• What Did You Watch? 2025-05-17 (Saturday)

    From Dimensional Traveler@21:1/5 to All on Sun May 18 09:20:00 2025
    Fringe S2E13 'Johari Window'. Olivia and Peter are stuck inside a
    quarantined building trying to find the origin of the pathogen while
    Walter tries to find a cure. (There is a reason one doesn't trust
    bicycle messengers.)

    The glyphs in this episode spell "Window".

    We all know the "science" in this show is ... not science, but I have to
    say that in this episode it is so much hooey that an entire herd of
    incontinent male bovines couldn't keep up. :)

    Dr. Walter Bishop: When the Victoria, the last surviving ship, return to
    its harbor of departure after the first circumnavigation of the earth,
    only 18 of the original 237 men were on board.
    Small Child: What happened to them?
    Dr. Walter Bishop: They all died, young lady. Horrible and most likely
    painful death. You see, when you open new doors, there is a price to
    pay. Now imagine... tonight, you look under your bed, and, lo and
    behold, you find a monster! And you're immediately eaten. Now, if you
    hadn't looked for the monster, you wouldn't have found it and you'd
    still be happy in your beds, instead of being slowly digested in the
    stomach sack of the creature. But, with any luck, your sister or your
    brothers might have heard your screams, and your endeavor will serve as
    a valuable lesson to them.

    [last lines]
    Astrid Farnsworth: Walter, um, inside, upstairs, when you said I can't
    let Peter die again, what did you mean by that?
    Dr. Walter Bishop: Some things are meant to be left alone, Agent Farnsworth.

    Like many episodes of Fringe (2008), this one contains several
    affectionate references to The X-Files (1993): the plot concerns a virus
    in a black oil that takes over the personality of and eventually kills
    its host human, something that was also a long-term plotline on "The
    X-Files"; FBI partners Peter and Olivia have a fight in which Peter
    (under the influence of the oil) accuses Olivia of betrayal, something
    that often happened between "X-Files" FBI partners Mulder and Scully
    while one or the other of them was being mentally altered against their
    wills; the guest star who plays Steve, Brendan Beiser, was an "X-Files"
    regular as Agent Pendrell, and Megan Leitch, who also guest stars in the episode played Samantha Mulder.


    Fringe S2E14 'The Bishop Revival'. A Holocaust survivor and 14 of her descendants all die of suffocation at a wedding when no one else is harmed.

    The glyphs from this episode spell out: FATHER

    This episode includes an appearance of the running joke in which Walter
    can't quite recall Astrid's name correctly. Here he calls her "Ostrich".


    Dr. Walter Bishop: What color are his eyes?
    Olivia Dunham: Brown.
    Dr. Walter Bishop: Then I was right after all. It is a targeted toxin.
    They all have brown eyes. That's the common genetic trait. Check the
    survivors, but I'm sure I'm right.
    [to Broyles]
    Dr. Walter Bishop: It's a good thing you weren't here at the time, or
    you'd be dead too.

    What Did You Watch?


    --
    I've done good in this world. Now I'm tired and just want to be a cranky
    dirty old man.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Arthur Lipscomb@21:1/5 to Dimensional Traveler on Sun May 18 10:10:14 2025
    On 5/18/2025 9:20 AM, Dimensional Traveler wrote:
    Fringe S2E13 'Johari Window'.  Olivia and Peter are stuck inside a quarantined building trying to find the origin of the pathogen while
    Walter tries to find a cure.  (There is a reason one doesn't trust
    bicycle messengers.)

    The glyphs in this episode spell "Window".

    We all know the "science" in this show is ... not science, but I have to
    say that in this episode it is so much hooey that an entire herd of incontinent male bovines couldn't keep up.  :)


    Hold up. Now just wait a minute. Are you saying, the science in Fringe
    wasn't 100% scientifically accurate? Are you sure?


    Dr. Walter Bishop: When the Victoria, the last surviving ship, return to
    its harbor of departure after the first circumnavigation of the earth,
    only 18 of the original 237 men were on board.
    Small Child: What happened to them?
    Dr. Walter Bishop: They all died, young lady. Horrible and most likely painful death. You see, when you open new doors, there is a price to
    pay. Now imagine... tonight, you look under your bed, and, lo and
    behold, you find a monster! And you're immediately eaten. Now, if you
    hadn't looked for the monster, you wouldn't have found it and you'd
    still be happy in your beds, instead of being slowly digested in the
    stomach sack of the creature. But, with any luck, your sister or your brothers might have heard your screams, and your endeavor will serve as
    a valuable lesson to them.

    [last lines]
    Astrid Farnsworth: Walter, um, inside, upstairs, when you said I can't
    let Peter die again, what did you mean by that?
    Dr. Walter Bishop: Some things are meant to be left alone, Agent
    Farnsworth.

