Follow TV Tropes

Following

History WMG / LietoMe

Go To

OR

Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None


[[WMG: Lightman is a direct descendant of [[Series/BattlestarGalacticaReimagined Amanda Graystone]]]]
The events of ''Series/{{Battlestar Galactica|Reimagined}}'' occur 150,000 years before the present day. Lightman's mother exactly resembles Amanda Graystone. Lightman, like everyone else, is part Cylon.

to:

[[WMG: Lightman is a direct descendant of [[Series/BattlestarGalacticaReimagined [[Series/BattlestarGalactica2003 Amanda Graystone]]]]
The events of ''Series/{{Battlestar Galactica|Reimagined}}'' Galactica|2003}}'' occur 150,000 years before the present day. Lightman's mother exactly resembles Amanda Graystone. Lightman, like everyone else, is part Cylon.
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None


[[WMG: Lightman is a direct descendant of [[BattlestarGalactica Amanda Graystone]]]]
The events of BattlestarGalactica occur 150,000 years before the present day. Lightman's mother exactly resembles Amanda Graystone. Lightman, like everyone else, is part Cylon.

to:

[[WMG: Lightman is a direct descendant of [[BattlestarGalactica [[Series/BattlestarGalacticaReimagined Amanda Graystone]]]]
The events of BattlestarGalactica ''Series/{{Battlestar Galactica|Reimagined}}'' occur 150,000 years before the present day. Lightman's mother exactly resembles Amanda Graystone. Lightman, like everyone else, is part Cylon.

Added: 1313

Changed: 1461

Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None


[[WMG: In ''Beat the Devil'' the killer accidentally says too much.]]
When Cal and Martin are in the woods, and the police arrives and Cal tells them to look for the body of the missing girl by the trees, Martin says, "there aren't any bodies, Lightman." This [[{{Foreshadowing}} foreshadows]] that there will be more than one body (there are four). If he had only killed the girl they are looking for, wouldn't he have said, "there is no body"? It doesn't really matter since they would have found them anyway, but I thought it was interesting that nobody commented on it.

to:

[[WMG: In ''Beat "Beat the Devil'' Devil," the killer accidentally says too much.]]
When Cal and Martin are in the woods, and the police arrives and arrive. Cal tells them to look for the body of the missing girl by the trees, trees. Martin says, "there aren't any bodies, Lightman." This [[{{Foreshadowing}} foreshadows]] that there will be more than one body (there -- there are four). four.

If he had only killed only the girl they are were looking for, then wouldn't he have said, "there is no body"? It doesn't really matter since they would have found them anyway, but I thought it was interesting that nobody commented on it.
body"?



No, seriously. In "The Royal We", Torres explicitly compares the way Cal treats Loker to the process used to create a "disturbed personality". Cal demoted Loker to unpaid intern (and how is Loker supporting himself if he's always working for the Lightman Group but doesn't get paid for it?), rarely praises him, constantly mocks and belittles him, actively sabotages him on certain cases, punched him out for being kissed by Emily, and Loker can't do a thing about it if he wants to keep his position. And then comes "Sweet Sixteen", where Loker almost gets ''blown up'', and you think the fallout of his constant ButtMonkey status is finally going to be shown. But no, the episode focuses on Cal and Gillian (which believe me, I'm not complaining about, it was great backstory) and while Loker is snippy and bitchy and hacks Gillian's computer to get the truth out of her, nothing ever comes of the fact that ''his bosses almost got him killed and lied about it''. He's LONG overdue for a meltdown (though "The Canary's Song implies that he's finally drank the KoolAid and gotten Cal's respect). And the reason he hasn't practiced his "radical honesty" since Season One? He'll reveal just how angry and screwed up he's become.

to:

No, seriously. seriously.

In "The Royal We", Torres explicitly compares the way Cal treats Loker to the process used to create a "disturbed personality". Cal demoted Loker to unpaid intern (and how is Loker supporting himself if he's always working for the Lightman Group but doesn't get paid for it?), rarely praises him, constantly mocks and belittles him, actively sabotages him on certain cases, punched him out for being kissed by Emily, and Loker can't do a thing about it if he wants to keep his position. And then comes "Sweet Sixteen", where Loker almost gets ''blown up'', and you think the fallout of his constant ButtMonkey status is finally going to be shown. But no, the episode focuses on Cal and Gillian (which believe me, I'm not complaining about, it was great backstory) and while Loker is snippy and bitchy and hacks Gillian's computer to get the truth out of her, nothing ever comes of the fact that ''his bosses almost got him killed and lied about it''. He's LONG overdue for a meltdown (though "The Canary's Song implies that he's finally drank the KoolAid and gotten Cal's respect). And the reason he hasn't practiced his "radical honesty" since Season One? He'll reveal just how angry and screwed up he's become.
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None


No, seriously. In "The Royal We", Torres explicitly compares the way Cal treats Loker to the process used to create a "disturbed personality". Cal demoted Loker to unpaid intern (and how is Loker supporting himself if he's always working for the Lightman Group but doesn't get paid for it?), rarely praises him, constantly mocks and belittles him, actively sabotages him on certain cases, punched him out for being kissed by Emily, and Loker can't do a thing about it if he wants to keep his position. And then comes "Sweet Sixteen", where Loker almost gets ''blown up'', and you think the fallout of his constant ButtMonkey status is finally going to be shown. But no, the episode focuses on Cal and Gillian (which believe me, I'm not complaining about, it was great backstory) and while Loker is snippy and bitchy and hacks Gillian's computer to get the truth out of her, nothing ever comes of the fact that ''his bosses almost got him killed and lied about it''. He's LONG overdue for a meltdown (though "The Canary's Song implies that he's finally drank the KoolAid and gotten Cal's respect). And the reason he hasn't practiced his "radical honesty" since Season One? He'll reveal just how angry and screwed up he's become.

to:

No, seriously. In "The Royal We", Torres explicitly compares the way Cal treats Loker to the process used to create a "disturbed personality". Cal demoted Loker to unpaid intern (and how is Loker supporting himself if he's always working for the Lightman Group but doesn't get paid for it?), rarely praises him, constantly mocks and belittles him, actively sabotages him on certain cases, punched him out for being kissed by Emily, and Loker can't do a thing about it if he wants to keep his position. And then comes "Sweet Sixteen", where Loker almost gets ''blown up'', and you think the fallout of his constant ButtMonkey status is finally going to be shown. But no, the episode focuses on Cal and Gillian (which believe me, I'm not complaining about, it was great backstory) and while Loker is snippy and bitchy and hacks Gillian's computer to get the truth out of her, nothing ever comes of the fact that ''his bosses almost got him killed and lied about it''. He's LONG overdue for a meltdown (though "The Canary's Song implies that he's finally drank the KoolAid and gotten Cal's respect). And the reason he hasn't practiced his "radical honesty" since Season One? He'll reveal just how angry and screwed up he's become.become.

[[WMG: Lightman is a direct descendant of [[BattlestarGalactica Amanda Graystone]]]]
The events of BattlestarGalactica occur 150,000 years before the present day. Lightman's mother exactly resembles Amanda Graystone. Lightman, like everyone else, is part Cylon.

Top