CrypticMirror wrote: ↑Wed Jan 26, 2022 10:43 pm
I think that the journalist getting hit by the car ought to have just been kept as a coincidence. A horrible coincidence, but a coincidence nonetheless. I'm told they retconned it to be the NID, but that seems clumsy even for them. US assassinations are usually more carefully staged to create doubt, and while hit and runs do happen all the time, and cars get stolen, having it happen in such a public place and in such close proximity to the journalist's targets, just seems a little too blatant for a Western Democracy, especially in the nineties where they were still paying lip service to the idea that the military industrial complex wasn't running everything.
If he'd been killed in a barroom brawl after arranging to meet Jack in a sleazy dive, then we could still have Jack wondering and it would be much more ambiguous. Of course these days he'd just be disappeared into a supermax or blacksite on trumped up charges that nobody would dare question that much.
I do gotta wonder why, if Jacob has got enough pull to get Sam into NASA (which was still in its glory days, owning its own truck) just on his say so, that Hammond wasn't able to just get him read into the Stargate program just to get him to stop tugging at threads. Especially after the cancer diagnosis. He was obviously no security risk.
Well, Hammond pulling strings to get Jacob clearance IS what happened in The Tokra Part 2.
If they retconned the journalist death, I don't recall it every coming up in the show as such. Unless it's some throwaway line that I didn't connect the dots on? I don't actually remember them mentioning Zimmerman again, except maybe briefly in passing.
Ghilz wrote: ↑Thu Jan 27, 2022 1:21 am
Frustration wrote: ↑Wed Jan 26, 2022 10:44 pm
Stupid question: was it ever established, definitively, not to be a coincidence?
It was not. Only time he's mentioned again is when O'Neil and Homer Simpsons share memories, and Homer seems convinced the NID did it (Which feels like the logical answer).
I'll say that this episode benefits from being early in the show's run, relatively (Season 2).
Coz saying Hammond was even slightly cognizant of the murder of a journalist and buried the thing sounds
incredibly out of character for the man. That someone else did it and Hammond didn't know? Yeah, I can buy that. But Hammond being in on the thing is widely out of character.
Yeah, okay, that's what I remember, too. And agreed on Hammond. That'd even be out of character for early season 1 Hammond (before Don S. Davis got them to soften the character more from the original plan). The difference in Hammond after that isn't HUGE... but you can pinpoint when it happens because he starts wearing the short-sleeved shirt instead of the dress uniform.
Fianna wrote: ↑Wed Jan 26, 2022 11:11 pm
How it seems to work is that our main heroes are all highly competent and highly ethical, and the superiors in their chain of command (from Hammond up to the President) will almost always take the policy of "let SG-1 do what SG-1 does best". However, any government operatives
outside their chain of command will be either evil or incompetent (and very often both).
That's their main justification for why, despite the the U.S. government (and later the whole UN Security Council) putting their best resources into fighting the Go'auld, all the really important work ends up being done by the same four people.
Hey now... the other SG teams occasionally get stuff done!
Which speaks to the SGC leadership... Hammond, Weir, O'Neill, and Landry are all very moral people, and they don't brook anything less than that in their subordinates. (The brief times we see other, less moral people in command... things get hairy fast.)