[Cancelled] Sarah Connor Chronicles (Terminator Series)


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I thought she was gonna come out the urinal again thinking she has a fetish :p

I think the writers meant for us to think that with all those shots of the urinal, I kept telling myself "here comes the urinal-killer-bot!" :p

Amen to that, she didn't even have a sentence of dialog until 21 minutes in. I didn't like that episode very much. The guy who plays Kyle Reese is awful. I didn't mind it in the little flashback when Derek was introduced but a whole episode, no thank you. Why is it that Kyle appears younger whereas Sarah is older. Why would she hallucinate a younger Kyle when she's only ever seen the older one? bull**** thats how. Should have hired an older actor. Plus it has nothing to do with John or Cameron, 3 scenes, are you ok? you have to live with it. No we don't need to find her. Weak sauce...

However I really did enjoy the scenes with John Henry though. Not sure what it had to do with Weaver going on a killing rampage though, not to mention how did she find the warehouse..

She wasted the people because they had used an unsecured communication. Therefore they are a risk. She didn't have to "find" the warehouse cos it was her companies anyway.

Not sure of what to think of tonights episode. It answered a lot of questions, but was pretty dull. I'm craving for some more Terminator on Terminator action! Bring on the chase scenes like in the first series and at the beginning of the 2nd.

damn, no wonder the ratings went down. I didn't get to watch it cuz i didn't even know it was back on. WTF! C'mon Fox, you gotta advertise this show during 24 and House and stuff like that to let people know it's moved! I'm downloading the last 2 episodes now, damnit!

I've been watching this show since ep 1, but the show is going down hill, it's as if the production and writing team have been split up and working with different pieces of the show and just sloppingly (yes, not a word) joining them together.

I think the worst part and the most obvious is that Sarah didn't even have a limp, I mean come on, she was shot just 3 days ago, near death, was just operated on, was having hallucinations, bleeding all over the place and yet, 3 days later she is perfectly fine...how she managed to get into that window is beyond me.

The only part that interested me was the last 1minute of the show, and they still got that part wrong, the craft that was in the episode where Sarah was shot was a rust colored, early prototype looking craft, but this one looked like a futuristic metallic smooth looking craft.

I know that I'm picking pieces out, but these were too damn obvious.

I gotta say I've been really disliking these last few episodes. Where's all this action they promised. As much as I like the show they seem to be really raping the Terminator story. A remote controlled drone? or AI controlled that likes chilling in trailers? Ah well, maybe I'm just bitter because they've been shafting Summer all season. Giving her a few lines/screen time each episode.

Haha, the half-second scene where Cameron walks in front of John with not alot on served absolutely no purpose whatsoever in anything except male viewing pleasure. Animated gif time Rappy? This one deserves it.

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    • We now know when and how the Universe may truly end by Sayan Sen Image by Marek Pavlík via Pexels| Not representative A study by physicist Henry Tye of Cornell University suggests that the universe may not expand forever. Instead, it could eventually stop expanding, begin contracting and end in a "Big Crunch" roughly 20 billion years from now. The research, published in the Journal of Cosmology and Astroparticle Physics, was conducted by Tye, Horace White Professor of Physics Emeritus at Cornell University. Using recent observations from major dark-energy surveys, Tye and his collaborators developed a cosmological model that predicts the universe could have a total lifespan of about 33 billion years. Since the universe is currently estimated to be 13.8 billion years old, the model places it near the midpoint of its existence. According to Cornell University's summary of the research, the study centers on the cosmological constant, a term introduced by Albert Einstein in his theory of general relativity. In modern cosmology, the cosmological constant is commonly used to describe the simplest form of dark energy, the unknown phenomenon believed to be driving the accelerating expansion of the universe. "For the last 20 years, people believed that the cosmological constant is positive, and the universe will expand forever," Tye said in a Cornell University news release. "The new data seem to indicate that the cosmological constant is negative, and that the universe will end in a big crunch." The study draws on data from the Dark Energy Survey (DES) and the Dark Energy Spectroscopic Instrument (DESI), two major projects designed to investigate the nature of dark energy. According to Tye, recent observations suggest that dark energy may not behave exactly like a simple cosmological constant. To account for those observations, Tye and his collaborators proposed a model involving an extremely light hypothetical particle that evolves over time. In their calculations, this produces a negative cosmological constant and leads to a future collapse of the universe. The model predicts that cosmic expansion would continue for approximately another 11 billion years before reaching a maximum size, after which the universe would begin contracting and eventually collapse. Scientists have long debated how the universe might end. As explained in an article published in The Conversation by Stephen DiKerby of Michigan State University, several possibilities have been proposed. If dark energy remains constant and positive, the universe could continue expanding indefinitely, gradually becoming colder, darker and more diffuse in a scenario often called the "heat death" of the universe. Other theoretical possibilities include a Big Rip, in which cosmic expansion accelerates so dramatically that galaxies, stars and even atoms are torn apart, or a Big Crunch, in which expansion reverses and the universe collapses back into an extremely dense state. DiKerby notes that the Big Crunch idea itself is not new. What distinguishes Tye's work is that it attempts to use current observational data to estimate when such a collapse might occur and how it could unfold. Much of the universe's long-term evolution remains uncertain. According to current astrophysical understanding, stars will continue to form and die for billions of years. The Sun, for example, is about halfway through its expected lifespan. Galaxies are also expected to continue merging; the Milky Way and Andromeda galaxies are projected to collide several billion years from now. At the same time, the nature of dark energy remains one of the biggest unanswered questions in cosmology. 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Whether the universe ultimately ends in a Big Crunch, expands forever, or follows another path entirely remains an open question that future observations will help answer. Source: Cornell University, The Conversation This article was generated with some help from AI and reviewed by an editor. Under Section 107 of the Copyright Act 1976, this material is used for the purpose of news reporting. Fair use is a use permitted by copyright statute that might otherwise be infringing.
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