    Like many episodes of Fringe (2008), this one contains several
    affectionate references to The X-Files (1993): the plot concerns a virus
    in a black oil that takes over the personality of and eventually kills
    its host human, something that was also a long-term plotline on "The X- Files"; FBI partners Peter and Olivia have a fight in which Peter (under
    the influence of the oil) accuses Olivia of betrayal, something that
    often happened between "X-Files" FBI partners Mulder and Scully while
    one or the other of them was being mentally altered against their wills;
    the guest star who plays Steve, Brendan Beiser, was an "X-Files" regular
    as Agent Pendrell, and Megan Leitch, who also guest stars in the episode played Samantha Mulder.



    They said the name out loud?


    Fringe S2E14 'The Bishop Revival'.  A Holocaust survivor and 14 of her descendants all die of suffocation at a wedding when no one else is harmed.

    The glyphs from this episode spell out: FATHER

    This episode includes an appearance of the running joke in which Walter
    can't quite recall Astrid's name correctly. Here he calls her "Ostrich".


    Dr. Walter Bishop: What color are his eyes?
    Olivia Dunham: Brown.
    Dr. Walter Bishop: Then I was right after all. It is a targeted toxin.
    They all have brown eyes. That's the common genetic trait. Check the survivors, but I'm sure I'm right.
    [to Broyles]
    Dr. Walter Bishop: It's a good thing you weren't here at the time, or
    you'd be dead too.

    What Did You Watch?



    I watched:


    Doctor Who (Disney+) - "The Interstellar Song Contest" - The Doctor and
    Ruby land on a satellite hosting an interstellar song contest, hey
    that's the title of the episode. Of course, something really, really
    bad happens as soon as the Doctor arrives. This episode put the Doctor
    in vengeance mode, which we don't often get to see, but he was ready to
    burn it all down. When he doesn't have UNIT or a companion to do his
    dirty work and get blood on their hands, sometimes he has to do it
    himself. This episode turned out to be a lot better than expected and
    had not one, but two major revelations. Pnebyr Naa Sbeq ercevfrq ure
    ebyr nf gur Qbpgbe'f tenaqqnhtugre, Fhfna. Naq gur gehr vqragvgl bs
    Zef. Sybbq jnf erirnyrq. Gurl ner *abg* gur fnzr crefba.


    Mission: Impossible III (4K disc) 2006 sequel which is where the
    franchise really took off and everything started to click, starting with finally introducing "Benji" (Simon Pegg) as everyone's favorite IMF
    tech support who hopes to one day be promoted to field agent. J.J.
    Abrams takes over directing duties so we get some Abrams regulars like
    Greg Grunberg, and Keri Russell. Michelle Monaghan also joins the
    franchise as Ethan's wife Julia. The villain this time around is a
    scenery chewing Philip Seymour Hoffman who just wants to know, where is
    the Rabbit's Foot.


    Mission: Impossible - Ghost Protocol (4K disc) 2011 sequel which has
    Jeremy Renner joining the Impossible Mission force to stop a mustache
    twirling Bond Villain (Michael Nyqvist) from starting a nuclear war.
    They let Benji go into the field but didn't let him wear a mask. Let
    him wear a mask! The one ends with Ethan learning about a new evil
    agency called The Syndicate.


    Mission: Impossible - Rogue Nation (4K disc) James Bond, I mean Ethan
    Hunt goes up against SPECTRE, I mean The Syndicate. All the usuals
    (Simon Pegg, Jeremy Renner, and Ving Rhames) return. But this time
    around they are forced to save the day while also hiding from their own government after Alec Baldwin takes over as the new CIA chief and
    convinces congress to mothball the MIF. This forces the MIF to have to
    save the day while avoiding the U.S. government. Rebecca Ferguson joins
    the franchise as a disavowed MI6 agent who teams up with Ethan. And
    Sean Harris shows up as the evil head of SPECTRE, I mean The Syndicate.


    Mission: Impossible - Fallout (3D) Now I won't pretend as if I fully
    grasp the plot of the various Mission Impossible movies. Much like a
    Bond movie, the plot is secondary to watching the hero save the day.
    But the plot of this one is nearly incomprehensible, and yet, it's
    probably the best one yet. I had *no* idea what was happening half the
    time and yet I was enjoying this one to no end. I hadn't noticed before
    now, but they basically stole a page from the Daniel Craig Bond movies
    and turned it into one continuous story, that picks up where "Rogue
    Nation" left off. The entire cast is back, including Rebecca Ferguson
    ans the MI6 agent with questionable loyalties. Alec Baldwin is back,
    and now he's he head of MIF. Sean Harris back as the same villain from
    the last movie. And joining the action for this go around are Angela
    Bassett as the new CIA head who like Baldwin before her, hates the MIF.
    The movie also stars Henry Cavill's mustache as a CIA assassin under
    orders from Bassetts to get the job done by any means necessary. And
    Vanessa Kirby as the daughter of "Max" from the first movie, a detail
    I'm sure I missed the first time I watched this. Also returning is
    Michelle Monaghan as Ethan's long suffering wife. This is one of those
    very rare franchises that someone manages to just keep getting better as
    it goes. I mean, they let Benjie not only go on a mission, but even
    wear a mask. :-)

