The Orville Season 2

Well, there’s always Darkstar.

I guess I’m just a backstory and broad stroke consistency guy… my favorite books are the ones with a lot of backstory that informs the “present day”.

The Lords of the Admiralty want to kill them off.

The Orville captured and was still in possession of the shuttle that they were going to use to infiltrate the Krill. Command was probably concerned if they didn’t do the mission soon, the Krill would figure out a shuttle was missing, and there was no time to get another Union ship out there. Plus Gordon is the best pilot in the Fleet, so a good choice to pilot unfamiliar hardware.

There you go again, muldoonthief, confusing people with the facts. :dubious:

Surely you mean the Romulans? :dubious: :confused:

“Let there be light.”

“… Bomb?” :dubious: :eek:

Romulans might be the better analogy, but I fail to see how Klingons are completely inapplicable.

Good point.

“Error 404”

Try it now:

Definitely remarkable similarities. I thought I had seen all of TOS, but that one does not look familiar.

In terms of talking about the Klingons, I just meant that while the Enterprise was on a five year exploratory mission, they would occasionally veer into a military footing with the Klingons as their adversaries.

Guess we have a repeat this week. Not sure why.

Funny enough, the next Orville will be on Valentine’s day. You’d think maybe they’d have saved the previous episode for that, since it’d be fitting. But I suppose they wanted to go off on their brief break with a good episode, and maybe the next one they’d swap it with wouldn’t be as good.

I’m enjoying the show, mostly, but it’s certainly vulnerable to nitpicking. Great to actually see the actors who voice Isaac and Yaphit in the simulations with the doctor. The crew’s giddiness at the prospect of first contact, and the race by the two officers to get to the Bridge with news of Isaac’s and the doctor’s date, were hilarious.

I also laughed when the captain had to change course midsentence when Isaac came on the Bridge: “He’s still… my father, and he’ll never be a weightlifter no matter how much his heart is in it.” Other good lines: “Let’s flip the tables here.” :: CRASH :: And when Isaac is trying provoke a breakup: “The last thing you need is more dessert.”

Glad not to see more of Patrick Warburton as the acting Security chief. That character was just annoying. I haven’t warmed to Alara’s replacement yet, though - too much eye makeup and her teeth look a little odd, I have to say.

Why do they keep showing The Orville with “limited commercial interruption”? Are they having a hard time lining up advertisers?

Why are they saying it at all, as it’s obviously not true. I think they have MORE commercial interruptions. They might have fewer overall commercials, but they break in all the damn time. Thank goodness for DVR.

I was thinking the same thing. Maybe it’s some sort of meta-joke by McFarlane?

Things I like about The Orville

  • It’s an homage to Star Trek, even the sappy parts
  • It reunites Seth McFarlane and Scott Grimes, who provide the voices of Stan and son Steve from American Dad
  • The Orville crew aren’t superhuman and are just as goofy, petty, and socially clueless as real people
  • “The Orville” is such a mundane name for a ship. It’s the guy who invented gourmet popcorn, fer gosh sakes.

Things I don’t like about The Orville

  • it uses the same trope as every other scifi show that all citizens of an alien planet share the same culture, speak English, and occupy the same amount of space as a city block.
  • the prevailing alien flaw of the week is a singular trait that can be fixed by the end of the episode.
  • it’s a Seth McFarlane vanity project. OK, that’s not really a bad thing. Seth doesn’t consider himself the center of the universe. At least he manages to convince us of that. I’m waiting until the day when he finally cracks and makes Captain Mercer the Space Messiah, so I can finally say “Ah HA! I knew it! He was setting himself to take Captain Kirk’s place all along!”

I believe it was true at first. Having more commercials is a good sign, more advertisers are buying time, and the show is making money for the network.

I figure it was named after Orville Wright.