... out for that, and so Dochterman takes it upon himself to "enhance" it; then tries to make it look like the original. What's the point? On the other hand, he's added things in (animated viewscreen for instance) which weren't part of the original, so that blows the "just improving the quality of what's there" angle. Either do one thing or the other, I would say. For ...
... out for that, and so Dochterman takes it upon himself to "enhance" it; then tries to make it look like the original. What's the point? On the other hand, he's added things in (animated viewscreen for instance) which weren't part of the original, so that blows the "just improving the quality of what's there" angle. Either do one thing or the other, I would say. For ...
... cried out for that, and so Dochterman takes it upon himself to "enhance" it; then tries to make it look like the original. What's the point? On the other hand, he's added things in (animated viewscreen for instance) which weren't part of the original, so that blows the "just improving the quality of what's there" angle. Either do one thing or the other, I would say. For doing a ...
... out for that, and so Dochterman takes it upon himself to "enhance" it; then tries to make it look like the original. What's the point? On the other hand, he's added things in (animated viewscreen for instance) which weren't part of the original, so that blows the "just improving the quality of what's there" angle. Either do one thing or the other, I would say. Now I appreciate the view ...
... of the effects are inadequate to convey what's going on (it's unclear in the original how the two starships get separated for instance) or sufficiently wrong to cause a significant dissonance (we see the Ent fly over the machine towards its rear, cut to the bridge and the viewscreen shows the machine's maw). Ian -- http://www.jaxtrawstudios.com sci-fi comics with shagging in
... they beamed deep underground in "Devil in the Dark", so there is no reason to believe line-of-sight is necessary. But we did see the Faux Earth rotating beneath the Enterprise on the viewscreen in "Miri". (Pretty high up, too... maybe 10,000 miles.) And there's still the problem of the visuals never even remotely suggesting that the Enterprise was stationary over a spot on the planet....
...and mass murder, that detested some particular other alien race and vowed to destroy them, and if said alien cult had declared the goal of conquering the Federation from within and without, and if the aliens were the kind of aliens who kidnapped people and then cut their heads off live on viewscreen well, it'd be the sensible thing to give them a bloody good hiding, wouldn't it? Ian
... auto inserted by jenny.exe at 17:09:06] +++ Wolfmother 'Minds eye' +++ i can think of maybe five ways i can use wot we got to wipe yr cube off my viewscreen but u cunts are evrywhere +++ got other smart critters to go hunt that soem mad human dreamt up or alien +++ fortunately most of them think small +++ th kind of critters who only...
... lounge is the center stage in this search for the next big "star". Q covers "Me and Mrs. Jones" and wows the audience! The Surreal Plot The Viewscreen: Guinan, Counselor Troi & Neelix host a succession of warm and fuzzy feel-good book authors and other personality-impaired personalities. Show is universally despised by males, as well as Klingons of either gender. ...
...stereotypes. At least he's not driving the ship. Tom Paris. The ships pariah, chauffeur and nurse, naturally he's a young white guy. After every unsuccessful diplomatic encounter on the viewscreen he is forced to make some quip to the effect of the alien race being "pleasant" "charming" or some other irritating comment. Another P.C. decision. Notice that the only white guy is......