын
@@MKDumas1981I guess since it was his least convoluted and best written story to date he didn't want the credit
@MKDumas19816 ай бұрын
@@daviddiggens8841: I heard he also wrote for "Evolution" and "The Best of Both Worlds, pt I".
@charlesvan13Ай бұрын
"There is no way to avoid that it will end up in the cave." Data could just avoid Earth from now on, or even just avoid the cave.
@lordmontymord87016 ай бұрын
Haven't seen this one in a long time. There are many episodes of TNG i rewatch every couple of years, but these aren't among them, despite me liking it when i first saw it. I guess it was the way the alien menace was handled. The alien "nurse" simply stating that there's nothing the Enterprise could do to help them looks like a cheap way to say their violent solution was right - even though Riker and the others didn't know this. Yes, we were unable to find a solution with our limited ressources, so i'm sure this Federation with it's different - and in many fields except time travel advanced tech and knowledge - will be unable to help us.
@jercoxthealmighty6 ай бұрын
I think this episode might have been child me's introduction to Mark Twain, so maybe that's why I don't dislike the portrayal as much as others seem to. Plus of course child me thought randomly finding Data's head in an old mine shaft was the coolest thing ever, so my ability to critique this episode may be colored by nostalgia. :D
@gargamellenoir84606 ай бұрын
Was there actually a controversy about that 5/10? Because it seems very fair to me.
@EebstertheGreat6 ай бұрын
I think there are two approaches to time travel stories. The overwhelmingly popular one is where time travel is used as a McGuffin to get people into the wrong time. That's only good if the fun of different times coming together is worth the implausibility of the premise. "The Trouble with Tribbles" is a good example of an episode where it's definitely worth it even though it makes absolutely no logical sense. The shockingly unpopular one is the one makes time travel itself the subject of interest. Movies usually want to go a certain way, and time travel is just a thing they pack along the voyage, and it works however is needed in the story before leaving and tying a bow behind it. But sometimes there are stories _about_ time travel, where the way it works is important, and the conflict arises naturally from what that would imply. _Primer_ is an example of such a movie. Another is the Spanish film _Los cronocrímenes_ (English title: "Time Crimes"). This isn't always the best plot, but it's so rare that I find the industry's fear remarkable, like it's taboo to treat the favorite Sci Fi fixture seriously. I think part of the issue is in constructing the scenes. Producers have a feeling of a show progressing, and things have to appear in a certain order to make sense. Even though scenes in different places might not literally happen at the same time, we need events to occur in a certain order for the audience to understand. But in a properly-done episode involving time travel, that simply isn't the case. Some things will appear out of order not just chronologically but in causal order, because that's what time travel is all about. Nobody wants to do that, because it's confusing. But if you aren't doing that, then it isn't really time travel, is it? Despite the fluffy ending and confusing plot, I really think _Interstsellar_ did this better than any other high-budget movie recently. Just kind of by default, because it has no competition.
@JohnZyski6 ай бұрын
I saw this as a kid, and I loved it.
@bthsr71136 ай бұрын
Guinan accepting time travel doesn't bother me all that much. She's lived a long life and TNG implies she's more than the average space traveler beyond just a longer life. Though if that's the angle they wanted to take for her not reacting with surprise to the concept, then she'd have needed to play a bit more coy over whether this is her first brush with time travel or if she's things just as weird.
@BronzeBoy5206 ай бұрын
So did Picard season 2 ever explain why Guinean went from Guinean in the late 19th century to another woman in the 2020’s to than Guinean again?
@xp75756 ай бұрын
They had to retcon that to cover up the fact that they retconned the fact that Guinean met Picard nearly 2 centuries earlier and that she shouldn't have been confused about who he is
@WDC_OSA6 ай бұрын
It's because Whoopi got old and portly
@joethehero26 ай бұрын
Wibbly wobbly timey whimey stuff.
@OtakuboyT6 ай бұрын
Who DIDN'T get face-lift in the 90s
@Blueskybuffalo6 ай бұрын
That future never happened because Picard came from the dystopia future. The TNG Guinan, not to mention that entire reality, did not exist. Picard and crew were the only constant, everything else got Q'd.
@toddfraser33536 ай бұрын
One aspect I found lacking is the fish out of water trope with time travel. With Picard rather comfortably conning Mrs. Carmichael. Or Crusher easily taking a submissive role with the Doctor. Heck Geordie needing to walk around public with a cane.
@hariman77276 ай бұрын
This episode is a little bit ridiculous, but also fun, and good. Mark Twain being that ridiculous caricature was pretty normal back then. EDIT: This episode is definitely one for the antics, and not so much for the villains. Ironically, I think it's STILL better than a lot of the recent series, which makes me sad.
@UniquelyCritical2 ай бұрын
Congratulations on getting married, sir.
