The Scripts of J. Michael Straczynski, Vol. 1 347
chromatic writes "It's hard to overestimate the influence that Babylon 5 had on American
television, especially science fiction and dramas. When it debuted, it was a
smaller, scrappier competitor to Paramount's revitalized Star Trek franchise.
When it ended, it had proven that not only could you tell a complex, layered
story over multiple years (and through the demise of syndication, yearly
struggles with funding, and often frustrating and unexpected troubles with
schedules and actors), but that a lean, creator-driven show could succeed
artistically." Read on for chromatic's review.
The Scripts of J. Michael Straczynski, Vol. 1 | |
author | J. Michael Straczynski |
pages | 454 |
publisher | Synthetic Worlds Publishing |
rating | Worth reading for B5 fans and television students. |
reviewer | chromatic |
ISBN | none |
summary | Notes on and scripts to the first half of Babylon 5 season 1. |
Through the course of the show, its creator J. Michael Straczynski (JMS) wrote 92 of the 110 episodes filmed, including every episode of seasons three and four and all but one episode of season five-- a record-breaking achievement. Now he's publishing all of his scripts, as written, in multiple volumes from Babylon5Scripts.com.
There are plenty of books about screenwriting and many include a few examples of actual scripts (another book from JMS himself reprints the script to the Hugo-award winning second season episode "The Coming of Shadows"). Yet what other book or series of books even promises to show the development of a series from inspiration to the final frame of the final episode? What's in the book (and the forthcoming volumes) for a Babylon 5 or sci-fan, let alone someone interested in the mechanics of television?
The Scripts of J. Michael Straczynski, volume 1 includes the first five JMS-penned episodes from season one, as well as the unfilmed draft of the pilot movie "The Gathering". Each episode includes a short essay with notable information about the writing, planning, or filming of the episode. There's also a short section of photos at the end, along with seven memos from the start of the project through the filming of the pilot.
Subsequent volumes reportedly will include similar information. The second, including the remaining seven episode JMS wrote for season one, is out and shipping now. The rest will follow every few weeks. Positives
The big draw, of course, is the scripts themselves. In particular, the draft of the pilot episode, "The Gathering", has a few major changes from the filmed version. Delenn, the Minbari ambassador, is still a masculine character in this draft. Kosh, the Vorlon ambassador and victim of an assassination plot, has a lifemate travelling with him on the station. For the most part, the changes made before filming are obviously for the better. (Though cutting Kosh's lifemate was the right choice, losing a line of dialogue about one reason for the Vorlons's obvious paranoia about their biology was a pity.)
The scripts appear as written, including typos and, occasionally, vague hints to what will occur later in the series. For example, the first appearance of a First Ones ship (the Walkers at Sigma 957 in the episode "Mind War") has an explicit note that the as-yet unmentioned "Shadowmen" ship will look very different. Another suggestion during the scene of the battle with raiders recommends using real-world physics for the Starfury crafts to differentiate from other dogfights-in-space shows.
If you're interested in scriptwriting, directing, acting, or editing, comparing the script to the finished product may be very educational. Straczynski writes sparse action, leaving most of the interpretation out of the script. Of course, the episodes so far are mostly character and background pieces with comparatively few action or effects scenes needing guidance. It may be that larger battles and flashbacks have more description; it's too early to tell.
The new material is interesting, and in a few places tells stories that never actually left the set. One explains why the change of station telepath from Lyta Alexander to Talia Winters took place between the pilot and the first episode. Another expands on the trials of pitching a show to television executives, especially during the first few attempts of the late '80s. None of this is essential to enjoying the show, but it does provide background for why things in the series happened the way they did. Drawbacks
Other scripts contain scenes that never actually aired. It's not always obvious whether this was due to time constraints, edits, or other decisions. Aside from a few mentions in the episode introductions, there are no notes in the scripts themselves related to what did and didn't make it to the screen. This may not be a drawback; they're much more readable this way and serious students may want to watch and read the episodes simultaneously anyway.
Though the scripts represent the bulk of the show and the introductions and memos provide some detail, there are plenty of decisions made during filming that don't actually have explanations in the book where you might expect them. Walter Koenig's character of Bester, the Psi-Cop, has a crippled hand, yet the book doesn't mention this at all. It's difficult to know how much detail to include -- and the permissions and availability of the material may make it difficult to include (production notes? director notes?) -- but this is by no means the whole story. Keep the Lurker's Guide handy for more details.
