Battlestar delay

February 14th, 2009 | by | battlestar galactica

Feb
14

FYI, I’m out of town and my mother-in-law doesn’t have cable, so I haven’t seen BSG yet. I may watch it on Hulu tonight, once the little ones are asleep, but it’s one of those shows I need to watch on a bigger screen, you know?

I’ll recap/review once I get a chance to watch. :-)

Meanwhile, if you just need to know who’s a Cylon and who’s not in your real life, check out the iPhone Cylon Detector app.

My friend over at iSmashPhone sent me the link this morning. Basically, you take a photo with your iPhone’s camera or load another image you already have into the app and it uses facial recognition (plus you have to tel it whether the person is male or female) and it tells you if your subject is a toaster or a native of the Colonies.

Costs $1.99. Nice. Now I just need an iPhone.

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Blog Carnival roundup

February 13th, 2009 | by | 24, blog carnival, supernatural

Feb
13

Just one this week, but it’s the really important one:

Blogs4Bauer, home of the Carnival of Bauer!!!, hosts this week. Lots of good stuff, including several lessons to be learned from 24 (such as, “Don’t bring a knife to a Jack fight”).

Here it is. If you want to participate in the next carnival, submit your article here.

Visions of Winchesters: The Supernatural Variety (A Blog Carnival) is on a break, because Supernatural is on a break, unfortunately. Last week’s episode (with the siren) is the last until March 5, according to BuddyTV.

UPDATE: The CW has now pushed the return date for Supernatural (and Smallville) back to March 12, apparently to avoid competing with American Idol’s semi-final round (probably not a bad idea), according to BuddyTV. Thanks to my buddy, Erika, for the tip.

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Lost: This Place is Death

February 12th, 2009 | by | lost

Feb
12

I was talking with a friend earlier today about the shows this season, and we agreed that they just keep getting better and better.

I mean, when we met the young Rousseau and found out Jin was alive last week, did you think this week could top it? Well, it did, imho.

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Some Twitter friends and I were discussing our favorite lines from the episode, and there were two that really made us guffaw:

Miles: “He’s Korean, I’m from Encino.”

Ben: “I didn’t account for traffic.”

True Lost fans don’t need the context for those quotes to laugh again at them.

But those aren’t even what made last night so fabulous.

First off:

Charlotte:

Her deathbed conversation with Daniel was extremely illuminating, in that Lost sort of way, where you learn a whole bunch of info, but still don’t know exactly what it means.

We now know she grew up on the island, and I am 99.9 percent sure now that she is Annie, Ben’s childhood sweetheart. She seems much younger than Ben, but we know that time moves differently on and off the island and so that really doesn’t matter.

Why did her mother move her from the island? Did Faraday somehow convince her to leave and tell her daughter the island didn’t exist? We know he told Charlotte never to come back or she’d died.

Faraday seemed to be surprised by this, but I believe it hasn’t happened yet in his life. He hasn’t traveled back in time to Charlotte’s childhood. And despite his knowing you can’t change the past, he tries anyway, hoping against hope that this time it will work.

Now, it previously had seemed Faraday knew she was from the island, but it didn’t seem that way last night. Not exactly what the deal is there.

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24: Hour 8

February 11th, 2009 | by | 24, jack bauer

Feb
11

Ladies and gentlemen, we have hit a new high point on 24: An almost-torture scene involving a baby.

Yes, our Jack-ette, Special Agent Renee Walker, handcuffed a mom to a table while her baby was crying and pretended like she was going to hurt the baby to get the dad to talk.

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It cost her a little piece of her soul to do it, but she did what she needed to do. Jack’s been there. He can be her sponsor.

This season has some kick-ass women – President Alison Taylor is pretty hardcore, too, saying she can’t expect the citizens of the country she serves to make sacrifices if she’s not ready to make them herself.

She’s way tougher than Larry over at the FBI. Who, first off, is completely unable to be incognito (what the hell was he doing in the hallway while he was talking to Renee on the phone?), and second, is totally a wimp and gives away the keys to his SUV to Jack, who – naturally – totals it.

