First as Tragedy, Then as Farce -
Billions of dollars have been hastily poured into the global banking system in a frantic attempt at financial stabilization. Where is the social stability?
quote [ A supercut of every utterance of the phrase "some kind" or "some sort" on the 1990s sci-fi drama, Star Trek: Voyager. ]
The creator detailed his process in splicing this whole thing.
HOW THIS VIDEO WAS DONE: http://imgur.com/a/eri9T#0 (8-picture photo album)
[SFW] [Quickies] |
[+4 Funny] |
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[by
damnit]
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Spyike said @ 9:43pm GMT on 17th November
Voyager was the first time I really got a sense of having seen all the characters before. You have the one who needs to have human emotions and experiences explained to them (Spock, Data, Odo (partly), Tuvok, Seven of Nine), the one with the bitter past and the struggle of a people on their back (Chakotay, Torres, both copied from Major Kira), the young, naive one who grows as a person during the series (Kes, Jake Sisko, Shut Up Westley), the one who doesn't work on the Bridge but people go to for advice (Neelix, Guinan, Garak), someone who's struggling to understand their new place away from their people (Worf, Odo, Seven of Nine, possibly Kes), the omnipotent god-allegory (Q, the wormhole gods, the caretaker (although he doesn't really factor to be fair), throw in a handful of Feisty Females, make sure some people have a strong interest in identifiable 20th century tech/culture (Sisko liked baseball, Paris liked cars, I think, did Picard have something like that) and that's most of the cast and interpersonal scripts pre-written already. It really felt like South Park's depiction of how Family Guy jokes are written. But this time the Klingon is HALF-HUMAN! As if that changes anything. Couldn't watch Start Trek after that.
Spyike said @ 9:45pm GMT on 17th November
Voyager was the first time I really got a sense of having seen all the characters before. You have the one who needs to have human emotions and experiences explained to them (Spock, Data, Odo (partly), Tuvok, Seven of Nine), the one with the bitter past and the struggle of a people on their back (Chakotay, Torres, both copied from Major Kira), the young, naive one who grows as a person during the series (Kes, Jake Sisko, Shut Up Westley), the one who doesn't work on the Bridge but people go to for advice (Neelix, Guinan, Garak), someone who's struggling to understand their new place away from their people (Worf, Odo, Seven of Nine, possibly Kes), the omnipotent god-allegory (Q, the wormhole gods, the caretaker (although he doesn't really factor to be fair)), throw in a handful of Feisty Females, make sure some people have a strong interest in identifiable 20th century tech/culture (Sisko liked baseball, Paris liked cars, I think, did Picard have something like that) and that's most of the cast and interpersonal scripts pre-written already. It really felt like South Park's depiction of how Family Guy jokes are written. But this time the Klingon is HALF-HUMAN! As if that changes anything. Couldn't watch Start Trek after that.
Spyike said @ 9:46pm GMT on 17th November
Voyager was the first time I really got a sense of having seen all the characters before. You have the one who needs to have human emotions and experiences explained to them (Spock, Data, Odo (partly), Tuvok, Seven of Nine), the one with the bitter past and the struggle of a people on their back (Chakotay, Torres, both copied from Major Kira), the young, naive one who grows as a person during the series (Kes, Jake Sisko, Shut Up Westley), the one who doesn't work on the Bridge but people go to for advice (Neelix, Guinan, Garak), someone who's struggling to understand their new place away from their people (Worf, Odo, Seven of Nine, possibly Kes), the omnipotent god-allegory (Q, the wormhole gods, the caretaker (although he doesn't really factor to be fair)), throw in a handful of Feisty Females, make sure some people have a strong interest in identifiable 20th century tech/culture (Sisko liked baseball, Paris liked cars, I think, did Picard have something like that?) and that's most of the cast and interpersonal scripts pre-written already. It really felt like South Park's depiction of how Family Guy jokes are written. But this time the Klingon is HALF-HUMAN! As if that changes anything. Couldn't watch Start Trek after that.
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Spyike said @ 9:43pm GMT on 17th November
Voyager was the first time I really got a sense of having seen all the characters before. You have the one who needs to have human emotions and experiences explained to them (Spock, Data, Odo (partly), Tuvok, Seven of Nine), the one with the bitter past and the struggle of a people on their back (Chakotay, Torres, both copied from Major Kira), the young, naive one who grows as a person during the series (Kes, Jake Sisko, Shut Up Westley), the one who doesn't work on the Bridge but people go to for advice (Neelix, Guinan, Garak), someone who's struggling to understand their new place away from their people (Worf, Odo, Seven of Nine, possibly Kes), the omnipotent god-allegory (Q, the wormhole gods, the caretaker (although he doesn't really factor to be fair)), throw in a handful of Feisty Females, make sure some people have a strong interest in identifiable 20th century tech/culture (Sisko liked baseball, Paris liked cars, I think, did Picard have something like that?) and that's most of the cast and interpersonal scripts pre-written already. It really felt like South Park's depiction of how Family Guy jokes are written. But this time the Klingon is HALF-HUMAN! As if that changes anything. Couldn't watch Start Trek after that.