Fridays' BSG...
Feb. 27th, 2006 12:00 am![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
My thoughts as they roll through my head.
1. Just to be clear, she *woke up* nine months ago? Okay. That means Sharon's giving birth quite early, right?
2. Is this the first time she's been born again? (Had to use the phrase, you understand.) She seems pretty discombobulated, more than you'd expect considering she seems to have known she was a Cylon the whole time. When it comes to that, Galactica-Sharon's (now CapricaSharon, while CapricaSharon has become GalacticaSharon, try to keep up here) the only one we've met who *didn't* realize she wasn't human. Was this a bug or a feature?
3. It's such a strange scene. The way everyone is standing around, it reminds me of sculptures of the Greek pantheon (group of gods, not the building). Or possibly the Xena pantheon, which at least makes sense....
4. Okay. Let's take this one apart. Gaius is in his Six' head. And Six is in her Gaius' head. And they're both giving their physical companions advice that is, at once, both contradictory (the human/cylon side is wrong! The humans/cylons were good! The humans/cylons deserved to die!) and alike (you misjudged your enemies, you did a bad thing, you don't understand God(s)!). It is, in fact, contradictory *because* it is alike. And they're not just figments of the imagination - they give other advice which is completely true, which their hosts couldn't've known.
Which raises the question: WHAT THE FUCK?
Now, I don't believe for a minute that these delusions are actually supposed to be deities, unless Ronald Moore *really* wants to piss off religious people. So... what the fuck are they? They're not the delusions I just pegged them for... and I don't think they're God/gods, or messengers thereof... so... um...
My head hurts.
In a good way.
5. I also really want to replay the scene where Gaius first knows Six is in his head, to look for similarities/differences. Oh, dear.
6. Gaius looks suprisingly attractive with the light on his face like that, and when he's not crazy. Huh.
7. Proof that the cylons aren't connected to each other, even over a short-range. It seems like telepathy would be such a *useful* thing, too, but that doesn't seem to be the cylon mindset at all.
8. I have to say, I never knew Lucy Lawless had any versatility as an actor, but she does surprise me. (AND SHE CAN FLY!)
9. Poor, dumb Cally. We don't see enough of her. Now, I've got a question. If the Resurrection Ship was so that Cylons could be reborn even distant from the rebirthing chambers on planets... why is Sharon on a planet?
10. Why are they calling her Sharon at this point? What's their thing against names, anyway?
11. Now, when they say present-day, wouldn't it be cool if it was our present-day as well?
12. Some people were talking about how the Human-Cylons seem to think of the Machine-Cylons as just heavy-labor - planting trees, cannon fodder. But... the Machine-Cylons made them (as did the humans before that). I'm thinking the Machine-Cylons 1. have some serious issues and 2. have some deep plans of their own - which the more human versions might not be aware of. And this leads to another question - who gave the cylons their religion, anyway? Did they come up with it on their own after the war? Or did it spread before the war? Whose bright idea was this, anyway?
13. Hmmm... is this meant to imply that other cylons have expressed remorse or guilt? I wonder what happened to them....
14. Yes, whoring yourself out to gain state secrets to commit genocide *is* rather inspiring, isn't it? I wonder, how did he know she was THAT Six instead of a random one? Do they have some form of telepathy (such as it is - does it count if it's not really telepathy) after all?
15. I love this. "Oh, you're my enemy, and oh, you're giving birth early, but let me take a moment to chew you out for not bothering to fix a few errors in the basic human model. Your people are idiots." Cottle is great.
16. It's interesting how much better Six is at pretending she's not crazy than Baltar is. *thinks* Actually, he's *just about* gotten to this point now. Maybe she sucked at it in the beginning too, just like he did.
17. Thanks for the explanation, Six. Now, did Three-over-there call her "Caprica", or does she really have a name that I just didn't catch?
18. It's also interesting how different hallucination-Gaius is from hallucination-Six. And yet, so oddly similar.
19. Some people are arguing over whether or not Anderson is a terrorist. Here's my view - he's not going after military or tactical targets. Instead, he wants them to feel absolutely unsafe. He wants to spread terror. Hence, he's a terrorist. He's also rather dumb, sneaking into the city in broad daylight when it's swarming with Sixes and Xenabots.
20. No, Helo, she needs oxygen support because she's already dead. I'd blame it on stress, but he's always this dum.
21. Interesting. Colonials have black-and-white photos. And it looks, to my untrained eyes, that this was black-and-white because color wasn't an option, rather than because it's classy.