The book itself is solid but not remarkable. The script formatting reproduces faithfully an actual shooting script in length and layout. The print quality is good.
Very picky readers may quibble about the length and weight of the book -- most of the non-script material uses whitespace a little too generously, with large top and bottom margins and more than double-spaced type allowing only around twenty lines of text on a letter-sized page. Hopefully subsequent volumes will tighten the layout somewhat. Conclusion
While it's always possible to find bootleg or transcribed scripts online or at conventions, often at vastly inflated prices, the chance to read the official versions as filmed is worth considering for serious students of film or television as well as Babylon 5 fans. The bonus materials are nice, but they're probably more interesting to fans than students; more information about the process of how a script went from the paper to film might satisfy both groups.
The quibbles are minor; if you're already a Babylon 5 fan, you know what to expect here. If you're not a fan or a screenplay geek, this isn't the place to start -- but if you find the creative processes behind television or movies fascinating, this is an easy way to soak up wisdom and hard-earned experience. It's well worth your time to compare a few episodes in script and filmed form.
chromatic's life goals include writing a novel (done), a comic book, and an episode of a television series. Then he can sleep. Slashdot welcomes readers' book reviews -- to see your own review here, read the book review guidelines, then visit the submission page.
Huh? (Score:4, Funny)
No it's not, you just did it with that sentence.
Re:Huh? (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Huh? (Score:5, Insightful)
SeaQuest DSV: 1993
Adventures of Brisco County Junior: 1993
Time Trax: 1993
Earth 2: 1994
Sliders: 1995
Space - Above and Beyond: 1995
Oh... and then there was this other little sci-fi show which came out a year before B5 which did pretty well. It was about two FBI agents investigating aliens. Maybe you've heard of it.
In terms of getting sci-fi accepted on TV, I would say that "Quantum Leap", "Alien Nation", and "V", all shows from the 80s, were vastly more important than B5.
Re:Huh? (Score:5, Insightful)
And B5 first aired in January 1993 (the network chickened out and aired the pilot as a stand-alone movie, so the series launched the following year), so I'm not sure what you're trying to say with Earth 2 or Space: Above and Beyond.
As for the big sci-fi launch of '93, all I can remember is B5, DS9 and Space Rangers. JMS had been shopping B5 around for about 5 years, much longer than DS9 had been in development, and I seriously doubt anyone spent much time on Space Rangers.
Re:Huh? (Score:3, Interesting)
I miss that show.
B5 had just a little too much "Hercules" or "Xena"-style cheese for me (Andromeda, anyone?), although in general it was much, much better.
The fact is that sci-fi is a genre: and that means you're always going to have people who try to capitalize on the built-in audience rather than try to tell good stories. Same thing happens with mysteries and fantasies. Yet for some reason, sci-fi fans seem desperate enough to lap up
Re: (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Huh? (Score:5, Interesting)
Arrested Development
Tru Calling
Firefly
The TICK (both animated and live-action)
Greg The Bunny
Action
Wonderfalls
Titus
Andy Richter Controls the Universe
There's three evenings worth of perpetual TiVo subscriptions right there, and I know I'm forgetting a bunch more.
I fear for "House." It's the best show on TV right now, and it's on FOX, so it doesn't really stand a chance.
Re:Huh? (Score:2)
And that was a shame in some cases (and not in others - I don't think anyone was sad to see SeaQuest die, I believe Roy Schieder's stated reason for leaving the show was "I don't want to do crap anymore").
Adventures of Brisco County Junior: 1993
Space - Above and Beyond: 1995
These two were actually quite good, or at least somewhat individual. Space Above and Beyond, particularly the later half of the season, was easily the darkest grittiest science fiction to make it t
Re:Huh? (Score:2)
Loved E2, watched every episode... not sure why.
I enjoyed Briscoe County Junior, but I think I missed a few episodes because I was left with some confusion in the end. Of course, it's difficult not to enjoy works by Bruce.
Time Trax was just bad acting really. For a future guy, he really didn't use much technology at all. That really did annoy the piss out of me.
I think I caught about every episode of Seaquest DSV and their newish seaso
Re:Huh? (Score:2)
Re:Huh? (Score:2)
Here's to overstatement.
