Tag Archives: mad-science

The Mad Science of Fringe: Artificial Life Generates Artificial Creepiness

Men talk with gaping holes where their hearts should be (We flash back to the hideous singing corpses from Fringe’s unfortunate musical episode ). Mad scientists string up corpses like marionettes so they can dance. Why did these things happen in last night’s Fringe? Because, while they are largely totally unrelated to the plot, they help pad the creepy quota. And sometimes, as long as you’re not thinking too hard about it, that’s all you really need. Read on for the mad science breakdown of “Marionette!”

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The Mad Science of Fringe: Artificial Life Generates Artificial Creepiness

The Mad Science of Fringe: Balance is Restored to the Multiverse

We may have bid farewell to the alternating red and blue title sequences with last night’s Fringe . Olivia’s brief romp to her universe finally blew Bolivia’s cover, the number of likable characters “over there” took a major hit, and only a few minor quibbles totally arrested disbelief. Read on for “Entrada’s” mad science report!

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The Mad Science of Fringe: Balance is Restored to the Multiverse

The Mad Science of Fringe: With the Energy of Leonard Nimoy, You Can Go Home Again!

Some crazy stuff went down in the Grey’s Anatomy finale last night, but I don’t know about any of that because 1) I got off that train after about season three and 2) Fringe’s season finale was nearly perfect, drawing the episode’s threads together (namely the Peter dilemma) in a tenuously satisfying conclusion, only before everything went to hell in the last two minutes. It reeked of Jabrahms-inspired madness. It was wonderful. But enough fawning. Let’s break this down into our usual mad science capsules:

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The Mad Science of Fringe: With the Energy of Leonard Nimoy, You Can Go Home Again!