22. Six got defensive really fast. "Um... GODLOVESYOU!" Of course, Gaius thinks she's faking, but if he's like delusion-Six, he could just be saying that to be a pain.
23. Careful, Sharon, you're never getting another picture of your friends.
24. She calls it the head even at home? She *does* have problems.
25. This, of course, is the problem with typing thoughts as they come - most of them are pretty inconsequential and silly. Alas.
26. They're talking together. Creepy. Does this mean he's more in her head than not, or what?
27. He's got a point. Logically, they should be taking this sort of risk to cut out the resurrection vats.
28. Is this to imply that they have no right of law, even for the non-Cylon babies? Or just to say "If I wanted to suggest that, I'd say it outright"?
29. Well, logically, it could be good for them, but not bad for humans. Or neutral towards both. Or good for Cylons only if the Cylons know what they're doing, which, frankly, I doubt.
Though I do agree that having this baby's non-death be public knowledge *would* be bad for humans.
30. These two are either very, very smart, or very, very paranoid. Or both, y'know. You can be paranoid and still have people out to get you.
31. Some other people criticized the fact that everyone at the table called Sharon Sharon in this scene. It makes sense to me - Six and the Xenabot were playing the game of "humor the crazy person". Or pretending to, anyway, right with their game of "big grins to hide the fact that we all hate each other".
32. Does Xenabot have any concept of her own hypocrisy? Yattering on about how humans are the ones who don't respect life, as she's about to kill this guy? Do *any* of them get it?
33. On the *other* hand, Xenabot clearly sees right through these two.
34. Good ol' Doc Cottle, always trying to comfort a patient. Even the Cylon. Question: Does it make logical sense to toss ashes and bodies out of airlocks? Shouldn't they, um... preserve them for... um... fertilizer? In a closed system, everything is eventually people.
35. Helo and Tyrol are the ones releasing the ashes. I understand why TheCylon couldn't be there... but man, everytime I see Helo and Tyrol together, I think pervy thoughts. I don't know why, I just *do*. Even when they're mourning.
36. A. Doesn't Baltar know that the child isn't dead? So... Six doesn't know everything Baltar knows? Got it. B. Ugh, I hate that. If God's will is that such-and-such a thing will happen, and it *doesn't happen*, and GOD IS OMNIPOTENT, then it must not have been God's will! (Unless her god isn't omnipotent, in which case, whatever.)
37. Really? They are? Something *worse* than genocide, I take it?
38. Unless your new aide (who isn't Billy! SOB!) happens to be a Cylon. Doesn't she look like a Cylon to you?
39. I find it rather disappointing that Anderson completely resisted the urge to make snarky one-liners and quips during the meeting of the Cylon minds. How could he *possibly* resist????
40. Xenabot is a fucking bitch. Let's just get that said.
41. This sounds like religious talk! Finally! But it's different religious talk than hallucination-Six gives to Flesh-and-Blood-Gaius.
42. Gaius, knock it off with the rhymes. They suck.
43. Bit late to rethink, don't you think? In situations like this, where I've done irreparable harm, and I can't find the wronged to fix it, I find it's often better to just plow on, full steam ahead!
44. Bright move! Would've been brighter to just head for the storm drain while they were distracted, though.... Ah, well, hindsight's 20/20. If you live. You, my dear Mr. Anderson, don't get the luxury of learning from all of your mistakes. Only the non-fatal ones, I'm afraid.
45. Huh. You know, calling him Mister Anderson like that actually makes me like the guy more. Mr. Anderson! *notes this down* Pity his name is actually Anders and I have it all wrong. I think I'll keep using my nickname anyway.
46. Shit, Anders, weren't you listening to the whole stupid conversation between those wacky cylons? Of course it's not a trick. (This explains why he didn't say anything. He wasn't paying attention. Stupid, stupid.)
47. Course, if you stand around, you soon won't have a chance to run. Ugh.
48. This part is all overdone. We got the point already. They're alive. Aliiiiiiive! Ugh, ugh, triple ugh.
49. When the dead don't really die, why bother running rescue efforts? (Heck, why bother drinking bad coffee?)
1. Just to be clear, she *woke up* nine months ago? Okay. That means Sharon's giving birth quite early, right?
2. Is this the first time she's been born again? (Had to use the phrase, you understand.) She seems pretty discombobulated, more than you'd expect considering she seems to have known she was a Cylon the whole time. When it comes to that, Galactica-Sharon's (now CapricaSharon, while CapricaSharon has become GalacticaSharon, try to keep up here) the only one we've met who *didn't* realize she wasn't human. Was this a bug or a feature?
