dickgrimes : Never understood people who go on trips to places they have never been without at least 2 ...
Toonaholic : What's with monster's face mask going to bad face makeup job? meh, ok. But enough with the...
Jirido : Some other links related to the episodes subject.. 👹 [Kuru: the science and the sorcery (2...
Twixtid : I heard some people complain that they felt like Enterprise felt "dated" in comparison to ...
Wizzdom : You have summarized my entire experience with this series. It gets worse, if you can belie...
Dethkids : Another disturbing alien flick you might enjoy : https://www.primewire.tf/movie/610591-und...
prism : well for one, Jonathan Frakes himself regrets doing it, said it took away from the series ...
Shade_Chylde : Don't mind me, I'm just here because they promised me some Lucy Lawless...
AnHistoricPigeon : I've been watching your progress from the shadows. Star Trek comments always catch my eye....
Twixtid : Truly appreciate your audience, and it is a pleasure to meet your acquaintance. Live long ...
Another person ashamed-to-have-been-raised-in-the-South-specifically-coastal-SC here: and I concur. Although cognitive dissonance is a wildly American trait in and of itself, it grows heavy, deep, and twisted in the South, like a poisonous vine.
My mother’s family was from a coastal island, and I think I’m related to half of the “real” Charlestonians. So many, I don’t even know most of them. When I started doing my genealogy, I found out that one specific family line ran through almost every family in that area. Hell, we’re probably cousins, too! We genealogists call the lowcountry “cousins by the dozens.” So much inbreeding! There are some batshit crazy rich people down there, and a lot of men with Peter Pan complexes. It’s an interesting place — Almost 400 years of history with no progress.