Keith the Thief wrote:So it would seem that this new version of BSG is actually a good show (?) I was so utterly appalled by the original series that I never even bothered with the new one.Does the Sci-Fi Channel re-run episodes so that someone can start from the beginning and catch up on the storyline?
bombadil wrote:It's a lot easier here, though. I posted a comment on Democratic Underground a while ago about government suppression of climate change scientists in this country (speaking from experience in many meetings where I've seen attempts to parse language), and was immediately banned. I asked why (via email), and never got a response.
Oden, Vili, and Ve fought and slew the great ice giant Ymir, and icy water from his wounds drowned most of the Rime Giants. The giant Bergelmir escaped, with his wife and children, on a boat made from a hollowed tree trunk. From them rose the race of frost ogres. Ymir's body became the world we live on. His blood became the oceans.
Three times (every 1200 years), the gods were distressed by the disturbance from human overpopulation. The gods dealt with the problem first by plague, then by famine. Both times, the god Enki advised men to bribe the god causing the problem. The third time, Enlil advised the gods to destroy all humans with a flood, but Enki had Atrahasis build an ark and so escape. Also on the boat were cattle, wild animals and birds, and Atrahasis' family. When the storm came, Atrahasis sealed the door with bitumen and cut the boat's rope. The storm god Adad raged, turning the day black. After the seven-day flood, the gods regretted their action. Atrahasis made an offering to them, at which the gods gathered like flies, and Enki established barren women and stillbirth to avoid the problem in the future.
Tibet was almost totally inundated, until the god Gya took compassion on the survivors, drew off the waters through Bengal, and sent teachers to civilize the people, who until then had been little better than monkeys. Those people repopulated the land.
bombadil wrote:Just listen to the voices from our past shouting out at us from all of the flood "myths" from around the world, especially the ones from mountainous, previously glaciated regions. Pretty damned spooky, compelling, and moving, if you ask me.
jasonw1239 wrote:You guys should just sign up for Deimos's new chat room and just have at it! (and may the fastest typist win!)Just give us some advance warning so I can get some popcorn ready
Badmike wrote:Get the miniseries/first season DVD. You'll be hooked.Part of the fun of the new series is that it stands a lot of cliches from the first series on it's head....for example, Starbuck being a woman, the Cylons looking like humans, Baltar still being a scumbag, but an entertaining scumbag, etc.Mike B.
Xaxaxe wrote:Remember, there was a lot of speculation that there was no way a new BSG could ever succeed ... and it's the miniseries that puts those doubts to rest.
Keith the Thief wrote:Was the miniseries a pilot film, in essence?
Keith the Thief wrote:MikeThanks for responding. I've been so consistently disappointed by the sci-fi channel's offerings that I just didn't think it would even be worth it (that and my aforementioned hatred for the original). But if the similarities are only superficial, then I may have found something to indulge in over the summer.Keith
jasonw1239 wrote:There was a very short piece on CNN last night from a Swiss base in western Greenland talking about glacial melting.
bombadil wrote:Konrad Steffen, by any chance? Great guy.