By the way – were those looters trying to rifle through Larry’s car while Jack’s off offing the bad guy? Is D.C. really that bad now? Just wondering.

All those little details are part of what makes 24 great.

To be sure, the scene was a little boring when Larry waxed poetic about how what makes us different and better was that we don’t resort to torture, blah blah blah, but Jack had the right response: “Not today.”

But the best line of the night was when President Taylor wondered aloud if she could trust Jack.

His response: “Ask around.”

Indeed.

Now, I know she’s a brand-new president and all, but you’d have thought there’d be some secret communique between presidents, some book or something, where it would have a photo of Jack Bauer, with the explanation: Believe everything this man says, he’s saved this nation six times already, dammit!

How could she be president and not know Jack Bauer? Yeesh. How the heck long was he traipsing around Africa and elsewhere?

Last of all, I totally love the insane storyline of Dubaku’s girlfriend and her disabled sister.

That’s exactly the kind of insanity that makes 24 so much fun. A friend over at Blogs4Bauer the other night when we liveblogged commented that this woman’s going to be the cougar of Season 7, and I think he’s absolutely right.

Look, the guy’s trying to keep control of his fictional African nation while launching terrorist attacks agains the United States and torturing the First Gentleman. He CAN’T come over for a lasagna dinner. Sorry. He’s just going to have to reschedule.

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So Say We All: The Battlestar Galactica Blog Carnival, Ed. 4.5.4

February 10th, 2009 | by | battlestar galactica, blog carnival, so say we all

Feb
10

Everyone knows I continue to be utterly amazed at the amazingness of these final episodes. I’m loving the blog carnival this time around, because it’s great to read what others are thinking.

So let’s just dive right in:

Norman Doering presents What scales? Blood, yes, lots of blood, but no scales, posted at A Blog from Hell, saying, “Instead of giving condemned prisoners last rites, on Galactica the atheistic crew talk to Baltar not about their sins, but about their lives overall. It gives the concept of confession a whole new meaning.” He also offers the reader background music to listen to while reading his post. He’s very relieved the mutiny’s over so we can get back to the important questions at hand.

Ms. Smarty Pants presents This Is Supposed to Feel Like a Victory Right?, posted at Ms. Smarty Pants Know It All, saying, “There’s no way to pick a theme so a list it is.” I really like her analysis of both Gaeta and Zarek. Very interesting, particularly Gaeta’s. And she also references this excellent piece by Mo Ryan from the Chicago Tribune, in which Richard Hatch (who played Apollo in the original series) explains Zarek.

Audra presents BSG – 4 down, 6 to go, posted at True Science Fiction. She was so stunned by the episode that she headed straight to the computer to jot down her thoughts. We go down the rabbit hole with her. Interesting question she raises about Starbuck.

Nina presents Battlestar Galactica Season 4.5 Epi. 14: Blood on the Scales, posted at Blog It Out Bitch. She agrees with me that Mary McDonnell needs an Emmy, that Gaeta is somewhat of a tragic figure (though he still got what he deserved) and that Adama is IT.

Roberta presents BSG ruminations posted at CouchSlobs – A Monument To Human Idleness. She, well, ruminates, on the episode. I, too, had expected either Roslin or Adama to die, because that’s just what this show would do. I, too, wonder if Anders died, and if he didn’t, if he could still resurrect, as it appears Ellen will do/has done. She wants to know what one big question you have that you want answered. Me? Why Sharon is model Number 8, when the “new” Cylons only have seven models. Huh? Riddle me this, Batman!

That concludes this edition. Submit your blog article to the next edition of so say we all using our carnival submission form. Past posts and future hosts can be found on our blog carnival index page.

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Supernatural: Catching up

February 9th, 2009 | by | supernatural

Feb
09

The last two episodes of Supernatural have given us an intersting look into the psyche of the Winchester brothers.

Let’s take “After School Special” first.

Dean was, not surprisingly, quite the Lothario in high school. But he also was, surprisingly, afraid to get hurt.

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I thought the whole sub storyline of Dean’s romance with the wholesome girl next door gave an interesting insight into his character. He always had to play the protective older brother, he had no time to let himself become emotionally invested in anything.

