We sure did It started on page 12. We also watched all the TOS and TNG movies along the way.
Cheers,
Brandon =/\=
I suggest, nay demand, you track down a bootleg copy (there's no DVD release) of the series finale for the show Webster. Or plead with your CBS rep to provide a copy.
(The IMDB description erroneously describes it as a dream. The episode itself is more ambiguous.)
In it, Webster (Emmanuel Lewis) gets struck by lightning while playing video games and is beamed aboard the Enterprise-D in a freak accident, where Worf gives him a tour of the ship.
Wackiest crossover in television history. Hastily added after Webster's final episode (and doubling as a Webster clip show retrospective to save on budget) to help boost TNG's ratings.
33 Seasons should keep you occupied a bit. Sadly earlier parts of it don't exist even in the BBC archives anymore.
No, but there are fan "reconstructions" that exist for all of the missing episodes. Complete audios exist, and a number of photographs were taken during filming; these are combined into the reconstructions, along with the occasional surviving clip or two. They aren't always an easy watch, but for dedicated fans, they're the only way to experience these lost episodes.
There are also a couple that have been animated (and more coming).
I definitely recommend Doctor Who, Brandon, but it's going to take you a long, long time.
Comments
I suggest, nay demand, you track down a bootleg copy (there's no DVD release) of the series finale for the show Webster. Or plead with your CBS rep to provide a copy.
http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0745039/
(The IMDB description erroneously describes it as a dream. The episode itself is more ambiguous.)
In it, Webster (Emmanuel Lewis) gets struck by lightning while playing video games and is beamed aboard the Enterprise-D in a freak accident, where Worf gives him a tour of the ship.
Wackiest crossover in television history. Hastily added after Webster's final episode (and doubling as a Webster clip show retrospective to save on budget) to help boost TNG's ratings.
No, but there are fan "reconstructions" that exist for all of the missing episodes. Complete audios exist, and a number of photographs were taken during filming; these are combined into the reconstructions, along with the occasional surviving clip or two. They aren't always an easy watch, but for dedicated fans, they're the only way to experience these lost episodes.
There are also a couple that have been animated (and more coming).
I definitely recommend Doctor Who, Brandon, but it's going to take you a long, long time.
JJ ST 2 .. soon.