So, anyone else enjoying The Orville?
I can't compare it to "Star Trek: Discovery" because I haven't been watching that show. When it airs on a channel that I already pay for in my current cable bill, then I'll watch it, but I'm not paying extra to see it.
I'm currently watching "Mirror, Mirror" of Star Trek the original series.
If I may engage my inner Trekkie, I've got this theory... in the episode "City On the Edge of Forever," after travelling back in time to find Dr. McCoy, Spock explains that if they save the life of Kirk's newly met love interest of the 1930's, Edith Keeler (Joan Collins), it will indirectly lead to a series of events that would cause the Axis powers to win WWII and cast Earth into a savage, militaristic future.
My theory is that the alternate dimension in Mirror Mirror is the savage militaristic future that occurred in a timeline where Kirk (or McCoy) saved Edith Keeler from being killed by a truck. It makes so much sense.
Have others come up with this theory before?
If I may engage my inner Trekkie, I've got this theory... in the episode "City On the Edge of Forever," after travelling back in time to find Dr. McCoy, Spock explains that if they save the life of Kirk's newly met love interest of the 1930's, Edith Keeler (Joan Collins), it will indirectly lead to a series of events that would cause the Axis powers to win WWII and cast Earth into a savage, militaristic future.
My theory is that the alternate dimension in Mirror Mirror is the savage militaristic future that occurred in a timeline where Kirk (or McCoy) saved Edith Keeler from being killed by a truck. It makes so much sense.
Have others come up with this theory before?