Are you kidding? (Score:5, Insightful)
The thing nobody has been able to match is to have an END. This sounds stupid, but it implies closure and a pre-written script that arcs over multiple seasons. It allows you to set up character attributes in season one that they will not make use of until season 4, and when done right it makes for a fantastic viewing experience.
Pre-scripting the story arc also allows for a continuity that would stop you from making a mish-mash of abandon technology and general stupidity like you always get in the Star Trek universe.
And I'm STILL understating it.
Re:Are you kidding? (Score:4, Insightful)
More importantly still, it allowed his characters to develop like real people, ie. permanently. What Hollywood still doesn't really get is that this adds verisimilitude that you can't SIMULATE. People change, and change in permanent ways. With a finite arc (in X years, we are DONE), you can kill characters, change them radically, do whatever, and (here's the key) they don't return to their original "character concept" by the end of 45 minutes or a couple of episodes. Really, as a viewer you never know when you're going to be handed a major character change...which is neat.
Re:Are you kidding? (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Nope, you're wrong too, nothing new (Score:3, Insightful)
Also, the concept of an "Arc" implies pre-written and thought-out scripts. Saying that a soap has an arc is kind of an insult.
Re:Nope, you're wrong too, nothing new (Score:4, Insightful)
Details changed, things got moved around, the first half of season 5 was mainly filler because those stoies got moved up to the end of season 4 -- but it was about the journey from point A in the first episode to point B in the last, and all the points along the way.
The soap opera model is designed to keep going indefinitely. You're not working toward an ultimate destination, you're working from what you have in place to see where you can go next. Even if you have things in mind to resolve one long-term story, you always have another one to launch to keep things going.
JMS has always likened B5 to writing a serialized novel for television. The soap opera model is more like standard super-hero comic books*. You might have a complicated, multi-year X-Men story, but you don't expect it to tell the entire story of the X-Men wrap it up with an epilogue and end the series when you're done.
* I'm not saying this to disparage soap operas or comics, and I'm well aware of comics like Preacher or Sandman that use the other storytelling model.
Re:Nope, you're wrong too, nothing new (Score:3, Interesting)
And I'll admit I may be misremembering, but isn't a telenovela generally either intended to run for one season, or at least designed one season at a time (like Buffy)?
A Bit Late Maybe...? (Score:2)
And while MJS may have written the vast majority of the episodes, the very best one was written by David Gerrold! That's my review.
Re:A Bit Late Maybe...? (Score:3, Insightful)
Indeed. That's probably why the reviewer didn't review the show. He/she reviewed a book about the show.
Re:A Bit Late Maybe...? (Score:2)
Okay, so I looked it up. Believers? Puh-lease!
Re:A Bit Late Maybe...? (Score:2)
"Next week, on a Very Special Episode of Babylon 5..."
Though it did have one of the best Kosh quotes ever.
"The avalanche has already started. It is too late for the pebbles to vote."
Fifth Post! (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Fifth Post! (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Fifth Post! (Score:3, Funny)
Well... (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Well... (Score:3, Informative)
The problem is, most of the episodes in series 1 sucked badly in many ways. And watching the rest without season 1 is difficult, because it relies heavily on backplot that you pick up in the early stages of the show to have a clue what's going on.
I don't have a solution. Perhaps just try to ignore the low budget, bad acting and clunky scripts. And skip the worst episodes (TKO stands out, in my op
come on... (Score:3, Funny)
Re:come on... (Score:2)
Especially when Will Robinson is adept at kicking ass.
Re:come on... (Score:2)
Well, no wonder! (Score:4, Funny)
I can see why no one had ever been able to do that before!
Re:Well, no wonder! (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Well, no wonder! (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Well, no wonder! (Score:2)
Re:Well, no wonder! (Score:2)
KEEP OFF THE
THE GRASS
If you know what it's likely to say (3, 4 and 5, rather than 4, 5 and 5) and you just skim it, you're not going to notice the typo.
Re:Well, no wonder! (Score:2)
Re:Well, no wonder! (Score:2)
The most Babylon 5 scripts penned by one man. No one previously had managed to write as many scripts for Babylon 5. It also seems likely that no one in the future will ever beat this record - though I guess if you include "fanfic scripts never filmed" the record is probably already held by someone other than Mr. Straczynski.
