This Is What I Think.

Monday, October 01, 2018

Night Gallery




TV Show Episode Scripts > The Twilight Zone (1959) > Season 4 > I Dream of Genie

The Twilight Zone (1959) s04e12 Episode Script

I Dream of Genie

(from internet transcript)


Three glass perfume bottles.

Three crystal bottles.

To imprison the attar of damask rose petals.

Two pottery jugs.

Pottery jugs? Where's your aesthetic sense, man? You can't entice anyone to buy "pottery jugs."

You think people buy something 'cause what you call it?

People don't buy anything in a gift shop. They come in because they don't know what they want. And then i sell them something.

Okay, what do you call the pottery jugs?










https://www.metv.com/schedule/

METV

Sunday, September 30, 2018

ON NOW

11:30pm Night Gallery

THE PAINTED MIRROR - A mirror reflecting an alien landscape figures in an antique dealer's scheme to rid himself of a hateful business partner.

Monday, October 01, 2018

12:00am The Twilight Zone

I DREAM OF GENIE










http://www.tv.com/shows/sliders/pilot-1-29773/recap/

tv.com

Sliders Season 1 Episode 1

Pilot (1)

Aired Mar 22, 1995 on FOX

EPISODE RECAP


Quinn begins a new video – dated September 26 – and debates what to send through the void next. He considers his cat, but can't bear the thought of the animal coming to harm.










http://www.tv.com/shows/night-gallery/the-cemetery-253663/trivia/

tv.com


Night Gallery Season 1 Episode 1

The Cemetery

Aired Nov 08, 1969 on NBC

Quotes

Host: Good evening and welcome to a private showing of three painting, shown here for the first time. Each is a collector's item in its own way. Not because of any special artistic quality but because each captures on a canvas, suspends in time and space a frozen moment of a nightmare. Our initial offering, a small Gothic item in blacks and grays, a piece of the past known as the family crypt. This one we call simply The Cemetery, offered to you now, six feet of earth and all that it contains. Ladies and gentlemen, this is the Night Gallery.










http://www.tv.com/shows/night-gallery/the-painted-mirror-77172/recap/

tv.com

Night Gallery Season 2 Episode 39

The Painted Mirror

Aired Dec 15, 1971 on NBC

EPISODE RECAP

Thrift shop owner Frank Standish is forced to take on a partner, Miss Moore. She immediately moves in and starts renovating the shop to make it more viable, and has a new doorbell installed. Frank tries to work in his back room shop despite the noise from the doorbell test, Miss Moore's dog Pookie, and the modern record she has put on. A neighborhood woman, Ellen Chase, comes in pulling a cart with two large packages on it. Frank leads her to the backroom workshop and serves tea, and they both talk about the old days and the first package, which contains a painting. The second item, a mirror, has been painted over and Ellen explains that it has been ever since she found it. She leaves them on consignment and Frank insists on giving her $10 for them.

As Ellen come out, Miss Moore is busy with a female customer. When Frank objects, he accidentally bumps the record player and the customer storms out. Miss Moore berates him for interrupting her sale and refuses to give him the $10 to pay Ellen. She does offer Ellen $1.50 for the cart, and Ellen reluctantly takes it out of desperation.

That night, Frank is working in his workshop when Miss Moore tells him that he'll have to find new quarters so they can convert the area into more floor space. Once she leaves, Frank scrapes off a bit of the paint and sees blue light shining through.










From 3/16/1991 ( my first successful major test of my ultraspace matter transportation device as Kerry Wayne Burgess the successful Ph.D. graduate ) To 3/22/1995 is 1467 days

From 11/2/1965 ( my birth date in Antlers Oklahoma USA and my birthdate as the known official United States Marshal Kerry Wayne Burgess and active duty United States Marine Corps officer ) To 11/8/1969 ( premiere US TV series pilot "Night Gallery" ) is 1467 days



From 7/19/1989 ( the United Airlines Flight 232 crash and the end of Kerry Burgess the natural human being cloned from another human being ) To 3/22/1995 is 2072 days

From 11/2/1965 ( my birth date in Antlers Oklahoma USA and my birthdate as the known official United States Marshal Kerry Wayne Burgess and active duty United States Marine Corps officer ) To 7/6/1971 ( Richard Nixon - Statement on the Death of Louis Armstrong ) is 2072 days



From 8/4/1985 ( Joseph Wayne Burgess killed in semi-trailer freight truck wreck ) To 3/22/1995 is 3517 days

