"I don't want any speeches" - Sheridan has really changed.
This feels like a very profound speech from G'Kar that would probably be more moving for me if I could remember anything much about Ta'Lon.
The touching goodbyes and handovers and so on are nice, but I'm starting to wonder if there'll be a plot happening this episode at all.
Garibaldi's 'all the troublemakers are now on the board' idea is very much the kind of thing you think is clever if you've never managed anyone ever.
The whole storyline of Garibaldi taking over Edgars' companies feels a bit off to me. He has no qualifications for this. It feels quite misogynistic that the entirely unqualified Garibaldi is running the show instead of the equally unqualified Lise or - wild idea - someone who actually has experience of running large companies?
How can it possibly be a news story when and on what ship Sheridan and Delenn are leaving Babylon 5? It's not news when a senior politician moves house.
@youcantfuckkosh has ruined Zack Allan for me. Every time he pops up I keep thinking that he's the one Babylon 5 character I can fuck. And I don't even want to fuck the guy.
Extremely weird assortment of people watching in C&C. Why is Vir there? Why is Ta'Lon??
We are fully halfway through this episode and no actual plot has happened yet.
I spoke too soon, the plot just started plottening. In which Lennier is... trying to murder Sheridan??
Thank goodness for shitty build quality on the White Star fleet.
Trying to murder Sheridan, or letting him die, really does not ring true for me for Lennier's character, and it feels like Delenn's speech afterwards affirms that.
I genuinely thought Londo might be a hallucination at first.
Londo's Keeper lets him refer so openly to his associates?
Presumably his gift is sinister though.
I know I was complaining about the lack of plot, but the Lennier storyline also feels like a weird thing to introduce with one episode to go.
The Keeper must be very confident that Sheridan and Delenn will keep that ugly urn and not lose it in the next 16 years.
Oh, it turns out that Sheridan is not done with speeches.
"Sooner or later, things do work out." But it'll take about a million years before they do, judging by what we saw at the end of the last series.