Crusher Crushed from Nemesis
Ant sent in a link to Wil Wheaton's weblog where he writes a surprisingly heartfelt piece on being cut from ST:Nemesis. Its a strangely bittersweet little entry that really speaks volumes, especially considering Wil's fairly public disagreements with
Rick Berman. Apparently Wil's bit was cut along with 48 whole minutes of the flick- its just the nature of filmaking. But
I guess if nothing else, they've got tons of stuff for the DVD now!
space nerd wil weaton is a no talent clownhat
Alt.wesley.crusher.die.die.die
Wil getting anally raped by a Klingon will not be worth watching.
Click here or here.
Wesley was probably THE most annoying SF character ever, even if Wil himself actually demonstrated that he can be a passable actor. And then for him to say "I want what's best for Star Trek and the Trekkies" - we're Trekers, not Trekkies.
Not everything that can be measured matters; Not everything that matters can be measured.
"I returned the call late the next day from my car on my way home from work. I was driving along a narrow tree-lined street in Pasadena that I sometimes take when the traffic is heavy on the freeway."
If he'd crashed in to one of those trees and died, I bet that 48 minutes would have been reinserted. It's about time talking on phones when driving was made illegal.
Just read the first 17 comments regarding the story....
Unsurprisingly, most of the comments are just junk. Hey, yeah, it's slashdot.
But it struck me that it's a little worse than the normal crap. Like hazing. Mean. Childish. Then again, who am I kidding. The two almost always go together.
It seems all the while Katz and geeks were whining and complaining about harrassment about being geeks, geeks treat others folks like shit. Lash out, online freedom of expression, whatever. It's a geek hierachy, plain and simple.
Get picked on, whine. See someone with more namesake than you, kick 'em when you have the chance. What wonderful, compassionate humans you've turned out to be.
Chalk this up as a troll. Most probably will. But, take a deep breath, and smell the surroundings. (sniff sniff) Ahh, the distinctive smell of hypocrites.
Wil Wheaton is gay!
You wife enjoyed 3 hours of me knocking the bottom out of her pussy with my trouser snake last night. Just something to keep in mind.
Screw you. If there's one thing I can't stand, it's assholes who drive with a McDonald's shake held in their crotch, shouting at thier kids, getting licked in the face by thir dogs, writing on a little note pad that's suction-cupped to the windshield, smoking cigarettes, and adjusting thier hair & make-up in the center rear-view mirror, who then feel it is their job to tell you not to ever, ever, ever talk on a mobile phone while driving.
No: Screw You.
I crave for a Wesley Crusher and Dell's "Steve" nightly. Sometimes I beat off to the warm glow of my incandescent lamp hovering over pictures of their youthful naked bodies.
I all truthfullness, what do these guys have that I don't? Steve is a puke pursuing a Theater degree and he's the spokesperson for Dell. Meanwhile, I actually have technical training and know something about computers, and Dell won't even look at me. Fags.
Meanwhile, Crusher stepped up in ranks on the Enterprise with no formal training while the rest of us work our asses off only to be rejected by company after company. They are symbols of what is wrong with this country.
Yeah, few people will ever be sound enough to waste their twenties clutching at the scraps of a pathetic "career" based on a single awful teenage role.
You played Wesley. IT SUCKED. Since then? Nothing worth mentioning. There is no career. You're not an actor.
Go out on the street and look around, see those people? Also not actors. It's called Earth: a planet with a demand for a very small number of movie and TV actors. A planet with NO demand for typecast weenies. Even if you were a good actor, your one role ruined any chance of a career. Face it, you're the Erkle of sci-fi.
Acting is easy, or at least acting talent is very common. Go to a community theater and you'll probably see acting as good as anything on the big screen. "Great actors" don't have talent, they have distinctive features, interesting voices, and mindshare built up from a series of good roles.