3. It's such a strange scene. The way everyone is standing around, it reminds me of sculptures of the Greek pantheon (group of gods, not the building). Or possibly the Xena pantheon, which at least makes sense....
4. Okay. Let's take this one apart. Gaius is in his Six' head. And Six is in her Gaius' head. And they're both giving their physical companions advice that is, at once, both contradictory (the human/cylon side is wrong! The humans/cylons were good! The humans/cylons deserved to die!) and alike (you misjudged your enemies, you did a bad thing, you don't understand God(s)!). It is, in fact, contradictory *because* it is alike. And they're not just figments of the imagination - they give other advice which is completely true, which their hosts couldn't've known.
Which raises the question: WHAT THE FUCK?
Now, I don't believe for a minute that these delusions are actually supposed to be deities, unless Ronald Moore *really* wants to piss off religious people. So... what the fuck are they? They're not the delusions I just pegged them for... and I don't think they're God/gods, or messengers thereof... so... um...
My head hurts.
In a good way.
5. I also really want to replay the scene where Gaius first knows Six is in his head, to look for similarities/differences. Oh, dear.
6. Gaius looks suprisingly attractive with the light on his face like that, and when he's not crazy. Huh.
7. Proof that the cylons aren't connected to each other, even over a short-range. It seems like telepathy would be such a *useful* thing, too, but that doesn't seem to be the cylon mindset at all.
8. I have to say, I never knew Lucy Lawless had any versatility as an actor, but she does surprise me. (AND SHE CAN FLY!)
9. Poor, dumb Cally. We don't see enough of her. Now, I've got a question. If the Resurrection Ship was so that Cylons could be reborn even distant from the rebirthing chambers on planets... why is Sharon on a planet?
10. Why are they calling her Sharon at this point? What's their thing against names, anyway?
11. Now, when they say present-day, wouldn't it be cool if it was our present-day as well?
12. Some people were talking about how the Human-Cylons seem to think of the Machine-Cylons as just heavy-labor - planting trees, cannon fodder. But... the Machine-Cylons made them (as did the humans before that). I'm thinking the Machine-Cylons 1. have some serious issues and 2. have some deep plans of their own - which the more human versions might not be aware of. And this leads to another question - who gave the cylons their religion, anyway? Did they come up with it on their own after the war? Or did it spread before the war? Whose bright idea was this, anyway?
13. Hmmm... is this meant to imply that other cylons have expressed remorse or guilt? I wonder what happened to them....
14. Yes, whoring yourself out to gain state secrets to commit genocide *is* rather inspiring, isn't it? I wonder, how did he know she was THAT Six instead of a random one? Do they have some form of telepathy (such as it is - does it count if it's not really telepathy) after all?
15. I love this. "Oh, you're my enemy, and oh, you're giving birth early, but let me take a moment to chew you out for not bothering to fix a few errors in the basic human model. Your people are idiots." Cottle is great.
16. It's interesting how much better Six is at pretending she's not crazy than Baltar is. *thinks* Actually, he's *just about* gotten to this point now. Maybe she sucked at it in the beginning too, just like he did.
17. Thanks for the explanation, Six. Now, did Three-over-there call her "Caprica", or does she really have a name that I just didn't catch?
18. It's also interesting how different hallucination-Gaius is from hallucination-Six. And yet, so oddly similar.
19. Some people are arguing over whether or not Anderson is a terrorist. Here's my view - he's not going after military or tactical targets. Instead, he wants them to feel absolutely unsafe. He wants to spread terror. Hence, he's a terrorist. He's also rather dumb, sneaking into the city in broad daylight when it's swarming with Sixes and Xenabots.
20. No, Helo, she needs oxygen support because she's already dead. I'd blame it on stress, but he's always this dum.
21. Interesting. Colonials have black-and-white photos. And it looks, to my untrained eyes, that this was black-and-white because color wasn't an option, rather than because it's classy.
22. Six got defensive really fast. "Um... GODLOVESYOU!" Of course, Gaius thinks she's faking, but if he's like delusion-Six, he could just be saying that to be a pain.
