I'm only finished with episode 7, but yes. This show is pretty damn intense.Just finished the first 14 episodes of Attack on Titan. Holy shit, is that show nuts.
Whoops. I mean 13. Found it here:I'm only finished with episode 7, but yes. This show is pretty damn intense.
EDIT: Also, how on earth have you seen 14 episodes? Wikipedia's page only lists a 13.5 episode that's supposed to air on July 6th.
Thanks, though by the time I catch up the remaining episodes will be up on Hulu, I was just wondering if future episodes had been leaked.Whoops. I mean 13. Found it here:
http://www.animesub.tv/watch/shingeki-no-kyojin-english-online/
Finish all of DS9 already?
Yeah, TNG doesn't get reliably good until after Roddenberry died.
Or the end of the writer's strike.Yeah, TNG doesn't get reliably good until after Roddenberry died.
From what I read, Roddenberry had a very firm hand on the direction and tone of the show - everybody had to "learn something" including the audience in the most anvilicious way with every episode, and Roddenberry's clashes with writers caused a revolving door of quitting and new writers, which explains the stumbling feeling of the first season. Once he was out of the picture, Berman and Piller could get to work sculpting the star trek universe in such a way that led to the series' main success and paved the way for DS9.Or the end of the writer's strike.
Whelp, thanks for that... Guess I don't have to watch the rest of the show now.Wesley makes acting ensign in like the 5th episode. Holy shit, if I were an enlisted non-com on that ship, I would be so fucking mad taking orders from a 12 year old.
The Enterprise gets a new chief engineer every episode too. They have some real turnover for that position.
On DS9, as much as I liked the series, the finale was a bit of a letdown. Most of the space battle footage was reused from the battle to retake DS9 and the battle for Chintoka and we find out that Sisko's big destiny from the Prophets is to push Gul Dukat and a book off a cliff. Pretty antic-climactic. Most of the other characters get a decent send-off, with the exception of old Dax, the pretend like she never existed. Even when Worf is remembering his good times on DS9, they cut her out of it.
Also, Nicole De Boer has one of the most beautiful smiles on Earth, that shit ain't no lie.
Whelp, thanks for that... Guess I don't have to watch the rest of the show now.
I don't know, but it has another season and looks to be still going, so I'm happy. And yeah, what a cliffhanger.My only qualm is Batman being a little shinier than he should be, other than that it looks all right to me.
Also Gravity Falls last night, holy shnikes what a cliff hanger. And its cliffhangeryness is even more extended because the season finale comes out three weeks from now for some reason. Seriously what is with the release of these episodes?
I don't know, but it has another season and looks to be still going, so I'm happy. And yeah, what a cliffhanger.
At least we know more now about what the triangle hat guy in the opening is, but how Bill Cipher will play out over the course of the series and his connection to Stan Pines will be a new matter.
I know right? And is Stan faking not knowing or was it some crazy mind erasure deally bop? And of course Soos mystery blocks the audience from figuring out what is behind the vending machine, hilarious.
I hadn't thought to question if Stan remembered anything or not, but now I am wondering about that. Just another stick on the fiery mystery of Stan Pines. Also, I'm guessing the kid with the book in Stan's childhood memory may be his twin brother, if he is in fact a twin.
Twin brother? Now that I did not think of! Also, notice how Bill referred to both the twins AND Soos as Stan's family? It would explain why he works for free at the shack.
I've become partial to the twin brother theory ever since I noticed how much everyone calls him Stanley yet Gideon and Bud Gleeful both call him Stanford. That, and show creator Alex Hirsch said that people were guessing wrong about the figure in the time travel episode (who looks like a younger Stan Pines). That has led to a lot of speculation that Stan may have had a twin. My guess is that something happened to the twin and Stan is now posing (to a certain degree) as his twin.
Also, I did not catch that about Soos. Good find.
I'm more bothered by the look of the world. It's so empty and sterile. The rooms and streets just don't work well with the character designs, and look cheap.Beware the Batman
Still not liking the look of Batman or Bruce Wayne, though.
You've said this before, and I think I had the same response - The series got better once Roddenberry was out of the way. They gave Troi a real uniform (and ALL the uniforms got much better, with jackets and pants instead of tight onesies) and something more to do than just cheerlead, Worf became more than just the resident tough that the villain of the week would beat up to show the audience how tough he was, Wesley goes the hell away (though there is a brief period in the immediate aftermath of Wesley leaving that Geordi and Data find themselves in the "I did some stupid science experiment and now the whole ship is at risk" niche), and Q introduces the Borg. OH THE BORG, HOW GREAT THEY WERE. Also the sisters of Duras start to make Klingon politics interesting.Man, some episodes of early Next Generation are just staggering in their storytelling incompetence.
Just finished an episode that begins as a silly shitty comedy involving space Irish and halfway into it becomes a half-assed rape/abortion allegory about clones that goes absolutely nowhere before a super convenient resolution. I am shocked this show got beyond the second season (which boasts only a handful of episodes that are beyond poor).
For what it's worth, Alexander has become a bonafied badass by the time of Star Trek Online. Hell, he was even tolerable for the few episodes of DS9 he was in.I warn you now, Alexander Rozhenko will become the next "Scrappy" of the series. In ways you can't imagine.
Virtually all the races in the universe can interbreed (with varying levels of success). It's never fully explained WHY this is possible, but it's hinted that all humaniod-type races are ether distantly related to the same species or created by it. This is why they can produce viable offspring that can reproduce in turn, unlike virtually every other instance in nature that creates an infertile monstrosity like a mule or a liger.Also, are humans the only species to interbreed with others? If someone is half something, it's always half-human half something else. I guess it makes sense, since humans are the vast majority of the Federation apparently.