The true twist on the story, in fact, wasn’t even that the vengeful ghost wasn’t who Dean and Sam first thought it was. Nor that the vengeful ghost considered Sam a bully and was going through a particularly tough time in his life when he himself was being a bully.

The true twist was that Dean was the one with bad memories of the school and Sam was the one who had fond memories of it.

Then, last week, we saw more of the brothers’ strained relationship in “Sex and Violence,” where the siren tried to tear them apart.

The brothers have a lot of anger at each other, and that only seems to come to the fore when they’re under someone else’s influence. The need to resolve some of these issues, pronto, or else there are gonna be real problems down the road.

Such as SPOILER ALERT!!!!!! when they find out they have another brother. TVGuide.com is reporting that Jake Abel has been cast as a third Winchester brother, the product of their father’s dalliance while he was on the road fighting demons.

Abel’s a relatively new face, wrapping up work on the film version of The Lovely Bones right now. Sci-fi fans might remember him from three episodes of the (much too) short-lived 2005 series Threshold.

Upon eventually being told by a onetime paramour of Adam’s paternity, John paid the lad the occasional visit. Never, though, did John alert Sam and Dean to Adam’s existence, nor vice versa.

The question, which TVGuide raises, rightfully so, is whether he is truly what he says he is, or if it’s a demon trick.

Me, I think it’ll depend how the fanbase takes to him. If you’ve read this far – what do you think of the addition?

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Battlestar Galactica: Blood on the Scales

February 8th, 2009 | by | battlestar galactica

Feb
08

I have to admit it – the blood shed was not exactly whose I’d expected.

Your only warning: Don’t read if you didn’t watch.

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After watching Friday’s installment of BSG, I found myself in awe of the perfect show.

I had a lot of trouble writing this post, I must admit, so I’m going to take it character by character – or, at least, character group by character group.

Tom Zarek and Felix Gaeta:

I have to admit, I’m sad they’re gone.

Tom Zarek was right, I must admit, when he basically told Gaeta to man up and deal with the fact that this was a coup. Gaeta’s disbelief that Zarek had the Quorum killed reflected his inability to understand what he had started.

I don’t really blame Zarek for anything he did. He, at least, was honest with himself, with Felix, with everyone. Well, except when he lied about Tigh and Adama having been killed.

I felt sorry for Felix, in a way. He truly did believe in his cause. He felt strongly that wrong had been done, and not just to him, but to all the survivors of the Colonial Holocaust.

Zarek took advantage of that and tried to make his naked bid for power.

Does this mean, however, that now Roslin and Lee are the only two surviving members of the Colonial government? And with Roslin dying, does this mean Lee might become the president much in the same way that Roslin did? By virtue of being alive?

So that brings me to

Apollo and Starbuck:

How awesome was it to see the two of them together, kicking ass and taking names?

First off, totally laughed when Starbuck knocked out the guy at the urinal, took his weapons and Lee took them without comment.

The two of them need to work together more often. And Lee looks so much more at home with a weapon than in a suit.

If Anders were to die, will Starbuck and Apollo actually finally get together? Starbuck will never leave Anders, not even with him being a Cylon.

But I’m not convinced that he’s dead. He was still alive at episode’s end, and on the way to Doc Cottle. And he’s a Cylon, so might he still be able to resurrect?

Which brings me to

The Cylons in the Fleet:

I’d say the Final Four, but Athena Sharon, Hera and Caprica Six were in the mix, so…

They didn’t have much of a role in the episode, but I found a few things interesting.

First off, the Sharons are a really interesting line of Cylon. We have Athena, who broke from the Cylons in order to be with the man she loved. We have Boomer, who fought (with Caprica Six) to have the Cylons stop killing humans after she resurrected back on Caprica. We have the Eight model who broke from the rest of her line to vote with Cavil, Simon and Aaron. I just wonder how she has so much diversity in the one model; so many diverging opionions. It shouldn’t be possible. Or should it?