23. Careful, Sharon, you're never getting another picture of your friends.
24. She calls it the head even at home? She *does* have problems.
25. This, of course, is the problem with typing thoughts as they come - most of them are pretty inconsequential and silly. Alas.
26. They're talking together. Creepy. Does this mean he's more in her head than not, or what?
27. He's got a point. Logically, they should be taking this sort of risk to cut out the resurrection vats.
28. Is this to imply that they have no right of law, even for the non-Cylon babies? Or just to say "If I wanted to suggest that, I'd say it outright"?
29. Well, logically, it could be good for them, but not bad for humans. Or neutral towards both. Or good for Cylons only if the Cylons know what they're doing, which, frankly, I doubt.
Though I do agree that having this baby's non-death be public knowledge *would* be bad for humans.
30. These two are either very, very smart, or very, very paranoid. Or both, y'know. You can be paranoid and still have people out to get you.
31. Some other people criticized the fact that everyone at the table called Sharon Sharon in this scene. It makes sense to me - Six and the Xenabot were playing the game of "humor the crazy person". Or pretending to, anyway, right with their game of "big grins to hide the fact that we all hate each other".
32. Does Xenabot have any concept of her own hypocrisy? Yattering on about how humans are the ones who don't respect life, as she's about to kill this guy? Do *any* of them get it?
33. On the *other* hand, Xenabot clearly sees right through these two.
34. Good ol' Doc Cottle, always trying to comfort a patient. Even the Cylon. Question: Does it make logical sense to toss ashes and bodies out of airlocks? Shouldn't they, um... preserve them for... um... fertilizer? In a closed system, everything is eventually people.
35. Helo and Tyrol are the ones releasing the ashes. I understand why TheCylon couldn't be there... but man, everytime I see Helo and Tyrol together, I think pervy thoughts. I don't know why, I just *do*. Even when they're mourning.
36. A. Doesn't Baltar know that the child isn't dead? So... Six doesn't know everything Baltar knows? Got it. B. Ugh, I hate that. If God's will is that such-and-such a thing will happen, and it *doesn't happen*, and GOD IS OMNIPOTENT, then it must not have been God's will! (Unless her god isn't omnipotent, in which case, whatever.)
37. Really? They are? Something *worse* than genocide, I take it?
38. Unless your new aide (who isn't Billy! SOB!) happens to be a Cylon. Doesn't she look like a Cylon to you?
39. I find it rather disappointing that Anderson completely resisted the urge to make snarky one-liners and quips during the meeting of the Cylon minds. How could he *possibly* resist????
40. Xenabot is a fucking bitch. Let's just get that said.
41. This sounds like religious talk! Finally! But it's different religious talk than hallucination-Six gives to Flesh-and-Blood-Gaius.
42. Gaius, knock it off with the rhymes. They suck.
43. Bit late to rethink, don't you think? In situations like this, where I've done irreparable harm, and I can't find the wronged to fix it, I find it's often better to just plow on, full steam ahead!
44. Bright move! Would've been brighter to just head for the storm drain while they were distracted, though.... Ah, well, hindsight's 20/20. If you live. You, my dear Mr. Anderson, don't get the luxury of learning from all of your mistakes. Only the non-fatal ones, I'm afraid.
45. Huh. You know, calling him Mister Anderson like that actually makes me like the guy more. Mr. Anderson! *notes this down* Pity his name is actually Anders and I have it all wrong. I think I'll keep using my nickname anyway.
46. Shit, Anders, weren't you listening to the whole stupid conversation between those wacky cylons? Of course it's not a trick. (This explains why he didn't say anything. He wasn't paying attention. Stupid, stupid.)
47. Course, if you stand around, you soon won't have a chance to run. Ugh.
48. This part is all overdone. We got the point already. They're alive. Aliiiiiiive! Ugh, ugh, triple ugh.
49. When the dead don't really die, why bother running rescue efforts? (Heck, why bother drinking bad coffee?)
no subject
Date: 2006-02-27 06:45 am (UTC)I don't think Baltar really knew the baby was alive. I don't think Adama and Roslin let him in on that little plan. Roslin clearly doesn't trust him anymore (and with good reason, obviously).
no subject
Date: 2006-02-27 08:49 am (UTC)> That means Sharon's giving birth quite early, right?
Hera is one month premature, birthed early by C-section because former Caprica-Sharon's placenta had separated from her uterine wall, explicitly stated.
