Not only Dino's, but our cousins. Dino's that were from our Earth, then evolved in another part of the Galaxy.
A part of the Galaxy where Janeway and crew just happened to find. The same way she just happened to find Ameila Airheart, played by Sipowitz's woman, from NYPD Blue.
I'm not even going to rant about the mind rape tower that Janeway powered up for another 1000 years. I wrote a long rant on that years ago and posted it in here.
I don't want to relive the anger and bitterness I have for that episode.
I watched it like religion, all 7 seasons. I liked about half of them.
It had some cool stuff. I liked the doctor. And Seven of Nine.
I hated Janeway. Tuvok was cool. Nelix, I wanted to get blown out an airlock.
Tuvix, like heck said, was EVIL and STUPID.
Chacoktay was cool, I liked him. His tats were slick.
The aliens were stupid for the most part, cept for the Borg, I like the Borg Queen. The caretaker or shiptaker or whatever sucked.
I loved the design of the ship, and to date the opening titles is my favorite of any Star Trek. The ship flying in the comet tail, the rings of the gas planet, the music. It all hit home.
There we go. Some cheery reviews. I liked the opening as well. Most of the aliens were dumb. Plenty of the storylines were salty and I didn't enjoy very much.
Hey Whidden, about the main characters... Even though you also didn't mention B'Ellanna, you said volumes when you forgot to mention Kim. To me, his character is very forgettable. I liked the Doctor, Tuvok, B'Ellanna some of the time, really liked Seven of Nine, Chakotay I could tolerate, but never really enjoyed that much, Paris kinda got on my nerves most of the time, and I NEVER liked little Naomi Wildman. Come to think of it, I can't really think of a reason why I liked the show other than that it was a Star Trek franchise...
Naomi Wildman was the little girl who was born and raised on Voyager. She had spikes running down the middle of her forehead, and was a waste of time and effort.
And Harry Kim was the most boring, useless character ever. His entire existance in Trek lore is pointless.
There were a few good Voyager episodes, I will admit it.
I liked the one with those robots that were in a huge war, then one of the crew told them about Data so it seemed like they were going to find him.
The other was 'Living Witness' where its 600 years in the future and this museum has this holographic display and it tells the tale of this evil ship named Voyager and how they tried to take them over. Then one of the historian guys finds a piece of Voyager and in it is a backup EMH doctor which he activiates, thinking it's still 600 years earlier. Blah blah blah, in the end, the Doc catches a ship back to Earth. This episode was cool because of the evil Voyager flashbacks and what not.
I kind of liked the one where Voyager got trapped in the time warp gas looking planet, but it was really just out of sync with Voyager, and centuries passed, as the planets inhabitants, over the many years, tried to get rid of Voyager, as it was causing earthquakes.
Sierradaddy said this in post #11 : That's because Jin from LOST was in that one...
I didn't know that. I will look out for him when I see it in reruns. Whenever my local station starts to play them.
quote:
HECK said this in post #12 : Don't remember that one. Was it with the mud people?
Neelix's girlfriend was a tool.
One cool thing was they landed Voyager, hadn't seen that before.
-HECK!
I don't remember the mud people. These were just normal run the mill aliens, looked human, but had some minor nose ridges or forhead ridges or some kind of funky face ridge.
HECK - Yeah, Jin was in the episode where Voyager was caught in a planet's atmosphere somehow, and the planet was in some kind of temporal acceleration. Voyager witnessed the evolution of a planet, and then Jin came up as one of 2 astronauts. When they shifted into Voyager's timeframe (or timespeed, whatever...), they both passed out, and I believe that the female astronaut died from the trauma. He survived, learned about Voyager, stayed until the planet started firing at Voyager, then went back to tell them all about the ship and that they were stuck. The episode ends with Jin as an old man back on his planet, watching, with tearful eyes, the star that Voyager appeared to be, as it finally breaks free of the atmosphere and flies away.
That was one of Voyager's best episodes.
I don't remember the mud people either... Only mud people I remember were from another show: Earth 2.
Darn it, not to go off topic, but I thought I was the only to ever watch Earth 2. Terry o'quinn was in that, the guy from LOST with the knives, he wound up being some holographic projection deal, a computer mind or some rot.
That was a darn good show at first, then if fizzled out.