Set in "the near future" (the year 2018 in the first season)
Uff.
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Set in "the near future" (the year 2018 in the first season)
Uff.
The 90's were peak optimism. It's all downhill from there
Yeah binging 90's scifi is very soothing.
Until you hit those depressingly real near future depictions.
The third season was a skip forward to 2032 and it was somewhat better, but still pretty stupid.
Like they had an android character who was a great big guy but had a simple, child-like brain. What the hell was the point of that?
Like they had an android character who was a great big guy but had a simple, child-like brain. What the hell was the point of that?
I'm sure there's a contract that says if you employ one DeLuise brother on a show you need to give the other one a bit part.
It would explain Wormhole Xtreme
Don't diss Wormhole X-treme, there's a reason it, allegedly, performed very well on DVD.
From that little room in the back of the video store which was closed off behind a curtain.
The reason it failed was that it didn't mimic Star Trek enough, with geopolitics and court room episodes.
But Star Trek could learn something by having an astrophysicist come on at the end of the show and talk space science like this show did with Robert Ballard.
Also, I had no idea that his bit at the end of his 30 Rock episode was satiring that in particular.
how.. ho wwas this?
This show is pretty fire back in the day, they had some hyper intelligent dolphin doing recon for them
Named Darwin. They had some way of translating his dolphin sounds to a weird synthesized voice that was probably voiced by an actor.
I only watched it because I fell in love with Stacey Haiduk watching her as Lana Lang in Superboy
The first season was really good. The second was labored at times. The third was... something else.
But it's got Mark Hamill so that's not nothing.
Was he the dolphin?
No, he was a shapeshifting reptiloid alien trying to get back home
i just recently downloaded this/added it to my library last year. it did not age well. it was pretty awesome back in the day, but its kinda hard to watch now
I did exactly the same thing.
I feel obligated to subject myself to this. But I appreciate the warning.
I've been wanting to as well out of nostalgia but I know it will be bad by today's standards, or even adult standards in general.
So I'm not going to do it.... Yet.
I remember being fond of the first season, but it was definitely "wet star trek," complete with a Tiger Beat suitable version of Wesley (RIP Jonathan Brandis, who got chewed up and spit out by Hollywood), especially by the end of season 2 when I stopped watching, apparently along with everyone else.
I watched all the seasons.
It was kind of poetic that a show about a submarine went so far off the deep end.
There were dozens of us who watched season 3.
Dozens!
This would have been a great show ....... because we haven't really explored the ocean depths in real life ... I think only 20% of the ocean floor has been mapped so far and of that mapping it wasn't very detailed.
Nah that's a common misconception, a lot of the ocean is mapped to enough resolution to know there's basically nothing there. A lot of the ocean floor is a barren desert with nothing much going on. Some parts have been thoroughly studied, where interesting stuff is going on and where we've put infra like all of the undersea cables (which are a lot). All of it is mapped to some resolution and some parts at higher resolution (you can see on Google maps lines where ships have gone through with better mapping abilities). So saying it hasn't been "explored" or "mapped" is simply false, it has been mapped and has shown to be not interesting. So no nobody went down there, nobody got pictures or centimeter level mapping, but we know how water and sand looks so why bother? It's this implication of something unknown and mysterious, whilst in reality we've just been efficient in what to find. And yes there are new species found in the ocean every day, but you'd need to be an expert to even tell them apart from other species we already know about. There isn't something big and interesting we don't know about. It's a nice story to tell, but it isn't real.
That said, we still get surprised.
This is a myth, and my heart aches for this show might have contributed to it. We have detailed maps of all the ocean floor, with more or less the same variance as our dry surface maps. We have been to most of the more interesting, extreme and dramatic parts of the depths. Hell, there are oceanographic channels that live stream from deep under on the regular. Sure, there are surely still some things we haven't found, thousands of sunk ships too small to know exactly where they ended up in, or natural phenomenon we probably haven't documented yet. But, on the grand scale of science, we know the ocean floor rather well.
Shout out to EVNautilus.
Here's a neat podcast that talks about this specific myth.
I don't think it's a myth. It's just boomer-era info that kept getting repeated until it was out of date.
The episode where Roy Scheider talks to Jonathan Brandis about using a condom was one of the most cringey things ever put on American TV.
I have never seen this show.
Live action Sealab with joxer/ted raimi
That's Countess Regina Barthalomew front row second from the left.
So this is what she and Moriarty got up to.
No! R2D2 got lost in the stargate! Quickly, Spok, send in the troopers to save him from Lord Zedd!
Sir, I'm afraid the troopers got their hands full with Emperor Ming at the moment.
Oh man, I forgot this ever existed. Thanks for the trip down memory lane.
"Darwin hates Brandis. Please, kill Brandis or kill Darwin."
A completely forgettable simulacrum