Former Galactica-Sharon's rebirth on Caprica was traumatic specifically because it was another confirmation of the nightmare she desperately did not want to be true, that she was indeed a Cylon and not Human.
> Okay. Let's take this one apart. Gaius is in his Six' head. And Six is
> in her Gaius' head.... And they're not just figments of the
> imagination....
If the reincarnated Caprica-Six is (as I think she will be) indeed one of the Cylons offering the peace terms to the Fleet in the season finale', it will be interesting to see how soon she realizes that the physical Gaius and the Gaius-in-her-head are not very much alike, and how she deals with that. Physical Gaius, for his part, doesn't seem to have much trouble (or even notices, at least at first) that the Six-in-his-head isn't anything like Gina-Six, and probably won't notice it with reincarnated Caprica-Six, either.
It'll be fun (and confusing!) for the viewer, though, when Physical Gaius, reincarnated Caprica-Six, Gaius-in-her-head, and Six-in-his-head are all in one scene together -- even more so if Gina-Six is there, too.
Where do you get the idea that Gaius- or Six-in-the-head are deities? There's never been anything to indicate that, the closest being Six-in-his-head making a claim to be an Angel of God, which I discount as she was very deliberately manipulating him at that moment.
> If the Resurrection Ship was so that Cylons could be reborn even
> distant from the rebirthing chambers on planets...why is Sharon on
> a planet?
Either the Fleet wasn't far enough away at that time to need the Resurrection Ship, or her downloaded personality was re-transmitted back to Caprica, just as the Galactica-Three's documentary was later on. If the latter, there may have been a reason why they wanted her back where she could be monitored -- her blowing up a basestar (including a bunch of her sister Eights) with a nuclear weapon, for example, strikes me as a pretty good reason for their wanting to do that.
> What's their thing against names, anyway?
They're not supposed to be individuals, but types. The individuality of the reincarnated Caprica-Six and Galactica-Sharon, as signified by their names, is anathema to basic Cylon psychology.
> ...the Human-Cylons seem to think of the Machine-Cylons as just
> heavy-labor -- planting trees, cannon fodder. But...the
> Machine-Cylons made them (as did the humans before that). I'm
> thinking the Machine-Cylons 1. have some serious issues and 2.
> have some deep plans of their own -- which the more human
> versions might not be aware of. And this leads to another question
> -- who gave the cylons their religion, anyway? Did they come up
> with it on their own after the war? Or did it spread before the war?
> Whose bright idea was this, anyway?
Ron Moore has specifically stated that the current Centurion-model Cylons are not sentient (you'll notice that unlike in the original series, the Centurions don't speak) and that they do not reincarnate -- so they cannot have plans of their own.
As to the origin of Cylon religion, that's one of the ongoing mysteries of the program, to be slowly revealed over the course of time. FWIW, Moore has stated that there won't be an equivalent of the godlike Count Iblis (portrayed in TOS by Patrick MacNee)...but he hasn't stated one way or another, to my knowledge, as to whether or not there is an equivalent of the Imperious Leader Cylon. If there is one (or more), it / they could be the source of the Cylon religion.
no subject
Date: 2006-02-27 11:36 pm (UTC)And Six's rebirth was traumatic because...? At least, it didn't look pregnant.
Where do you get the idea that Gaius- or Six-in-the-head are deities?
Straight from my own head. Hey, it's definitely one option.
Ron Moore has specifically stated that the current Centurion-model Cylons are not sentient (you'll notice that unlike in the original series, the Centurions don't speak) and that they do not reincarnate -- so they cannot have plans of their own.
Except that Sharon-on-the-Galactica has stated that the ship-Cylons ("Like dogs", she said earlier, except that was her alter-ego) are reborn - that's why Scar was so nasty. And if the Centurions aren't sentient, who the hell made the more modern human versions? Who rebelled?
no subject
Date: 2006-02-28 02:12 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2006-02-27 06:45 am (UTC)I don't think Baltar really knew the baby was alive. I don't think Adama and Roslin let him in on that little plan. Roslin clearly doesn't trust him anymore (and with good reason, obviously).
no subject
Date: 2006-02-27 08:49 am (UTC)> That means Sharon's giving birth quite early, right?
Hera is one month premature, birthed early by C-section because former Caprica-Sharon's placenta had separated from her uterine wall, explicitly stated.