I couldn’t help but think that Tori might end up being the only Cylon left alive by episode’s end. When Tyrol was running through the Galactica, I thought he might be going to blow it up.

When they started spooling up the FTL drives, I realized what he was really after.

This episode showed the true integration of Cylons and humans into one group. While many humans stood by Adama, the Cylons in the fleet unflinchingly stood by him, even when they knew it could mean their deaths. They never tried to flee.

And by sheer force of will, Roslin got the Cylons on the Base Star to stick around – though Leoben appeared to have wanted it more than the other models.

SPOILER if you don’t watch previews:

And next week, we start seeing the truth about the Final Five, with the return of Ellen Tigh.

What I wonder: How long has she been resurrected? I’m assuming right after her death. So Cavil knows she’s alive, I’m assuming. And he’s been hiding her. Do the Simons and Aarons know?

Roslin and Adama:

If Mary McConnell and Edward James Olmos don’t get nominated for Emmys next time around, this is a travesty.

The two actors put so much into these characters in this episode, I was blown away.

Roslin’s anger when she believed Adama to be dead was truly a force to behold. And Adama’s quiet anger at those who betrayed him cut like a knife.

McConnell and Olmos weren’t acting; they WERE those characters. If the Academy chooses not to recognize that …

Watching last night, I felt better about the choices made in having Roslin retreat into nothingness and hid out on Galactica. If she hadn’t withdrawn so utterly and left a vacuum in which Tom Zarek could take hold of power, last night’s episode would not have been possible.

Baltar:

It’s impossible to hate Baltar.

Which is kind of the point, I guess.

He is such a characteriture of himself and, yet, every time you think he’s unredeemable, he finds a way to be just ever so slightly less reprehensible.

He followed his desire to flee, in large part to escape his insane followers. But even he recognized how wrong that was and sees he must return. Damn Gaius Baltar for being human!

The final six episodes:

SPOILER IF YOU DONT’ WATCH PREVIEWS:

We know that Ellen Tigh is returning next week. I’m assuming she resurrected above New Caprica after Saul killed her. I’m also assuming Cavil knew and has been keeping her in hiding.

That would explain his intense desire to keep D’Anna boxed and knowledge of the Final Five from everyone.

Ellen seems different.

Her connection to Saul was such a mystery and yet so intense. It goes back 2,000+ years; that explains it. But she also, in Saul’s flashback, had made preparations for their future. She knew they’d be resurrected; did the others? Were they even aware of their ability to be resurrected?

I think we now will start finding out some big-time answers to questions and I’m very excited. My only regret is that this also means we’re coming to a close. In six weeks, BSG will be but a memory.

Fortunately, the Caprica pilot will be available online or through iTunes in April. Unfortunately, that’s the only way it will be available until it premieres to kick off the Caprica series in 2010.

Guess I’ll be making an iTunes purchase.

Don’t forget: So Say We All: The Battlestar Galactica blog carnival posts Tuesday. If you know anyone who writes about the show, please let him or her know and urge them to submit their post here. I’ve been loving reading all the divergent views of these final episodes.

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Lost: The Little Prince

February 5th, 2009 | by | lost

Feb
05

Our favorite Losties continued their zig-zagging around time this week, with increasingly dire results. (Don’t read if you didn’t watch … you’re warned.)

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First, let’s look at the Oceanic 6:

• Jack is so determined to put things right, to “fix” everything as usual, that he is all in with Ben. He cannot imagine Ben would be lying about anything. And in his effort to get Kate to join them in going back to the island, he almost ends up spilling the beans about Aaron to Claire’s mom. Did you not double-take when she asked, “Who’s Aaron?” By the way, my buddy Stephanie Dube has a verrrry interesting theory about Jack, check it out.

• Sayid is attacked by someone with Kate’s address in his pocket. Was this person sent by Widmore? By Ben? By Marvin Candle? By Jacob? By someone else we can’t even fathom?

• Poor Hurley’s in jail and thinks he’s safe, but he’ll be released in the morning. A prison jumpsuit was a bit slimming on him, though, I thought.

