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Time and Again
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A classic time Time Travel novel written in 1970 by Jack Finney. Commercial artist Simon "Si" Morley is chosen as a candidate for a government experiment in Mental Time Travel. However, Si (through his girlfriend) has a personal stake in the time period in question, which leads him to take a trip back to the New York of the 1880s. Slow-paced, exceptionally well-researched intrigue follows as Si attempts to solve a nearly hundred-year-old-mystery. Finney wrote a well-received sequel much later, From Time To Time (1995), before he died. Needs a Better Description. Asher Sutton discovers he is destined to write a book that will help androids become more human, a book that would make humans equal with all creatures, rather than towering above them. However Sutton is the target of many groups who want to influence or prevent the book from being written. He is helped by two beings, an android and Eva, an android masquerading as a human. The reason for Eva doing this is to trick Sutton into thinking that there are still humans who belive in the message his book will give. At the end of the novel, Sutton leaves for a distant planet to write his book. One episode profiles the career of Jim Henson, highlighting clips of The Muppets' many appearances on The Today Show (including their earliest appearances from 1961), as well as the making of The Dark Crystal and Labyrinth. The show features archive interviews with Henson, Frank Oz, Jane Henson, and Brian Henson. Thrown back in time, Janeway races to prevent a catastrophe without alerting its millions of victims. Time and Again is the third episode of series three of the original series of Bernard's Watch Television program.
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--01-30 1999-09-24
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Time and Again is the third episode of series three of the original series of Bernard's Watch Television program. Asher Sutton discovers he is destined to write a book that will help androids become more human, a book that would make humans equal with all creatures, rather than towering above them. However Sutton is the target of many groups who want to influence or prevent the book from being written. He is helped by two beings, an android and Eva, an android masquerading as a human. The reason for Eva doing this is to trick Sutton into thinking that there are still humans who belive in the message his book will give. At the end of the novel, Sutton leaves for a distant planet to write his book. One episode profiles the career of Jim Henson, highlighting clips of The Muppets' many appearances on The Today Show (including their earliest appearances from 1961), as well as the making of The Dark Crystal and Labyrinth. The show features archive interviews with Henson, Frank Oz, Jane Henson, and Brian Henson. Thrown back in time, Janeway races to prevent a catastrophe without alerting its millions of victims. A classic time Time Travel novel written in 1970 by Jack Finney. Commercial artist Simon "Si" Morley is chosen as a candidate for a government experiment in Mental Time Travel. However, Si (through his girlfriend) has a personal stake in the time period in question, which leads him to take a trip back to the New York of the 1880s. Slow-paced, exceptionally well-researched intrigue follows as Si attempts to solve a nearly hundred-year-old-mystery. Much of the early part of the novel is devoted to the protagonist's lovingly created Nostalgia for the period, creating a definite mood for the setting. It helps that the Victorian Gothic Dakota Apartments received Retroactive Recognition due to this novel, becoming once again the home to high-class artistes such as John Lennon. Originated the interesting concept of going back in time via surrounding the protagonist with all the trappings of the Victorian or Edwardian Era and imagining yourself to be back in time. Finney wrote a well-received sequel much later, From Time To Time (1995), before he died. Needs a Better Description. * Born in the Wrong Century: The premise of the novel. * Crowning Moment of Awesome: It isn't even that relevant to the plot, but SI GON' SAVE DAT GIRL FROM THE FIRE. DAT' JUST HOW IT IS. * Establishing Character Moment: In his first proper appearance, Jake Pickering very nearly (and very intentionally) breaks Si's hand with a handshake. * Leaning on the Fourth Wall: "Those are actual quotations, word for word, from The New York Times, February 1, 1882, anyone free to read it and check up." * Mental Time Travel: one of the originals. * Monumental Battle: That depends -- does hiding from the police in the Statue of Liberty's disembodied arm count? * One-Scene Wonder: The cab driver. It reads like a two-page-long Author Tract, but if it is, it's a good one. * Ret-Gone: Sorry, college guy. We don't know who you were, but you ain't anymore. * Ripple-Effect-Proof Memory: Well, except for the guy who accidentally wiped him from existence. Still, even knowing that he existed in the original timeline is enough to make the director try to stop the project. * Later joined by... well, if you really want to know, you can check Wikipedia, but this one doesn't bear spoiling. * Shown Their Work: Finney put a lot of work into figuring out what life was like in 1880s New York, and by golly, he is going to let you know it. * Trapped in the Past: A rare example of averting the "trapped" aspect, with Si and a fellow chrononaut preferring to settle down and live there. In fact, in the sequel From Time To Time the other man actually reverses Si's attempt to erase the time machine's inventor from ever existing. He's quite happy where he is, thank you.