Former Galactica-Sharon's rebirth on Caprica was traumatic specifically because it was another confirmation of the nightmare she desperately did not want to be true, that she was indeed a Cylon and not Human.
> Okay. Let's take this one apart. Gaius is in his Six' head. And Six is
> in her Gaius' head.... And they're not just figments of the
> imagination....
If the reincarnated Caprica-Six is (as I think she will be) indeed one of the Cylons offering the peace terms to the Fleet in the season finale', it will be interesting to see how soon she realizes that the physical Gaius and the Gaius-in-her-head are not very much alike, and how she deals with that. Physical Gaius, for his part, doesn't seem to have much trouble (or even notices, at least at first) that the Six-in-his-head isn't anything like Gina-Six, and probably won't notice it with reincarnated Caprica-Six, either.
It'll be fun (and confusing!) for the viewer, though, when Physical Gaius, reincarnated Caprica-Six, Gaius-in-her-head, and Six-in-his-head are all in one scene together -- even more so if Gina-Six is there, too.
Where do you get the idea that Gaius- or Six-in-the-head are deities? There's never been anything to indicate that, the closest being Six-in-his-head making a claim to be an Angel of God, which I discount as she was very deliberately manipulating him at that moment.
> If the Resurrection Ship was so that Cylons could be reborn even
> distant from the rebirthing chambers on planets...why is Sharon on
> a planet?
Either the Fleet wasn't far enough away at that time to need the Resurrection Ship, or her downloaded personality was re-transmitted back to Caprica, just as the Galactica-Three's documentary was later on. If the latter, there may have been a reason why they wanted her back where she could be monitored -- her blowing up a basestar (including a bunch of her sister Eights) with a nuclear weapon, for example, strikes me as a pretty good reason for their wanting to do that.
> What's their thing against names, anyway?
They're not supposed to be individuals, but types. The individuality of the reincarnated Caprica-Six and Galactica-Sharon, as signified by their names, is anathema to basic Cylon psychology.
> ...the Human-Cylons seem to think of the Machine-Cylons as just
> heavy-labor -- planting trees, cannon fodder. But...the
> Machine-Cylons made them (as did the humans before that). I'm
> thinking the Machine-Cylons 1. have some serious issues and 2.
> have some deep plans of their own -- which the more human
> versions might not be aware of. And this leads to another question
> -- who gave the cylons their religion, anyway? Did they come up
> with it on their own after the war? Or did it spread before the war?
> Whose bright idea was this, anyway?
Ron Moore has specifically stated that the current Centurion-model Cylons are not sentient (you'll notice that unlike in the original series, the Centurions don't speak) and that they do not reincarnate -- so they cannot have plans of their own.
As to the origin of Cylon religion, that's one of the ongoing mysteries of the program, to be slowly revealed over the course of time. FWIW, Moore has stated that there won't be an equivalent of the godlike Count Iblis (portrayed in TOS by Patrick MacNee)...but he hasn't stated one way or another, to my knowledge, as to whether or not there is an equivalent of the Imperious Leader Cylon. If there is one (or more), it / they could be the source of the Cylon religion.
no subject
Date: 2006-02-27 11:36 pm (UTC)And Six's rebirth was traumatic because...? At least, it didn't look pregnant.
Where do you get the idea that Gaius- or Six-in-the-head are deities?
Straight from my own head. Hey, it's definitely one option.
Ron Moore has specifically stated that the current Centurion-model Cylons are not sentient (you'll notice that unlike in the original series, the Centurions don't speak) and that they do not reincarnate -- so they cannot have plans of their own.
Except that Sharon-on-the-Galactica has stated that the ship-Cylons ("Like dogs", she said earlier, except that was her alter-ego) are reborn - that's why Scar was so nasty. And if the Centurions aren't sentient, who the hell made the more modern human versions? Who rebelled?
no subject
Date: 2006-02-28 02:12 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2006-12-16 05:01 am (UTC)Are you kiddin' mate? She was like the Johnny Depp of Xena (easily the best actor on that show, actually). Although it still bothers me that people dismay X:WP (<--FANGIRL) at least Lucy Lawless is on BSG too if Xena doesnt float their boat.
no subject
Date: 2006-12-16 05:01 am (UTC)Are you kiddin' mate? She was like the Johnny Depp of Xena (easily the best actor on that show, actually). Although it still bothers me that people dismay X:WP (<--FANGIRL) at least Lucy Lawless is on BSG too if Xena doesnt float their boat.