Well, you missed the really important stuff:
How are Boxey and Muffitt II doing these days?
Why the King tut headresses?
What happened to Lorne Greene's cape?
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Well, you missed the really important stuff:
How are Boxey and Muffitt II doing these days?
Why the King tut headresses?
What happened to Lorne Greene's cape?
Intrigueing question. I've long maintained that David Hasselhoff's Baywatch rescue buoy should have talked to him, preferably in KITT's voice, and have an oscillating red eye...
Whatever. Frakkin' peanut gallery, is what I'm dealing with here... :rolleyes:
All I can say is, the finale was freakin' awesome.
And it's a pretty nice twist ending, finding out that the series was really set one hundred fifty thousand years in the past, right up to the jump forward at the very end - to the present day.
Y'know, I strongly doubted that the destroyed planet they landed on at the midseason break last summer actually was Earth. And I was right... and wrong. Evidently, it was the first "Earth", but not the Earth we know. Which actually makes sense now, seeing as how the colonists/human-type Cylons on that other Earth were only there for a thousand years... it didn't quite add up, but now it makes sense.
But Wait, There's More! We've got the prequel, Caprica, to look forward to... and now, we've also got Battlestar Galactica: The Plan, which appears to be a retelling of the miniseries from the Cylons' point of view.
I'll agree with you Rob: the BSG finale was certainly something to behold. In fact, my only gripe about it would be that the Jimi Hendrix version of "All Along the Watchtower" didn't continue to play over an extended and complete credits sequence. Other then that though, it was the best frakking finale to the best frakking show on television. http://www.thescifiworld.net/img/smi...ckanime003.gif
So how about Boxey and Muffitt II?