From 11/2/1965 ( my birth date in Antlers Oklahoma USA and my birthdate as the known official United States Marshal Kerry Wayne Burgess and active duty United States Marine Corps officer ) To 6/20/1975 ( premiere US film "Jaws" ) is 3517 days



From 12/27/1982 ( Jack Swigert dead ) To 3/22/1995 is 4468 days

4468 = 2234 + 2234

From 11/2/1965 ( my birth date in Antlers Oklahoma USA and my birthdate as the known official United States Marshal Kerry Wayne Burgess and active duty United States Marine Corps officer ) To 12/15/1971 ( premiere US TV series episode "Night Gallery"::"The Painted Mirror" ) is 2234 days



From 7/28/1942 ( Flinders Petrie dead ) To 12/15/1971 ( premiere US TV series episode "Night Gallery"::"The Painted Mirror" ) is 10732 days

From 11/2/1965 ( my birth date in Antlers Oklahoma USA and my birthdate as the known official United States Marshal Kerry Wayne Burgess and active duty United States Marine Corps officer ) To 3/22/1995 is 10732 days



From 3/10/1913 ( Harriet Tubman deceased ) To 12/15/1971 ( premiere US TV series episode "Night Gallery"::"The Painted Mirror" ) is 21464 days

21464 = 10732 + 10732

From 11/2/1965 ( my birth date in Antlers Oklahoma USA and my birthdate as the known official United States Marshal Kerry Wayne Burgess and active duty United States Marine Corps officer ) To 3/22/1995 is 10732 days



From 10/24/1994 ( premiere US film "Stargate" ) To 3/22/1995 is 149 days

From 11/2/1965 ( my birth date in Antlers Oklahoma USA and my birthdate as the known official United States Marshal Kerry Wayne Burgess and active duty United States Marine Corps officer ) To 3/31/1966 ( the launch from planet Earth of the Soviet Union Luna 10 spacecraft ) is 149 days



Other posts by me on this topic, future updates likely


http://www.tv.com/shows/sliders/pilot-1-29773/

tv.com


Sliders Season 1 Episode 1

Pilot (1)

Aired Mar 22, 1995 on FOX

AIRED: 3/22/95










Sliders

Pilot

Wednesday 22 March 1995

Episode 1 Season 1 DVD video:

00:05:09


Professor Maximilian Arturo: As even the most intellectually impoverished physicist knows, the largest symmetry group of a single Dirac field is - ? The silence is deafening.












Louis_Armstrong_ .jpg










Sliders

Pilot

Wednesday 22 March 1995

Episode 1 Season 1 DVD video:

00:51:42

Rembrandt Brown: I'm telling you the truth. I was driving along, minding my own business, when this crazy genius - he - he zaps me into this - this big black hole.










https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0134967/quotes

IMDb

Sliders (TV Series)

Pilot (1995)

Quotes

[last lines]

Michael Mallory: Hey. Did I miss anything?

Quinn Mallory: Hello... Dad.

Michael Mallory: What's the matter, son? You look like you've seen a ghost.










http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0073195/releaseinfo

IMDb

Jaws (1975)

Release Info

USA 20 June 1975










http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0073195/quotes

IMDb

Jaws (1975)

Quotes


[Hooper is examining the remains of the first victim - describes the post-mortem into his tape recorder]

Hooper: The height and weight of the victim can only be estimated from the partial remains. The torso has been severed in mid-thorax; there are no major organs remaining...

Hooper: Right arm has been severed above the elbow with massive tissue loss in the upper musculature... partially denuded bone remaining...

Hooper: [to the m.e. and Brody] This was no boat accident!

Hooper: [to Brody] Did you notify the Coast Guard about this?

Brody: No. It was only local jurisdiction.

Hooper: [continues post-mortem] The left arm, head, shoulders, sternum and portions of the rib cage are intact...

Hooper: [to Brody] Do not smoke in here, thank you very much.

Hooper: [lifts up the severed arm] This is what happens. It indicates the non-frenzied feeding of a large squalus - possibly Longimanus or Isurus glauca. Now... the enormous amount of tissue loss prevents any detailed analysis; however the attacking squalus must be considerably larger than any normal squalus found in these waters. Didn't you get on a boat and check out these waters?

Brody: No.