• Sun is preparing to kill Ben. Does she want to kill Jack, too? Why did she call Kate? How creepy was it that she had Aaron in the back seat, fast asleep, as she’s stalking Ben? I’m sorry, but she’s really not being a very good baby-sitter.

• Kate is totally messed up. She totally loves Aaron. She is the boy’s mommy now, no matter what anyone says. She really does just want to live her life, but life just won’t let her. How, exactly, are they going to get her to join them? By the way, I’d totally forgotten that Kate had been the one to deliver Claire’s baby; what goes around …

• Is it just me or does Aaron seem a little big for 3 years old?

• Ben – he’s kind of like the Oceanic 7th. Michael Emerson totally has to win an Emmy for the job he does. Even I get sucked in by Ben’s lies from time to time.

Meanwhile, back on the island:

• Didn’t you just want to give Sawyer a big cuddle and tell him everything was going to be OK when he got all heartbroken seeing Kate? He’s really got it bad. By the way, how many more episodes before he and Juliet kiss? Anyone taking bets?

• Daniel needs to start being more honest with folks. I dont understand why he’s not telling what he knows. I mean, we already know he knows more, just in terms of needing a constant. But it’s even more obvious that he knows something about Charlotte and Miles.

• Nose bleeders – Charlotte was first, Miles second and now Juliet. I’m more convinced than ever that Charlotte is Annie, Ben’s childhood girlfriend who grew up on the island. Her being younger than she should be could be easily explained by the way time moves differently on and off the island. Miles I think is Marvin Candle’s son. Why he has no knowledge of having been on the island before, I don’t know. And Juliet has been on the island for a few years, longer than the Losties, because she was brought there by the others for the whole fertility issue. I hope we learn if I’m right about Charlotte and Miles before season’s end.

• Where are Rose and Bernard?

• Whose canoe-thingy was that on the beach that they used to try to get to the Orchid?

• Who else is excited to see a young Rousseau and learn her story??? Me me me! I knew the second we first saw them that that’s who they were. I didn’t realize, however, that they crashed out at sea and rode a boat to the island.

• Jin’s alive!!!!!!! What? OK, so riddle me this – is he unhinged from time, too, or is he stuck in the past with the French folks?

• Why, exactly, does the island keep hopping about in time? Hasn’t the frozen donkey wheel been used before? Did it hop around then? I wonder if the Oceanic 6 must come back to the island because (and hat tip to Dube again) they are the island’s constant, and they must all be there in order to stabilize it.

• Is Michael alive, too, then?

• Who was shooting at Locke & co. when they were rowing? Juliet seemed pretty convinced those were not Others. And at this point, I don’t think she’s lying about this stuff anymore.

• As for Locke, it seems pretty obvious that he gets to the Orchid, turns the frozen donkey wheel, tries to convince The Six to go back to the island, fails and kills himself because he believes he’s killed the island and those who remain.

• The episode’s title: The Little Prince. It comes from the title of the famous novel by Antoine de Saint-Exupéry. It’s a wonderful little book I read back in high school in the original French. It’s supposedly a children’s book, but is written as much for adults, much in the same way that Disney/Pixar movies are for children, yet have lots of jokes for the adults who bring them. It is very idealistic and many consider the key to the theme of the book to be a sentence a fennec (desert fox) utters to the main character, the prince:

“One cannot see well except with the heart. The essential is invisible to the eyes.”

Does that sentence sum up Locke or what?

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The Carnival of Bauer!!!! returns

February 5th, 2009 | by | 24, blog carnival

Feb
05

Hour 7 totally rocked the house, with 5 Jack kills, Red Hot getting at least one kill, Tony claiming some lives, Phlox blowing up and general mayhem – along with the First Dude talking his way out of getting his brains splattered all over the wall.

Sure, we had a total WTF moment when Chewbacca got home and his waitress girlfriend came by to ask if they were still on for dinner, and Jack didn’t drop any Dammits, but it was an excellent hour of television, by any standard.