The whole tone of mindless breathless worship tended to detract from the review badly. Couldn't have just had something like "Stracz
Re:Well, no wonder! (Score:3, Informative)
The background material is a fun read. (Score:2)
I'm not sure I'd spend $40 just for the background material, but I have no regrets about spending $30 for the combination of background and the scripts themselves. (There's a $10 discount on each volume for the first week that it's on sale.)
Re:The background material is a fun read. (Score:2)
Holy crap. $30+ for *one* of these books? With the implication that there are going to be more than ten of them for the complete set? That's worse than the Star Trek DVD set pricing.
Re:The background material is a fun read. (Score:2)
I was still reluctant at first, but there's enough in the first volume that I'll probably keep going.
All or all but one? (Score:2)
I'm normally not one to gripe about things that should be fixed by an editor, as I'm one of the worst offenders, but I'm at a loss here to figure out what this sentence was intended to mean. Can anyone clarify?
Re:All or all but one? (Score:3, Informative)
So with one exception (Season 5's "Day of the Dead," written by Sandman writer Neil Gaiman) he wrote three entire seasons in a row -- plus more than half of the first two seasons' scripts.
Re:All or all but one? (Score:2)
The rest will follow every few weeks. Positives
None of this is essential to enjoying the show, but it does provide background for why things in the series happened the way they did. Drawbacks
Hopefully subsequent volumes will tighten the layout somewhat. Conclusion
Re:All or all but one? (Score:2)
That leaves me still equally confused. It would seem to suggest he both wrote all of the episodes and all but one of the episodes of season five.
B5 (Score:5, Interesting)
My dream is that some day we will get JMS and Joss Whedon to sit down and do a sci-fi series together. With JMS's strengh in plotlines and story development and Joss's characters it would be one of the best series ever. Certainly better then the upcoming SW:TV series. Han with wookies indeed.
Re:B5 (Score:2)
Re:B5 (Score:2)
It wasn't until years later when TBS aired the series in order and in a stable timeslot that I was able to really appreciate it.
Re:B5 (Score:2)
Re:B5 (Score:2)
The creators of Farscape openly acknowledge B5 as an influence in creating their show, and I think that that shows, too. Stargate also seems to have picked u
Firefly versus Farscape (Score:3, Insightful)
That's odd; I had the exact opposite impressions. Based on the DVDs I thought Firefly was the best TV show I'd ever seen in my life (though it lagged a little towards the end), and Farscape was so bad I couldn't stand to watch more than the first DVD. Farscape reminded me of those cheesy seventies kiddie shows like "Jason of Star Command". Really dumb plots, reasonably dumb one-note cha
Re:B5 (Score:3, Insightful)
I once read that JMS's characters don't have conversations, they make soliloquies at each other.
I love B5, but I can't help but think about that when watching it anymore...
Syndication was poor (Score:3, Interesting)
I had wondered as a kid why CTV suddenly stopped showing Bab 5. It used to be on right before Star Trek TNG on my CKCK TV station, then poof it was gone, or moved to Saturday afternoon. Then it was on here and there, and I realized they were trying to kill it off. There were times when I felt I couldn't go on, not knowing what was going to happen next on Bab 5, but I sadly got over my addiction and ended up not watching most of the last two seasons since they weren't readily available to me. One of these days I'll have to get ahold of the DVDs and watch the series in its entirety...
Re:Syndication was poor (Score:2)
Re:Syndication was poor (Score:2)
Re:Syndication was poor (Score:3, Informative)
For quite a while, the regular time slot for my local station had it at 5pm on Saturdays. One week I turned on the TV and tuned to the same station to watch it and this show I'd never seen was on. They had replaced Babylon 5 with Homeboys in Outer Space [imdb.com].
So ... this is about Hill Street Blues? (Score:5, Insightful)
It seems to me that Babylon 5 was an attempt to produce something a little like Hill Street Blues in space. It wasn't as well written, acted, or
What?! (Score:2)
Re:What?! (Score:2)
Re:So ... this is about Hill Street Blues? (Score:4, Insightful)
HSB was a great show, and yes, everything that came after it drew from that greatness, or was the worse for not having learned its lessons. I don't think that changes the impact that B5 had, though.