Hooper: Well, this is not a boat accident!










https://www.jsc.nasa.gov/Bios/htmlbios/swigert-jl.html

NASA

National Aeronautics and Space Administration

Lyndon B. Johnson Space Center

Houston, Texas 77058

Biographical Data

JOHN L. SWIGERT, JR.

NASA ASTRONAUT (DECEASED)

PERSONAL DATA: Born in Denver, Colorado, on August 30, 1931. Single. Died December 27, 1982, of cancer.

EDUCATION: Attended Blessed Sacrament School; Regis High School, and East High School in Denver, Colorado; received a Bachelor of Science degree in Mechanical Engineering from the University of Colorado in 1953, a Master of Science degree in Aerospace Science from the Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute in 1965, and a Master of Business Administration degree from the University of Hartford in 1967; and presented an Honorary Doctorate of Science degree from American International College in 1970, and an Honorary Doctorate of Laws degree from Western State University in 1970, and an honorary Doctorate of Science from Western Michigan University in 1970.

ORGANIZATIONS: Fellow of the American Astronautical Society; Associate Fellow of the Society of Experimental Test Pilots and the American Institute of Aeronautics and Astronautics; and member of the Quiet Birdmen, Phi Gamma Delta, Pi Tau Sigma, and Sigma Tau.

SPECIAL HONORS: Presented the Presidential Medal for Freedom in 1970 and the NASA Distinguished Service Medal; Co-recipient of the American Astronautical Society Flight Achievement Award for 1970, the AIAA Haley Astronautics Award for 1971, and the AIAA Octave Chunute Award for 1966 (for his participation in demonstrating the Rogallo Wing as a feasible land landing system for returning space vehicles and astronauts); and recipient of Colorado University's Distinguished Alumnus Award in 1970, the City of New York Gold Medal in 1970, the City of Houston Medal for Valor in 1970, the City of Chicago Gold Medal in 1970; and the Antonian Gold Medal in 1972.

EXPERIENCE: Swigert held a position as engineering test pilot for North American Aviation, Inc., before joining NASA. He was also an engineering test pilot for Pratt and Whitney from 1957 to 1964.

He served with the Air Force from 1953 to 1956 and, upon graduation from the Pilot Training Program and Gunnery School at Nellis Air Force Base, Nevada, was assigned as a fighter pilot in Japan and Korea. After completing his tour of active duty in the military services, he served as a jet fighter pilot with Massachusetts Air National Guard from September 1957 to March 1960 and as a member of the Connecticut Air National Guard from April 1960 to October 1965.

He logged 7,200 hours flight-which includes more than 5,725 in jet aircraft.

Mr. Swigert was one of the 19 astronauts selected by NASA in April 1966. He served as a member of the astronaut support crew for the Apollo 7 mission.

Mr. Swigert was next assigned to the Apollo 13 backup crew and subsequently called upon to replace prime crewman Thomas K. Mattingly as command module pilot. (The substitution was announced 72 hours prior to launch of the mission following Mattingly's exposure to the German measles.) Apollo 13, April 11-17, 1970, was programmed for ten days and was committed to our first landing in the hilly, upland Fra Mauro region of the moon. However, the original flight plan was modified enroute to the moon due to a failure of the Apollo 13 service module cryogenic oxygen system, which occurred at approximately 55 hours into the flight. Swigert and fellow crewmen, James A. Lovell, spacecraft commander and Fred W. Haise, lunar module pilot, working closely with Houston ground controllers, converted their lunar module "Aquarius" into a effective lifeboat. Their emergency activation and operation of lunar module systems conserved both electrical power and water in sufficient quantity to assure their safety and survival while in space and for the return to earth.

In completing his first space flight, Mr. Swigert logged a total of 142 hours, 54 minutes.

Mr. Swigert took a leave of absence from NASA in April 1973 to become Executive Director of the Committee on Science and Technology, U.S. House of Representatives.

Mr. Swigert resigned from NASA and the committee in August 1977, to enter politics. In 1979 he became Vice President of B.D.M. Corporation, Golden, Colorado. In November 1982 he was elected to the U.S. House of Representatives. He died on December 28, 1982 of bone cancer, before he could be sworn in.

JANUARY 1983










https://www.britannica.com/biography/Flinders-Petrie

Encyclopaedia Britannica

Sir Flinders Petrie

BRITISH ARCHAEOLOGIST

Sir Flinders Petrie, in full Sir William Matthew Flinders Petrie, (born June 3, 1853, Charlton, near Greenwich, London, England—died July 28, 1942, Jerusalem), British archaeologist and Egyptologist who made valuable contributions to the techniques and methods of field excavation and invented a sequence dating method that made possible the reconstruction of history from the remains of ancient cultures. He was knighted in 1923.

