Episode title: There's Something About Olga.
After Dr. Olga Vukavitch is impersonated by a former mental patient who bears an astonishing resemblance to her, during which time this impersonator covetously seduces Lt. Frank Parker and pummels him when he apologizes for acting as such a "sex-crazed maniac," as he so kindly puts it, as well as murdering her employers and irregrettably committing suicide, Lt. Frank Parker journeys back, apprehends and interrogates the impersonator, and obviously saves the day. The impersonator, in other news, remains alive and is admitted to a mental correctional facility in which she exhibits her sadistic love for Lt. Frank Parker.
--D. Stuart
Two particular "nit-picks" from me. For starters, where is Comdr. Craig Donovan throughout this episode? He is nowhere to be found, and Comdr. Craig Donovan is a frequent attendant to the meetings. And secondly, the Russian villain who ultimately injects a chemical into the legitimate Dr. Olga Vukavitch heralds how arduous it is for him to eliminate her from the picture, as he is injecting the chemical. However, he does not even come close to injecting it into her the second go around prior to Lt. Frank Parker shooting him dead.
Parker shoots that guy in the back! How cowardly! Not to mention that the bullet could have passed through that guy and hit Olga.
One small nit. The phone number given on the pagers starts with a 505. Which everyone thinks is just a fast food place. The facility is supposed to be in Nevada. The 505 area code is in New Mexico, but no one comments on the long distance nature of the calls. Los Alamos National Labs has that area code along with Santa Fe.
the 505 was actully sos.
By the way, why do these world-conquering, domination-seeking villains always undermine their schemes from within secluded warehouses? One would think these warehouses need be excavated when they are no longer in use, but I presume that would cause it to lose its charm.
Could this have been the incident from which Russia retrieved its capability to one day transpose Dr. Olga Vukavitch's ex-husband into the past to sabotage the Backstep project and plagiarize their technology? If so, I wonder how this affected the future and particularly Dr. Olga Vukavitch's ex-husband's journey from and to the future.
It would seem I am incapable of posting any messages to the section for episode #13, which is titled Parkergeist, due to the nonprovision of a post/preview button. The comments below are regarding episode #13, otherwise known as Parkergeist.
I counted the shots fired from the villain's handgun about eight minutes to the conclusion of the episode, during which time the villan shoots and resultfully kills the blind individual who was assisting Lt. Frank Parker and demanded to receive Lt. Frank Parker's access codes, or something to that effect. The amount of shots fired were seven. First of all, do most handgun clips commonly contain seven bullets? And secondly, could the seven shots be an allusion to the title of this series? Thank you.
...during which time the >villanvillain<... Typo.
...and >demandeddemands< for... Typo.
Actually I thought It was Captain Donvonan