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Dimensional Traveler@21:1/5 to Arthur Lipscomb on Sun May 18 12:09:26 2025
    On 5/18/2025 10:10 AM, Arthur Lipscomb wrote:
    On 5/18/2025 9:20 AM, Dimensional Traveler wrote:
    Fringe S2E13 'Johari Window'.  Olivia and Peter are stuck inside a
    quarantined building trying to find the origin of the pathogen while
    Walter tries to find a cure.  (There is a reason one doesn't trust
    bicycle messengers.)

    The glyphs in this episode spell "Window".

    We all know the "science" in this show is ... not science, but I have
    to say that in this episode it is so much hooey that an entire herd of
    incontinent male bovines couldn't keep up.  :)


    Hold up.  Now just wait a minute.  Are you saying, the science in Fringe wasn't 100% scientifically accurate?  Are you sure?

    *bronx cheer*

    Dr. Walter Bishop: When the Victoria, the last surviving ship, return
    to its harbor of departure after the first circumnavigation of the
    earth, only 18 of the original 237 men were on board.
    Small Child: What happened to them?
    Dr. Walter Bishop: They all died, young lady. Horrible and most likely
    painful death. You see, when you open new doors, there is a price to
    pay. Now imagine... tonight, you look under your bed, and, lo and
    behold, you find a monster! And you're immediately eaten. Now, if you
    hadn't looked for the monster, you wouldn't have found it and you'd
    still be happy in your beds, instead of being slowly digested in the
    stomach sack of the creature. But, with any luck, your sister or your
    brothers might have heard your screams, and your endeavor will serve
    as a valuable lesson to them.

    [last lines]
    Astrid Farnsworth: Walter, um, inside, upstairs, when you said I can't
    let Peter die again, what did you mean by that?
    Dr. Walter Bishop: Some things are meant to be left alone, Agent
    Farnsworth.

    Like many episodes of Fringe (2008), this one contains several
    affectionate references to The X-Files (1993): the plot concerns a
    virus in a black oil that takes over the personality of and eventually
    kills its host human, something that was also a long-term plotline on
    "The X- Files"; FBI partners Peter and Olivia have a fight in which
    Peter (under the influence of the oil) accuses Olivia of betrayal,
    something that often happened between "X-Files" FBI partners Mulder
    and Scully while one or the other of them was being mentally altered
    against their wills; the guest star who plays Steve, Brendan Beiser,
    was an "X-Files" regular as Agent Pendrell, and Megan Leitch, who also
    guest stars in the episode played Samantha Mulder.

    They said the name out loud?

    I don't understand the question. The trivia item is saying that actors
    who were in X-Files episodes got roles, as different characters, in this episode of 'Fringe'.

    --
    I've done good in this world. Now I'm tired and just want to be a cranky
    dirty old man.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Arthur Lipscomb@21:1/5 to Dimensional Traveler on Sun May 18 14:44:07 2025
    On 5/18/2025 12:09 PM, Dimensional Traveler wrote:
    On 5/18/2025 10:10 AM, Arthur Lipscomb wrote:
    On 5/18/2025 9:20 AM, Dimensional Traveler wrote:
    Fringe S2E13 'Johari Window'.  Olivia and Peter are stuck inside a
    quarantined building trying to find the origin of the pathogen while
    Walter tries to find a cure.  (There is a reason one doesn't trust
    bicycle messengers.)

    The glyphs in this episode spell "Window".

    We all know the "science" in this show is ... not science, but I have
    to say that in this episode it is so much hooey that an entire herd
    of incontinent male bovines couldn't keep up.  :)


    Hold up.  Now just wait a minute.  Are you saying, the science in
    Fringe wasn't 100% scientifically accurate?  Are you sure?