Petrie was named for his maternal grandfather, Matthew Flinders, British navigator, pioneer hydrographer, and explorer of Australia and Tasmania. A frail child, Petrie was privately educated, early developing archaeological and ethnological interests, particularly in the area of ancient weights and measures, and in Egyptology.

At the age of 24, Petrie wrote Inductive Metrology; or, The Recovery of Ancient Measures from the Monuments, a work that represented a new approach to archaeological study. Fieldwork done at various locations in Britain, including Stonehenge, enabled him to determine by mathematical computations the unit of measurement for the construction of the monument. His Stonehenge: Plans, Description, and Theories was published in 1880, and in that same year he began the surveys and excavation of the Great Pyramid at Giza, which initiated his four decades of exploration in the Middle East.

During the 1884 excavation of the Temple of Tanis, Petrie discovered fragments of a colossal statue of Ramses II. In 1885 and 1886, at Naukratis and Daphnae in the Nile River delta, he uncovered painted pottery by which he proved that those sites had been trading colonies for the ancient Greeks. It was this discovery that caused him to believe that history could be reconstructed by a comparison of potsherds (pottery fragments) at various levels of an excavation.

Petrie first applied his principle of sequence dating in Palestine, at the site of Tel ?asi, south of Jerusalem. In 1890, in a period of only six weeks, the indefatigable excavator found a series of occupations for which he was able to supply tentative dates of habitation. Petrie’s work at the hill site marked the second stratigraphic study in archaeological history; the first was carried out at Troy by Heinrich Schliemann. The excavations of these two men marked the beginning of the examination of successive levels of a site, rather than the previously practiced method of haphazard digging, which had produced only a jumble of unrelated artifacts. Most of Petrie’s contemporaries in archaeology questioned his hypothesis that chronology could be established by potsherds, whether painted or undecorated. But, with the progressive sophistication of archaeology, the examination and classification of broken pottery became routine procedure.

Petrie made other important discoveries in the Al-Fayyum region of Egypt. At Gurob he found numerous papyri and Aegean pottery that substantiated dates of ancient Greek civilizations, including the Mycenaean. At the Pyramid of Hawara he searched through the tomb of Pharaoh Amenemhet III to discover how grave robbers could have found the tomb’s opening and made their way through the labyrinth surrounding the two sarcophagi that they emptied. He concluded that they must have been given the master plan by an informer. At Al-Fayyum also he made a rich find of 12th-dynasty jewelry (housed at the Metropolitan Museum in New York City since 1919). He was delighted by his discovery of the earliest known Egyptian reference to Israel on the stela (a stone slab monument) of Merneptah, king of ancient Egypt from 1213 to 1204 BCE.

In 1892 Petrie was made Edwards professor of Egyptology at University College London, and he served in the position until 1933, when he became professor emeritus. In 1894 he founded the Egyptian Research Account, which in 1905 became the British School of Archaeology.

Petrie added to the knowledge of the pyramid builders during his exploration of the necropolis of Abydos, holy city of the cult of Osiris, god of the dead. At Tell El-Amarna he excavated the city of Akhenaton, or Amenhotep IV, ruler of Egypt from 1353 to 1336 BCE, revealing the now-famous painted pavement and other artistic wonders of the Amarna age (14th century BCE). Three thousand graves found by Petrie at Naqadah, northeast of Thebes, were identified as those of primitive ancient Egyptians.

In 1904 Petrie published Methods and Aims in Archaeology, the definitive work of his time, in which he lucidly defined the goals and methodology of his profession along with the more practical aspects of archaeology—such as details of excavation, including the use of cameras in the field. With uncommon insight, he noted that research results were dependent on the personality of the archaeologist, who, in addition to possessing broad knowledge, had to have insatiable curiosity. His own abundance of that characteristic was never questioned.

Inscriptions that Petrie found on the Sinai Peninsula represented an intermediate stage (not later than 1500 BCE) of written communication between Egyptian hieroglyphics and the Semitic alphabet. Although he wrote The Formation of the Alphabet (1912), language was not Petrie’s forte, and he depended on a sixth sense for free translation of inscriptions and for establishing dates through the study of the forms of hieroglyphs.

