#demerzel — Public Fediverse posts
Live and recent posts from across the Fediverse tagged #demerzel, aggregated by home.social.
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YouTube Tipp ▶️
#Spoiler #Foundation — #Demerzel: Behind the Scenes with #LauraBirn | #Apple TV+ #IsaacAsimov #scifi
https://youtu.be/VPVSck6yo1M?si=wDZ0LIxZJCvh2cf4 -
YouTube Tipp ▶️
#Spoiler #Foundation — #Demerzel: Behind the Scenes with #LauraBirn | #Apple TV+ #IsaacAsimov #scifi
https://youtu.be/VPVSck6yo1M?si=wDZ0LIxZJCvh2cf4 -
When A Book Finds You is not just a title - it’s a warning.
In this week’s #Foundation Season 3 Episode 3 breakdown, we’re diving into banned math, robot secrets, and The Mule throwing the wildest psychic rave in the galaxy. Gaal’s cold with it. Demerzel’s playing long game chess. And The Mule? He’s out here hijacking jumpgates mid-homicide.
🎥 Watch the full deep dive now: https://youtu.be/g7si3cTyzOE
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Think you know Foundation? Think again. What if Season 3 isn’t about Hari or The Mule... but about Demerzel vs Kalle?
Check out my latest theory and see why I think the real war is between two ancient AIs pulling strings behind the scenes.
Watch here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=88_JqfAaqKQ
#Foundation #FoundationSeason3 #Demerzel #Kalle #SciFiTheory #AppleTV #TMB
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YouTube Tipp ▶️
#Spoiler #Foundation 3x01 #Clip | #IsaacAsimov's Three Laws of Robotics #Appletv# #Demerzel #LauraBirn
https://youtu.be/yZ46G27P1Ts?si=0Al6-4OCd63sGsLR -
YouTube Tipp ▶️
#Spoiler #Foundation 3x01 #Clip | #IsaacAsimov's Three Laws of Robotics #Appletv# #Demerzel #LauraBirn
https://youtu.be/yZ46G27P1Ts?si=0Al6-4OCd63sGsLR -
🚨 Foundation Season 3 is HERE!
The premiere dropped on Apple TV+ and whew—The Mule bodied a whole army with one line.
Brother Day’s got a beard, Demerzel's spilling secrets, and I'm breaking it ALL down in my new recap and theory drop.🎥 Watch here:
👕 Grab the merch: “I Require No Army. I Have Talents, You See.”
Use code TMB2025 for 15% off.#Foundation #FoundationS3 #AppleTVPlus #TheMule #SciFiTV #Demerzel #FoundationBreakdown
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CW: Foundation season 2 spoilers!
While I enjoyed the season finale of #Foundation, it didn’t quite live up to expectations. It was disappointing that the general (or the spacers) didn’t make their stand sooner. And for the fate of #Empire to come down to fisticuffs is just lazy writing, especially given all of the dramatic resources that were already in play. In the end, most of the drama came from revealing things that had already happened without the audience’s knowledge rather than some unforeseen twist of events, and key elements of the plot remain unexplained. How, for example, did Seldon no. 2 come to have a physical body? Presumably we will have to wait until next season.
The back-story for #Demerzel was, however, superb with a sterling performance from #LauraBirn throughout. But there were many different ways this could have played out. Why, for example, didn’t Foundation take advantage of Empire’s weakness by jumping to Trantor while the Imperial fleet was distracted in Terminus? And why could only one person fit in the escape/cleaning pod when there was clearly room for two (albeit with a shorter supply oxygen which could have meant both of them died). Finally, what a waste of #LeahHarvey’s superb talent and character, which carried season 1, but seemed to lack purpose or direction, being a mere side-kick to Gaal and Hari in the battle against the Mentalics crazed leader.
One of the things I love about #Asimov’s books is that they told a story in which everything is governed by scientific laws, albeit from a future science that is as yet undiscovered. Everything that happens happens for a reason and in accordance with the ‘laws’ of human behaviour, albeit at galactic scale. The first season of the adaptation mainly stuck with this formula to good effect. The second seems more like Star Wars with swearing. Fun but ultimately undermining the series’ central premise: that the rise and fall of civilisations can be predicted.
There’s an inherent paradox in telling a story that is supposed to be governed by precise mathematical rules through the eyes of a small number of individuals, each of whose actions can determine the fate of an entire galaxy. We are left wondering what, if anything, Seldon actually predicted, since events always seem to be knocking it off course, and whether the much vaunted plan was any good to begin with. Overall, season 2 is more psychodrama than #psychohistory. Hopefully season 3 will offer a more satisfying fusion of the two.
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CW: Foundation season 2 spoilers!
While I enjoyed the season finale of #Foundation, it didn’t quite live up to expectations. It was disappointing that the general (or the spacers) didn’t make their stand sooner. And for the fate of #Empire to come down to fisticuffs is just lazy writing, especially given all of the dramatic resources that were already in play. In the end, most of the drama came from revealing things that had already happened without the audience’s knowledge rather than some unforeseen twist of events, and key elements of the plot remain unexplained. How, for example, did Seldon no. 2 come to have a physical body? Presumably we will have to wait until next season.