So it’s no surprise we have some excellent entries this week for the Carnival of Bauer!!!, and I’m thrilled to say Adam from The Jack Sack™ made a carny screencap for me (actually, gave me two choices, and as a bonus I’ll put the runner up at the bottom of this post):

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To start things off with the appropriate humor, let’s head on over to the aforementioned Jack Sack™ and check out the latest set of e-cards. No. 3 makes me sad. :-(

Steve over at the Magic Lamp, whose minute-by-minute recaps of 24 are so frakkin’ funny that Dave Barry posts them on his blog, does it again Warning: He does these so detailed it might take you an hour to read it. But it’s pretty funny, so it won’t be a wasted hour. Like this: “2:54 – At the White House, the news shows the Kidron plant is in a state of disarray, with some people wearing chemical outfits. Others are just going into neighboring towns which must have some kind of anti-insecticide shielding (but really HUGE bugs).”

Kasia over at Almeida is God waxes poetic over the episode. She truly, madly, deeply loves 24 and, of course, Tony. One thing I missed, though, was the symmetry of Jack and Tony’s handshake mirroring the opening scene of Season 2 (my personal favorite, btw), but that’s not lost on her.

Jackster at the covert diaries of jackster maps out all the potential moles in Season 7 so far, detailing the pros and the cons on why each would or wouldn’t fit the role. I really hadn’t considered Janis Gold as a mole, but he had some interesting theories. Fact is, it’ll be another 15 hours before we find out all of them for sure.

TonyJunkie from Tony Almeida Junkie Blog found a great little article about the good folks of Kidron, Ohio, who were quite surprised to find their town was the focal point of a 24 terrorist near-attack.

Jeff Kouba of Truth vs. the Machine recaps the hour with a Copy That drinking game, in which, just as it sounds, you have to drink every time someone utters “Copy that.” Needless to say, he’s a bit tipsy by episode’s end.

King Tom from King Tom’s Kingdom points out something I hadn’t noticed before (and neither had he) that our big bad guy (so far) is named “Ike.” Yes, Like Eisenhower. Really?

Here’s a fun one – Jack Bauer calls President Obama. How’s that work out? Not so well? Anyhow, thanks to Never Yet Melted for that one.
And over at Zap2It.com, they don’t much like Janis Gold, either.

Finally, we have Blogs4Bauer‘s weekly Tivo Blogging update by our very own VtheK, complete with all the “official” (to B4B, at least) nicknames of the season to date.

Want to  join in the fun next week? Submit your blog article to the next edition of carnival of bauer!!! using our carnival submission form. Past and future hosts can be found on our blog carnival index page.

carny2Again, thanks to Adam for the fabulous screencaps! You should see what he can do with some paint, children’s furniture and too much knowledge of Star Wars!

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24: Hour 7

February 4th, 2009 | by | 24, jack bauer

Feb
04

Hour 7 gave us almost everything that is the best about 24, except for the fact that Jack didn’t say “Dammit” a single time.

You  hear that? Not a single D-bomb.

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But Chloe computered, Jack killed at least five bad guys, Renee Walker shot a guy in the back – yeah, baby! – and Bill, Tony, Jack and Chloe all working together for the common good.

And now, they’re going straight to Madame President because they can’t trust anyone else. This is what I wanna know: How does any president at this point not know that s/he simply must trust Jack Bauer? Tell me President Cankles (sorry, my friends at B4B started calling her that and I can’t stop now) doesn’t have some sort of secret memo from the multiple President Palmers that says,

Always listen to Jack Bauer. Always. Really – always. No, really. You need to listen to Jack. Did I mention that you should do whatever Jack Bauer says?

I think there should be a special panel on the desk in the Oval Office with that etched into it that pops out anytime someone tells the president not to listen to Jack or that Jack’s a bad man.

OK, I know the jokes – If everyone listened to Jack, the show would be called “2.”

I love how Matobo totally believes everything Jack says now, only an hour or so after meeting him. And blowing up Phlox (the guy who played the man who invented the stupid program that controls every sensitive computer-run system in the frakkin’ United States once played an alien doctor on the Star Trek spinoff Enterprise, for the five of you who didn’t know that) was inspired.

C’mon. We watch 24 because people are killed and blowed up and that sort of thing. You know you loved it.

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