Under the auspices of the American School of Research, he excavated in Palestine from 1927 until 1938, when he was 85. In those years, again at Tel ?asi, he uncovered the ruins of 10 cities. His scientific methods provided the guidelines for all subsequent Palestinian excavations. He died in Jerusalem at the age of 89.










http://www.stargate-sg1-solutions.com/wiki/Stargate:_The_Movie_Transcript

STARGATE WIKI


Stargate: The Movie (1994)

(from internet transcript)

THOMAS
Doctor Jackson, you've left out the fact that Colonel Vyse discovered inscriptions with Khufu's name—

DANIEL
Right...

[Daniel nods, raising a finger and starting to write on his blackboard.]

THOMAS
(continuing)
...within the pyramid.

DANIEL
Well, his discovery was a fraud.

[Outraged mutterings come from amongst the audience. Some start to laugh.]

THOMAS
[ Well I hope you can prove it. ]










Other posts by me on this topic include: http://hvom.blogspot.com/2018/09/the-last-stargate-starfighter.html


http://www.gettyimages.com/detail/news-photo/gail-ogrady-during-premiere-of-stargate-october-24-1994-at-news-photo/105534043

gettyimages

Premiere of Stargate - October 24, 1994

Premiere of Stargate - October 24, 1994 at Mann's Chinese Theater in Hollywood, California, United States.










http://www.tv.com/sliders/pilot-2/episode/29774/trivia.html

tv.com

Sliders

Season 1, Episode 2

Pilot (2)

Air Date

Wednesday March 22, 1995

Quotes

Commissar Wapner: I sentence you to fifteen years in the Alaskan Gulag, without the possibility of parole.

Rembrandt: Fifteen years?!

Commissar Wapner: Fifteen years.

Rembrandt: Don't you mean fifteen dollars?










https://www.britannica.com/biography/Harriet-Tubman

Encyclopaedia Britannica

Harriet Tubman

AMERICAN ABOLITIONIST

Harriet Tubman, née Araminta Ross, (born c. 1820, Dorchester county, Maryland, U.S.—died March 10, 1913, Auburn, New York), American bondwoman who escaped from slavery in the South to become a leading abolitionist before the American Civil War. She led hundreds of bondmen to freedom in the North along the route of the Underground Railroad—an elaborate secret network of safe houses organized for that purpose.

Born a slave, Araminta Ross later adopted her mother’s first name, Harriet. From early childhood she worked variously as a maid, a nurse, a field hand, a cook, and a woodcutter. About 1844 she married John Tubman, a free black.

In 1849, on the strength of rumours that she was about to be sold, Tubman fled to Philadelphia, leaving behind her husband, parents, and siblings. In December 1850 she made her way to Baltimore, Maryland, whence she led her sister and two children to freedom. That journey was the first of some 19 increasingly dangerous forays into Maryland in which, over the next decade, she conducted upward of 300 fugitive slaves along the Underground Railroad to Canada. By her extraordinary courage, ingenuity, persistence, and iron discipline, which she enforced upon her charges, Tubman became the railroad’s most famous conductor and was known as the “Moses of her people.” It has been said that she never lost a fugitive she was leading to freedom.

Rewards offered by slaveholders for Tubman’s capture eventually totaled $40,000. Abolitionists, however, celebrated her courage. John Brown, who consulted her about his own plans to organize an antislavery raid of a federal armoury in Harpers Ferry, Virginia (now in West Virginia), referred to her as “General” Tubman. About 1858 she bought a small farm near Auburn, New York, where she placed her aged parents (she had brought them out of Maryland in June 1857) and herself lived thereafter. From 1862 to 1865 she served as a scout, as well as nurse and laundress, for Union forces in South Carolina. For the Second Carolina Volunteers, under the command of Col. James Montgomery, Tubman spied on Confederate territory. When she returned with information about the locations of warehouses and ammunition, Montgomery’s troops were able to make carefully planned attacks. For her wartime service Tubman was paid so little that she had to support herself by selling homemade baked goods.