    *bronx cheer*

    Dr. Walter Bishop: When the Victoria, the last surviving ship, return
    to its harbor of departure after the first circumnavigation of the
    earth, only 18 of the original 237 men were on board.
    Small Child: What happened to them?
    Dr. Walter Bishop: They all died, young lady. Horrible and most
    likely painful death. You see, when you open new doors, there is a
    price to pay. Now imagine... tonight, you look under your bed, and,
    lo and behold, you find a monster! And you're immediately eaten. Now,
    if you hadn't looked for the monster, you wouldn't have found it and
    you'd still be happy in your beds, instead of being slowly digested
    in the stomach sack of the creature. But, with any luck, your sister
    or your brothers might have heard your screams, and your endeavor
    will serve as a valuable lesson to them.

    [last lines]
    Astrid Farnsworth: Walter, um, inside, upstairs, when you said I
    can't let Peter die again, what did you mean by that?
    Dr. Walter Bishop: Some things are meant to be left alone, Agent
    Farnsworth.

    Like many episodes of Fringe (2008), this one contains several
    affectionate references to The X-Files (1993): the plot concerns a
    virus in a black oil that takes over the personality of and
    eventually kills its host human, something that was also a long-term
    plotline on "The X- Files"; FBI partners Peter and Olivia have a
    fight in which Peter (under the influence of the oil) accuses Olivia
    of betrayal, something that often happened between "X-Files" FBI
    partners Mulder and Scully while one or the other of them was being
    mentally altered against their wills; the guest star who plays Steve,
    Brendan Beiser, was an "X-Files" regular as Agent Pendrell, and Megan
    Leitch, who also guest stars in the episode played Samantha Mulder.

    They said the name out loud?

    I don't understand the question.  The trivia item is saying that actors
    who were in X-Files episodes got roles, as different characters, in this episode of 'Fringe'.


    I thought you meant the character on the fringe episode was named
    Samantha Mulder. I guess I read it wrong.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Dimensional Traveler@21:1/5 to Arthur Lipscomb on Sun May 18 18:21:58 2025
    On 5/18/2025 2:44 PM, Arthur Lipscomb wrote:
    On 5/18/2025 12:09 PM, Dimensional Traveler wrote:
    On 5/18/2025 10:10 AM, Arthur Lipscomb wrote:
    On 5/18/2025 9:20 AM, Dimensional Traveler wrote:
    Fringe S2E13 'Johari Window'.  Olivia and Peter are stuck inside a
    quarantined building trying to find the origin of the pathogen while
    Walter tries to find a cure.  (There is a reason one doesn't trust
    bicycle messengers.)

    The glyphs in this episode spell "Window".

    We all know the "science" in this show is ... not science, but I
    have to say that in this episode it is so much hooey that an entire
    herd of incontinent male bovines couldn't keep up.  :)


    Hold up.  Now just wait a minute.  Are you saying, the science in
    Fringe wasn't 100% scientifically accurate?  Are you sure?

    *bronx cheer*

    Dr. Walter Bishop: When the Victoria, the last surviving ship,
    return to its harbor of departure after the first circumnavigation
    of the earth, only 18 of the original 237 men were on board.
    Small Child: What happened to them?
    Dr. Walter Bishop: They all died, young lady. Horrible and most
    likely painful death. You see, when you open new doors, there is a
    price to pay. Now imagine... tonight, you look under your bed, and,
    lo and behold, you find a monster! And you're immediately eaten.
    Now, if you hadn't looked for the monster, you wouldn't have found
    it and you'd still be happy in your beds, instead of being slowly
    digested in the stomach sack of the creature. But, with any luck,
    your sister or your brothers might have heard your screams, and your
    endeavor will serve as a valuable lesson to them.

    [last lines]
    Astrid Farnsworth: Walter, um, inside, upstairs, when you said I
    can't let Peter die again, what did you mean by that?
    Dr. Walter Bishop: Some things are meant to be left alone, Agent
    Farnsworth.

    Like many episodes of Fringe (2008), this one contains several
    affectionate references to The X-Files (1993): the plot concerns a
    virus in a black oil that takes over the personality of and
    eventually kills its host human, something that was also a long-term
    plotline on "The X- Files"; FBI partners Peter and Olivia have a
    fight in which Peter (under the influence of the oil) accuses Olivia
    of betrayal, something that often happened between "X-Files" FBI
    partners Mulder and Scully while one or the other of them was being
    mentally altered against their wills; the guest star who plays
    Steve, Brendan Beiser, was an "X-Files" regular as Agent Pendrell,
    and Megan Leitch, who also guest stars in the episode played
    Samantha Mulder.

    They said the name out loud?

    I don't understand the question.  The trivia item is saying that
    actors who were in X-Files episodes got roles, as different
    characters, in this episode of 'Fringe'.


    I thought you meant the character on the fringe episode was named
    Samantha Mulder.  I guess I read it wrong.

    It's a straight copy-n-paste from IMDb so take it up Ian.

    --
    I've done good in this world. Now I'm tired and just want to be a cranky
    dirty old man.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)