Laze is formed when hot lava hits the ocean sending hydrochloric acid and steam with fine glass particles into the air. Health hazards of laze include lung, eye and skin irritation. The laze plume travels with the wind and can change direction without warning, according to Civil Defense.
I hadn’t thought about the idea it’s foreshadowing Lorca’s return. Maybe the Talosians will force Michael to relive/rethink her past choices with Lorca in her own ‘Cage’ scenario. Wouldn’t that be a mind-blower? (j/k)
It doesn’t have to look like the 1960s but it should reflect what was presented. Holotechnology wasn’t a thing until TNG, replicators for food were merely touched up but greatly expanded upon in TNG. Enterprise, all its flaws aside, managed to strike that balance.
– Pike and Number One, as the Enterprise prepares to leave Talos IVhttps://memory-alpha.fandom.com/wiki/The_Cage_%28episode%29
Originally built to support the construction of the trans-Alaska pipeline in the mid-1970s, the James Dalton Highway is infamous, and it seems like everyone likes it that way. If you’ve watched Ice Road Truckers or World’s Most Dangerous Roads, you’ve been regaled with the brutal nature of the Dalton Highway, and you might rather drive off a pier than on the Dalton. I thought locals would roll their eyes, but to my surprise, most people I met in Alaska kept my fear alive.
I quite enjoyed most aspects of this episode – new and re-introduced characters, acting, storytelling, pacing, depth, humour – it was all there. My, oh my, compared to “The Vulcan Hello”/”Battle at the Binary Stars” there was SUCH an improvement in tone. There’s one thing I keep missing though: A certain “hands-on” feel, a certain bit of realism. This episode in particular just made me wonder: Is there anything in this version of the Star Trek universe that’s not holographic or collapsible? We got holographic displays, holographic controls, holographic candles, holographic drawings, collapsible spacesuits, a collapsible… “gravity simulator”? You know, I won’t cry “CANON VIOLATION” at a bit of pre-TOS holo-tech – that would be silly. But hitherto, in Star Trek a glass of tea was just a glass of tea… or in regard to this episode: A candle was just a candle and an EV suit was just that: A suit that one had to put on. It’s just a bit too much fanciness for the sake of fanciness, if you know what I mean. This season may turn out superb, but those stylistic choices kinda take away from the overall picture.
“We hope it doesn’t burst, but unlike many cities we had time to act,” said Décio dos Santos, the town mayor. “We didn’t know the dam was dangerous.”
I realize you’re fond of being provocative, Luke, but fables are by definition stories told to make ethical points or impart wisdom for a balanced life. Do you also call Aesop’s Fables “fake” and therefore presumably of no value? What about Shakespeare’s plays? Are they also “fake” because they are not transcripts of historical events? Yes, the Bible contains fables. It also contains poetry, musical lyrics, law codes, “history” (as understood by ancient peoples), letters, laments, proverbs, and other literary forms spanning a millennium. So?
I did like it that if they had to have religion that at least the local religion included seven major Earth religions, including Wicca.
Funny how you think that was an attack on you when I very specifically (and intentionally) did not call you out as a critic of DSC. Mehtinks you doth protest too much.
Any word on why Airiam was recast (especially since the acress appeared on the episode in another role)?
McLaren’s promotional videos show 600LTs sliding around in a plume of tire smoke, but at road speeds, including naughty ones, the only haze is one of confusion as to how the chassis never loses composure, even after repeated changes in direction. With less weight than a 720S, the 600LT feels even more agile, delivering the sort of intimate driving experience you don’t get in most big power supercars. The laggy turbo is the only aspect of this car that lacks immediacy.
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