@luisostasuc81353 ай бұрын
You are correct about needing more time to process the consequences of the situation. There is definitely a way to have dealt with the idea of stealing human "souls" or energy or whatever. They were already far ahead of the viridians in that they waited until people were already dying. The next and best step would be to, while cloaked, ask people if they're okay with it. The complication would then be "is there an afterlife? is a soul really what is needed to pass from the physical realm into the afterlife? Would appealing to people convinced that their actions put them into a bad afterlife, and giving them the option of eternal torture or a short period of agony before complee annihilation, be morally justified? Whether or not the afterlife is real makes this even more grey: if it is real then the act of feeding on a soul would be a cointoss between good and bad, is it isn't real then it's a long discussion about giving people on the verge of a shite death a shot at a noble ending versus tricking them by appealing to their version of a good afterlife.
@charlesvan13Ай бұрын
They wanted to used the Data head prop, they made for Data--Lore.
@MKDumas19816 ай бұрын
37:36 - The late Gilbert Gottfried takes umbrage with that statement.
@AndrewLoukidis-jr2bp6 ай бұрын
Good thing the people checking out the cave new who Data was.
@fredrikcarlstedt3935 ай бұрын
A French Android at Mark Twains Home Court Reception .
@anthonymaslow7986 ай бұрын
Hal Holbrook did a one man play where he played Mark Twain for 60 years in a row. He was very famous for it. I doubt he was cribbing the voice off of other actors who played the role.
@peepance17994 ай бұрын
Enterprise guests include Abe Lincoln, and Mark Twain
@kevinrussell35016 ай бұрын
I think these are good episodes. And it led to one of the best but creepiest episodes of Srat Trek Online. It's really good
@jodieg631827 күн бұрын
Wouldn't The Amazing Maurice have his educated rodents preform the trick?
@BobSentell6 ай бұрын
Twain sounding like the Penguin got me.
@marcherwitch98116 ай бұрын
only one nite... saying monologues aren't how people speak... +laughs in used to work for the army+
@ImperatorPenguin6 ай бұрын
So stick to the impression done in 'The Adventures of Mark Twain', gotcha.
@xp75756 ай бұрын
16:49 missed opportunity for a D.O.C. reference 24:51 please do a whole episode in this voice 🥺
@ImaginaryTerrie36 ай бұрын
PERHAPS TODAY IS A GOOD DAY TO D...oh ice cream!
@daviddiggens88416 ай бұрын
What? Is that a Joe Biden quote?
@rc89376 ай бұрын
Maybe they thought Data was East European (i.e. Slavic).
@MrRobot19846 ай бұрын
The episode that proves Star Trek: Picard couldn’t happen. Guinan somehow aging backwards then forward again, no alien biology is going to square that circle.
@zephyr80726 ай бұрын
Star Trek Picard is Picard's fever dream as he lays dying in his vineyard from his bad brain syndrome and no one can convince me otherwise.
@MrRobot19846 ай бұрын
@@zephyr8072 agreed, or he got blown up by Romulans in episode 1 and the rest was a trip through hell by Q.
@CybershamanX6 ай бұрын
I'm so sad they used the Devidians in the recent book trilogy to bring to a close the decades-long continuity they had developed. I enjoyed it until near the end when Spock brought up his memory of his half-sister (after having never mentioning her before) battling an AI bent on destroying everything. 😕
@Zeithri6 ай бұрын
They also show up in Star Trek Online in case you wanted to blast them with some phaser fire.
@ArcaneSky6 ай бұрын
Yeah it was an unfortunate ending to what was a really good expanded universe.
@franohmsford75486 ай бұрын
Since when have Trek novels been "canon"? They've always been explicitly NON-Canon! It's not like Star Wars where Lucas actually signed off on and made requirements of the writers of Legends Continuity! Or Doctor Who where the Virgin New Adventures, Missing Adventures and later BBC New Adventures featuring Paul McGann's Doctor actually tried to maintain a consistent Canon until Russell T. decided to ignore them and most of Classic Who along with them! Star Trek on the other hand is known for the various novels being completely contradictory and absolutely NOT Canon!
@CybershamanX6 ай бұрын
@franohmsford7548 Who said anything about them being canon? They were simply a very enjoyable alternative continuity that was in real life forced by the higher-ups to change course, in fact, literally destroyed in-universe, to conform to the new shows. If you had been following it for the last few decades, it was really emotional. So, please politely take your ignorance and go elsewhere. 🙄
@franohmsford75486 ай бұрын
@@CybershamanX Apart from the latter seasons of Discovery {I gave up on that about a 3rd to half the way through season 3} I've watched every single live action episode of Star Trek along with all the films. The only novel I ever read was Vonda McIntyre's "Enterprise" written in 1986 but I wouldn't have read it till at least 94 after her Star Wars novel "The Crystal Star" came out. I enjoyed that novel first time round but was put off buying any more Trek novels because they were explicitly NON-CANON! - It's got nothing to do with the "new shows" or any of the constant ret-conning post 2008! Trek novels have always been explicitly non-canon so why bring them up?
@FreeJaffa926 ай бұрын
Frankly a 5 out of 10 is being very generous.
@bradwolf076 ай бұрын
Part one was a good start, plenty of potential. But the second part was a let down.
@spencersholden6 ай бұрын
I think they know Gainan well enough to know she’s seen almost everything. What’s weirder: a godlike entity or a predestination paradox.