After the Civil War Tubman settled in Auburn and began taking in orphans and the elderly, a practice that eventuated in the Harriet Tubman Home for Indigent Aged Negroes. The home later attracted the support of former abolitionist comrades and of the citizens of Auburn, and it continued in existence for some years after her death. In the late 1860s and again in the late 1890s she applied for a federal pension for her Civil War services. Some 30 years after her service, a private bill providing for $20 monthly was passed by Congress.










http://www.tv.com/sliders/pilot-2/episode/29774/trivia.html

tv.com

Sliders

Season 1, Episode 2

Pilot (2)

Air Date

Wednesday March 22, 1995

Quotes

Rembrandt: (Surrounded by armed guards at the toll booth) Do you all need exact change? Is that it?










http://www.tv.com/sliders/pilot-2/episode/29774/trivia.html

tv.com

Sliders

Season 1, Episode 2

Pilot (2)

Air Date

Wednesday March 22, 1995

Quotes

Llewelyn: The defendant dubiously claims that he is not of this earth, and therefore shouldn't be expected to abide by the laws of civilization.










http://www.tv.com/sliders/pilot-2/episode/29774/trivia.html

tv.com

Sliders

Season 1, Episode 2

Pilot (2)

Air Date

Wednesday March 22, 1995

Quotes

Reporter: Now the defendant is on his way out of the courtroom. Mr. Brown, if I could ask you a quick question? Obviously, Commisar Wapner didn't believe a thing you had to say. How does that make you feel?

Rembrandt: How do you think I feel, fool? I am never watching this show again. Small claims my (bleep).

Reporter: Well, thank you very much.










http://www.tv.com/shows/night-gallery/the-painted-mirror-77172/trivia/

tv.com

Night Gallery Season 2 Episode 39

The Painted Mirror

Aired Dec 15, 1971 on NBC

QUOTES

Host: We all of us have a kind of fascination for mirrors. There's a most appealing mystery to what's on the other side of the looking-glass. And occasionally we turn into Alice. Our last selection in tonight's gallery, a very special looking-glass, and it's called The Painted Mirror.










Stargate SG-1 - Children of the Gods - television series premiere Season 1 Episode 1 - Sunday 27 July 1997

Episode Summary

The System Lord Apophis launches an attack through the Stargate, tucked away by the military after the events of the movie, and the SGC program is reactivated and given a new objective - seek out and find the alien invaders and defeat them. Jack O'Neill is called out of retirement and sent to locate Daniel Jackson on Abydos.

(from internet transcript of incomplete dialog)


United States Air Force major general HAMMOND: Care to explain this concept?

DAVIS: Chevron 5, encoded!

United States Air Force colonel Jack O'NEILL (retired): Jackson has allergies.

KAWALSKY: (grinning) I get it.

O'NEILL: He'll know this came from me and not from someone... (glancing at Hammond) with all due respect, sir, like yourself.

Hammond and Samuels exchange glances as the Stargate continues spinning, the chevrons locking in.










http://www.stargate-sg1-solutions.com/wiki/2.21_%221969%22_Transcript

STARGATE WIKI


Stargate SG-1

"1969"

Television series Season 2 episode 21

Friday 05 March 1999


United States Air Force major general HAMMOND
Time to ship out, Captain.

United States Air Force captain Samantha CARTER
(putting note in vest pocket)
Yes, sir.

[Hammond steps aside to let her pass, and she heads out of the control room, still baffled by his behavior.]

TECHNICIAN
Chevron four, encoded.

INT—SGC GATE ROOM

[Carter enters the bay doors, shouldering her gun as she comes up to the rest of SG-1.]

TECHNICIAN
(over intercom)
Chevron five, encoded.

O'NEILL
(to Carter)
Ah! Done already?

[In the control room, Hammond moves to stand beside the technician, looking down at SG-1 in the Gate room. Carter glances up to see him standing there.]

TECHNICIAN
Chevron six, encoded.

[View of the Stargate as the final chevron is encoded. Cut to a shot of the computer screen, which shows the seventh chevron coming "out" from the representation of the Gate. Cut to the Gate as the last chevron locks, and then cut back to the computer as the last chevron moves into the sequence on the right side of the screen and the words "SEQUENCE IN PROGRESS" are replaced by "SEQUENCE COMPLETE."]

TECHNICIAN
Chevron seven, locked.

[In the control room. As the wormhole activates, Hammond is still standing there, looking expectantly down at the team as though there's something he wants to tell them. Cut to the Gate room, as SG-1 stands at the base of the ramp. Carter is still looking up at the control room curiously.












the-simpsons_season30-ep1_00h18m36s.jpg





the-simpsons_season30-ep1_00h18m37s.jpg



- posted by Kerry Burgess 02:39 AM Pacific Time Spokane Valley Washington USA Monday 01 October 2018