In article <g068fj$fls$1@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
>,
wdstarr@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
(William December Starr) wrote:
> In article <rO-dnSivq46w77_VnZ2dnUVZ_umdnZ2d@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
>,
> khaight@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
(Kyle Haight) said:
>
> > Barry Margolin <barmar@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> wrote:
> >> Al Gore <usenet00000001@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> wrote:
> >>
> >>> And doesn't this show sound like an American Dr Who without the
> >>> Tardis to anyone?
> >>
> >> With a little bit of Buffy thrown in.
> >
> > Actually, the first thing that crossed my mind was Alias.
>
> The first thing that crossed my mind was how stupid the name was.
> Then I read the rest of the article mentally changing it to "Frank"
> all the way through it and it sounded a lot better:
>
> Wendy's situation takes a drastic turn during a routine temp
> assignment at a local laboratory, when she is thrown into the
> middle of a science experiment gone very wrong. If that
> weren't bizarre enough, who should show up to save the day,
> but a mysterious, handsome, gun-wielding stranger who
> introduces himself only as Frank.
>
> A covert hero who neutralizes any and all danger humanity
> isn't prepared to face, the milk-drinking, ruggedly wholesome
> Frank is in need of a new colleague in the fight against
> otherworldly evil and thinks Wendy fits the bill. After a
> series of tests that would make grown astronauts weep and Navy
> Seals beg for mercy, Wendy is quickly recruited into the Frank
> ranks.
"Frank ranks"? Do they spank? (Yeah, that stank)
--
Star Trek 09:
No Shat, No Show.


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