It was a splash of cold water to the networks. They were SURE that the SF&F markets had no interest in stories. They wanted phasers and green babes as far as they could tell. When the B5 audiences swelled, the big question was: why? When it started to win awards, there was a sort of cautious optimism. When it went a full 5 seasons, and swithched to a real network, "non-episodic" became a hollywood buzzword, and "B5-like" was a phrase applied by the marketing teams behind quite a few shows that you heard about and would never think had any connection.
Granted, there was no real, general understanding of what they had on their hands. The sequel series (Crusade) was horribly broken from day one as a result of a torrent of "notes" from TNT that destroyed any sense of what the original concept was. The suits also misunderstood the nature of the structure. They thought that X-Files and B5 had the same structure, and any attempt to explain the book-like structure of B5 was met with blank stares (I'm generalizing, this was not a universal failure, of course, just the norm). Still, there was a real change in the way Hollywood made TV, and every SF show and MANY of the non-SF shows to air since have had B5 to thank for that change. Buffy, The West Wing, Farscape, Firefly, and many other shows would likely not have been possible without B5s influence on the BUSINESS as well as on the writers, costume designers, make-up, special effects (call it cheesy now, but NO ONE thought you could do computer-generated effects for a series on-budget before B5 came out, doing it initially on Amigas).
B5 changed so much that, in retrospect, it's almost impossible to understand. You just can't bring yourself to accept that one show pushed the envelope in so many areas. JMS is an obsessive, territorial, hard-ass who many people in the industry have come to dislike, but credit where credit is due: his show was a turning point.
What a gyp! (Score:2)
B5 was fun, but.. (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:B5 was fun, but.. (Score:5, Insightful)
Ignore the spaceships and the funky haircuts on the aliens. Who is G'Kar? Who's asking you "What do you want?" in that seductive tone of voice. Who's being held in who's cellars, out of sight and out of mind? And remember, B5 had come and gone before any of us heard of Abu Ghraib!
<grandiose statement> (Score:2)
WTF? I thought I filtered out JonKatz stories years ago.
Yes, Law and Order, CSI:*, and all the other top-rated shows that everyone knows about owes deep allegiance to... what was that again?
B5 guide, quotes and game (Score:4, Interesting)
Some great links:
Babylon 5 Lurker's Guide
http://www.midwinter.com/lurk/lurker.html [midwinter.com]
B5 quotes I gathered (and published in an open book):
http://www.alexandre.leroux.net/quotes/quotes_e.h
Free B5 great game:
http://ifh.firstones.com/ [firstones.com]
Cheers
Give it up, man... (Score:2, Funny)
One of B5s major pluses: lack of cliches! (Score:4, Interesting)
Have you noticed just how much snark made it's way into original sci fi series these days? B5 started it. SG1 made it a sci-fi standard. Joss with buffy/firefly turned it into a fine art worthy of hanging in the l'ouvre, if one could hang such things. Even Andromeda, which is an okay sci fi series, still has loads of snark. Snark and sarcasm are the highest forms of humor (I feel) and require intelligence and attention span to get. US TV executives of major networks shoot for the lowest common denominator and these are not traits most Americans have.
Re:One of B5s major pluses: lack of cliches! (Score:2)
When does the script book for (Score:2)
Who really poisoned Kosh? (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Who really poisoned Kosh? (Score:3, Interesting)
For reference, here's the explanation from JMS on the Lurker's Guide:
"Think hard about the pilot for a moment. Whose job is it in the observation dome to monitor incoming ships...but apparently let the spider transport slip thr
Re:Who really poisoned Kosh? (Score:4, Interesting)
The assassin was a member of the Minbari Wind Swords clan. The Wind Swords sheltered Deathwalker, the worst war criminal among the Dilgar. The Dilgar have been implied to have been allies of the Shadows. At least some Shadow allies are known to have been active since the Earth-Minbari War or earlier. This suggests that the Wind Swords clan is either allied with the Shadows or has been infiltrated by Shadow agents.
It's entirely likely that the Shadows, or their agents, recognized Babylon 5's significance -- as they recognized Babylon 4 -- and wanted to destabilize it before it beame a threat. What better way than to strike at a likely pivotal figure (Sinclair) by killing a Vorlon and sparking a potential conflict with the Vorlons themselves?