The back-story for #Demerzel was, however, superb with a sterling performance from #LauraBirn throughout. But there were many different ways this could have played out. Why, for example, didn’t Foundation take advantage of Empire’s weakness by jumping to Trantor while the Imperial fleet was distracted in Terminus? And why could only one person fit in the escape/cleaning pod when there was clearly room for two (albeit with a shorter supply oxygen which could have meant both of them died). Finally, what a waste of #LeahHarvey’s superb talent and character, which carried season 1, but seemed to lack purpose or direction, being a mere side-kick to Gaal and Hari in the battle against the Mentalics crazed leader.
One of the things I love about #Asimov’s books is that they told a story in which everything is governed by scientific laws, albeit from a future science that is as yet undiscovered. Everything that happens happens for a reason and in accordance with the ‘laws’ of human behaviour, albeit at galactic scale. The first season of the adaptation mainly stuck with this formula to good effect. The second seems more like Star Wars with swearing. Fun but ultimately undermining the series’ central premise: that the rise and fall of civilisations can be predicted.
There’s an inherent paradox in telling a story that is supposed to be governed by precise mathematical rules through the eyes of a small number of individuals, each of whose actions can determine the fate of an entire galaxy. We are left wondering what, if anything, Seldon actually predicted, since events always seem to be knocking it off course, and whether the much vaunted plan was any good to begin with. Overall, season 2 is more psychodrama than #psychohistory. Hopefully season 3 will offer a more satisfying fusion of the two.
-
CW: Foundation season 2 spoilers!
While I enjoyed the season finale of #Foundation, it didn’t quite live up to expectations. It was disappointing that the general (or the spacers) didn’t make their stand sooner. And for the fate of #Empire to come down to fisticuffs is just lazy writing, especially given all of the dramatic resources that were already in play. In the end, most of the drama came from revealing things that had already happened without the audience’s knowledge rather than some unforeseen twist of events, and key elements of the plot remain unexplained. How, for example, did Seldon no. 2 come to have a physical body? Presumably we will have to wait until next season.
The back-story for #Demerzel was, however, superb with a sterling performance from #LauraBirn throughout. But there were many different ways this could have played out. Why, for example, didn’t Foundation take advantage of Empire’s weakness by jumping to Trantor while the Imperial fleet was distracted in Terminus? And why could only one person fit in the escape/cleaning pod when there was clearly room for two (albeit with a shorter supply oxygen which could have meant both of them died). Finally, what a waste of #LeahHarvey’s superb talent and character, which carried season 1, but seemed to lack purpose or direction, being a mere side-kick to Gaal and Hari in the battle against the Mentalics crazed leader.
One of the things I love about #Asimov’s books is that they told a story in which everything is governed by scientific laws, albeit from a future science that is as yet undiscovered. Everything that happens happens for a reason and in accordance with the ‘laws’ of human behaviour, albeit at galactic scale. The first season of the adaptation mainly stuck with this formula to good effect. The second seems more like Star Wars with swearing. Fun but ultimately undermining the series’ central premise: that the rise and fall of civilisations can be predicted.
There’s an inherent paradox in telling a story that is supposed to be governed by precise mathematical rules through the eyes of a small number of individuals, each of whose actions can determine the fate of an entire galaxy. We are left wondering what, if anything, Seldon actually predicted, since events always seem to be knocking it off course, and whether the much vaunted plan was any good to begin with. Overall, season 2 is more psychodrama than #psychohistory. Hopefully season 3 will offer a more satisfying fusion of the two.
-
CW: Foundation season 2 spoilers!
While I enjoyed the season finale of #Foundation, it didn’t quite live up to expectations. It was disappointing that the general (or the spacers) didn’t make their stand sooner. And for the fate of #Empire to come down to fisticuffs is just lazy writing, especially given all of the dramatic resources that were already in play. In the end, most of the drama came from revealing things that had already happened without the audience’s knowledge rather than some unforeseen twist of events, and key elements of the plot remain unexplained. How, for example, did Seldon no. 2 come to have a physical body? Presumably we will have to wait until next season.
The back-story for #Demerzel was, however, superb with a sterling performance from #LauraBirn throughout. But there were many different ways this could have played out. Why, for example, didn’t Foundation take advantage of Empire’s weakness by jumping to Trantor while the Imperial fleet was distracted in Terminus? And why could only one person fit in the escape/cleaning pod when there was clearly room for two (albeit with a shorter supply oxygen which could have meant both of them died). Finally, what a waste of #LeahHarvey’s superb talent and character, which carried season 1, but seemed to lack purpose or direction, being a mere side-kick to Gaal and Hari in the battle against the Mentalics crazed leader.
One of the things I love about #Asimov’s books is that they told a story in which everything is governed by scientific laws, albeit from a future science that is as yet undiscovered. Everything that happens happens for a reason and in accordance with the ‘laws’ of human behaviour, albeit at galactic scale. The first season of the adaptation mainly stuck with this formula to good effect. The second seems more like Star Wars with swearing. Fun but ultimately undermining the series’ central premise: that the rise and fall of civilisations can be predicted.
There’s an inherent paradox in telling a story that is supposed to be governed by precise mathematical rules through the eyes of a small number of individuals, each of whose actions can determine the fate of an entire galaxy. We are left wondering what, if anything, Seldon actually predicted, since events always seem to be knocking it off course, and whether the much vaunted plan was any good to begin with. Overall, season 2 is more psychodrama than #psychohistory. Hopefully season 3 will offer a more satisfying fusion of the two.