@MKDumas19816 ай бұрын
Yes.
@mikegates89936 ай бұрын
Gainan is a one-woman Dragon Break, every possible version of herself exists at once, even if they totally conflict with each other.
@MKDumas19816 ай бұрын
@@mikegates8993: Don't give the writers of Picard season 2 a pass!
@MKDumas19816 ай бұрын
29:19 - Wereworf.
@Nasafalkas16 ай бұрын
Oh dear. Gainan and Data made Mark Twain come out of the closet.
@HilaryPea6 ай бұрын
-Did you say the staff is called an "effidian"? I can't get the spelling correct to Google it. And the captioning is getting the spelling nowhere close to accurate. -"I like this, the fact that they have to come face-to-face ... with a demonstration of Data's mortality." It's alway nice to see you no-so-subtly acknowledge things like inside jokes or puns (intended or not) without actually having to elaborate. It's the little things that bring a smile and make us come up with our own funny verbal acknowledgements, instead. As usual, sometimes less is better. -"Hey, make her dress disappear!" Hahahahaha! -LMAO at Pimpin' Data! -"Pulling anals beads out of a sheep." OMG, I am dying here! -Damn Gramma, always ruining everything, including Free Ice Cream Day! -Not "... Dying in terror and presumably no ice cream ...", instead "... Dying in terror from lack of ice cream ...". Get it right next time! -Twain couldn't be any more American if he had an Uncle Sam hat with a feather in it named Macaroni. -Your acid Farewell of Twain was wonderfully acidic! -Guinan is an alien herself, visiting Earth for awhile. And, since she has otherworldly knowledge and wisdom, she could accept Data as not being human. It wouldn't take much to convince her, if he had to. Just open up a panel on his arm for her to see his circuitry and wiring. If she needed to believe it from the rest of his human/humanoid crewmates, I could understand she would/should be appropriately skeptical of such claims. Dyson was skeptical to believe Sarah Conner's claims, but he had no choice but to believe the Terminator's claims after skin was peeled back from an arm. There could be no doubt for a space-faring Guinan where Data is concerned. -And I agree that the writers could have skipped Mrs. Carmichael's arc, and instead, say why the hell the aliens were killing off human's for their soul energies. It's sad they all had to die. The fact that they were going after already sick homeless meant that they were trying to be merciful about it. People who were already in pain and dying. This meant that they might have been willing and eager to help the Enterprise crew find an alternative. They couldn't find an alternative, it doesn't mean that somebody else (like Data and his high intelligence) couldn't. I get that bad guys have to die or be incarcerated for a feel good storyline. But, the merciful deaths, and the fact that the aliens were weak and dying themselves. Then the fact that their reasons were never explained it is more bitter than sweet. Like they weren't given a chance to explain one character or redemption plot. It leave an empty feeling and too many strings untied at the end of the episode. And using genecide to stop them felt very unnecesary for something they were forced to do to survive. Yes, they killed, but in a circle of life kinda way. They still could have had a relieving solution at the end. {--- I wrote this before hearing your video-end summation. I am glad you agree with their death/genecide was too easy and out of character. -In your summation you mentioned Part 1 had too much for Part 2 to deal with. I was thinking of a Part 3 before you concluded to that idea. Then they would have had time for all the fluff without sacrificing the story, the plot, and mostly importantly, the conclusion. -Just your numerous descriptions of Twain, alone, make this review worth watching.
@alexneff6 ай бұрын
The definitive shatner impression is from family guy
@MaryKirk-u6x3 ай бұрын
Desiree Ways
@applewagon2536 ай бұрын
That mark Twain makeup is so bad!
@jankostrhun87254 ай бұрын
Believe me. Most of the Asia would largely prefer to be conquered by Brits and Yanks rather than Chinese.
@MrARock0016 ай бұрын
Has anyone ever fact-checked Twain's speech about Alfred Russel Wallace? I had always known of Wallace as the co-discoverer of evolution by natural selection. Was he ever quoted as "reaffirming" any creationist beliefs?
@jonathancurran53666 ай бұрын
Wallace did theorise that life was confined to Earth in a paper replying to those claiming the canals spotted allegedly on Mars were signs of an advanced Martian civilisation.
@MrARock0016 ай бұрын
@@jonathancurran5366 cool, thanks!
@wilkoufert87586 ай бұрын
Strangest episode of NewWho ever. But it holds my heart by finally revealing Riker as a genocidal villain
@tristanmccann68385 ай бұрын
19:37
@robertpearson541026 күн бұрын
Twain's voice is irritating and that probably leads to a more negative analysis of his performance than warranted. If he had toned it down a little bit, it probably would have been fine. I never like it when the time travel stories dredge up a legendary character from that time period for a cameo. Aha! So that's how London started his literary career. Who knew?
@lynngreen79786 ай бұрын
So Lore is Left Brained and Data is Right Brained
@MKDumas19816 ай бұрын
Type R?
@Renegade27866 ай бұрын
If Lore is Left Brain and Data is Right Brain, does that mean that Soong is Maximillion Cortex?