We continue our journey back through time with some flashbacks of Michael’s childhood, witnessing the young orphan girl welcomed into the Vulcan home of Sarek and his human wife Amanda. Mia Kirshner continues to impress, adding new dimensions to this familiar character as she offers her blessing to young Michael, one of the many religious tidbits peppered into this episode, which kicks off a season said to deal with the theme of science versus faith. But their young son was not nearly so welcoming, throwing a computer-generated holographic dragon at the frightened young girl before shutting the door in her face.
Yeah I don’t get the point of saying specifically the character came from a Luddite community to join the away team and yet did absolutely nothing with it once they got there. Clearly they were just looking for some excuse to have the character there but I think they could’ve just said she has the most experience of the crew going undercover on pre-warp away team missions and left it at that (especially since Discovery is really a science vessel and not a exploratory one).
Only read the thread title, but does this mean they’re flirting with SPACE 1999 s1 stuff? I read a book on the show that explained that season actually has an arc and makes sense if you watch the eps in the right order (something I never knew while spending decades making fun of it.) Where I lived the ARKADIA ep was like the 4th run, not the season-ender.
Kirk Jay (Team Blake) and Rascall Flatts, “Back to Life” — Kirk’s grade: A- | When Kirk started singing, I was relieved — this was the Kirk that I’d been a fan of all season long. Dunno what went wrong Monday, but whatever it was, he was back in fine form Tuesday. A day late to help him in the contest, sure, but at least he got to end the season on a high note, whatever happened. His vocal was strong, not at all froggy, and he had one run in there that was so complicated, it might have qualified as an obstacle course.
Before winter shutdown, rock excavation, wayside embankment construction, the vast majority of rock bolting and aggregate production were completed.
The CW’s charming, telenovela-esque comedy has proved itself to be binge-watching candy. If you haven’t checked out "Jane the Virgin," you can get lost in the first three seasons available on Netflix.
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The federal report, prepared under the auspices of the U.S. Global Change Research Program, mentions the words “adapt” or “adaptation” at least 40 times, and “resilience” or “resilient” another 39 times. But the word “adapt” appears just once in the main New York Times story about the report; “resilience” or “resilient” not at all. And many other news outlets seems to have followed the lead of the Times.
“I’m a Mess” is a welcome reminder that Bebe Rexha is capable of striking gold outside of collaborations, too. The track is simultaneously self-deprecating and optimistic, built around Rexha’s self-assurances on the chorus that everything will turn out all right — after all, her therapist said so. Rexha scored her first solo top 40 hit with the clever cut, thanks in part to a well-choreographed music video (which transported fans into an insane asylum), an elaborate performance of the track at the 2018 MTV EMAs and an even more buzzworthy one at the Victoria’s Secret Fashion Show. She’s since been lighting up the Jingle Ball circuit, with "Mess" providing her best opportunity yet to shine all on her own. — GAB GINSBERG
Thank Yeezus. Sure, it wasn’t Ye’s annus mirabilis – musically or culturally – but his tiff with frenemy Drake partly inspired social media’s top tune of the year, “In My Feelings.” Across the board, it has all the ingredients of a Drake smash: half-sung, half-rapped vocals; a well-timed cameo from a newcomer (in this case, the uncredited City Girls); lyrics that authored countless Instagram captions; and dear God, that title. Even cynics who lamented the nod to New Orleans bounce music as just another stamp in Aubrey “culture vulture” Graham’s passport were no doubt sucked into the song’s inescapable summer dance challenge crafted by comedian Shiggy. If you didn’t master it this year, don’t fret: The dance ensured that “Feelings” will be a staple at wedding receptions and family reunions for years to come. – T.A.
A concentrated patch of sunlight, known as a sun dog, appears to the left and right of the sun over downtown Kalamazoo, Mich. on Thursday, Jan. 31, 2019. The painfully cold weather system that put much of the Midwest into a historic deep freeze was expected to ease Thursday, though temperatures still tumbled to record lows in some places. (Joel Bissell/Kalamazoo Gazette via AP)
Marlon 2012: “Since the late 1800s, human activities and the ecological effects of recent high fire activity caused a large, abrupt decline in burning similar to the [Little Ice Age] fire decline. Consequently, there is now a forest âfire deficitâ in the western United States attributable to the combined effects of human activities, ecological, and climate changes.â http://www.pnas.org/content/109/9/E535/F2.large.jpg
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