Re: (Score:2)
Re:Scripts? (Score:2)
I'd say there's enough interest.
B3 was B4 B5 (Score:2)
Quick, someone call the The Narn Bat Squad
Re:B3 was B4 B5 (Score:2)
wamwamwamwamwam
tromptromptromptromptromp
Betcha we're the only people who know what that means...
It also showed (Score:2)
TWW
This post is not "5 miles long..." (Score:3, Interesting)
Good news! (Score:2)
It can be a dangerous place... (Score:2)
Bester's crippled hand... (Score:3, Interesting)
It wasn't something JMS came up with or had originally penned, hence I could see how it wouldn't have a place
in his original notes for season one.
I have mixed feelings about how it adds or doesn't add to the character, thought it certainly makes Bester _seem_ a little more three-dimensional or "realistic"...
Prescient? (Score:4, Insightful)
Once a viewer said that such features of a dictatorship could never occur in an established democracy. JMS responded that they are bound to happen as long as people think they cannot happen (paraphrased). I fear he was right.
Re:I can overestimate it! (Score:2)
Not to mention 80% of the rest of the world.
Re:I can overestimate it! (Score:2)
Re:J. Michael Straczynski (Score:3, Informative)
Mainly he's writing comic books -- Amazing Spider-Man, Fantastic Four and an original project with Colleen Doran called The Book of Lost Souls. (I haven't read his Marvel Universe books, and Lost Souls is too early to tell.)
There's also a couple of potential TV series coming up next year, but the TV industry is volatile enough you never know until the last contract is signed whether you've actually got a deal. JMS has a habit of not letting too much slip until the deal i
Re:J. Michael Straczynski (Score:4, Interesting)
He's had an interesting career in SciFi, and got his start in the little known show, "Captain Power and the Soliders of the Future!" Sadly, the show went off the air just as people were starting to get into it. Stupid networks.
Re:J. Michael Straczynski (Score:2)
Ah, good old Captain Power. Mind blowing stuff, for a 12 year old, at the time; a personal favourite was the episode where Masters (flying guy) gives shelter to a kid who was built to be a plague carrier.
The season (and, unfortunately, series) finale involving the self-sacrificing death of a major character and utter fuxxoring of the goodguys was also something rarely seen on TV, let alone on Saturday-morning fare.
CP was an awesome concept, and could really stand another go.
Re:J. Michael Straczynski (Score:2)
Re:J. Michael Straczynski (Score:3, Informative)
The Trek pitch was, IIRC, either 2004 or 2005 -- after it was clear that Enterprise was foundering.
Re:J. Michael Straczynski (Score:3, Informative)
What wrench? JMS has gone on record [jmsnews.com] saying:
He wasn't involved with th
Re:The creative processes behind television or mov (Score:2)
Me. But if you knew me, you wouldn't trust me either.
Re:The creative processes behind television or mov (Score:3, Informative)
Believe me.
You might not remember it, but back then, when the enterprise of STNT had only canned model shots and only moved left/right, the quality downsides of the rendering was vastly offset by the increase of in creative possibilities.
And you know that Star Treck had about 4-5 times as much money per episode?
Re:The creative processes behind television or mov (Score:4, Informative)
Re:The creative processes behind television or mov (Score:3, Insightful)
I think you're forgetting the general quality of computer graphics in 1993. The Video Toaster was still the best reasonably-affordable system back then.
B5 looks a bit dated now, but so does any CG- or model-based sci-fi from the early 90s.
You can't save them all! I can try. (Score:3, Informative)
Payoff for all the previous crud you had to shift through. Keep the netflix faith. It's worth it.
Season 5? You can pretty much skip it entirely.
Trade-offs (Score:2)
It's just a different approach. To make a comparison to prose writing, you can either publish a new short story each week, or you can publish a new chapter in a novel each week. Most TV goes for the short story approach, because they want the casual viewer. B5 went for the serialized novel approa
Re:Bester (Score:2)
Re:Trek fans know it... (Score:2)
Re:Does anyone really care? (Score:2)
Wow. I didn't realize that you had that big an impact on the ratings.
How many TVs do you have in your house?
Re:I loved it (Score:2)
Yes! Bring on the sci-fi characters that surf for pron all day long!
Re:I loved it (Score:2)