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T'Pring Rotarniece Gaynelle McComb Bynum was born in Miami, Florida and has lived in various states. However, she was primarily reared in El Dorado, Arkansas. She graduated from El Dorado High School and gave her life to Christ in 1996. Several years later, she accepted her calling to ministry. She is a graduate of the University of Arkansas at Monticello with her AA and BBA degrees.She currently resides in Crossett, Arkansas, with her husband. All together they have eight children; seven living. They are blessed to have four amazing grandchildren.T'Pring works full time for Georgia Pacific. She started out as an entry-level Utility Worker, moved up to an Administrative Assistant, then became a Shift Supervisor. T'Pring is now a Mill Shift Leader.She dedicates the remainder of her time to ministry where she attends church. She loves praying for others, encouraging people and spending time with family. She is faithful and dedicated to the Lord.T-Pring is the author of Painful Past to Purposed Present a book about the redemptive and healing power of God’s work in her life. She shares her history, struggles and testimonies of the many victories God has brought her through.Don't miss this episode...This Is The Year For Your New Bookwww.selfpublishn30days.com
Problematic faves! Anika and a sliiiiiiiiiiightly hungover (yet award-winning) Liz discuss the characters we love, but can't entirely recommend without a caveat. Or many caveats. But first -- we have to define terms. How do you narrow it down when literally every single work of fiction, along with every single human who ever existed, is imperfect? Discussed: Yeoman Tonia Barrows of "Shore Leave" (TOS) Captain Kathryn Janeway of THE ENTIRE SERIES OF VOYAGER have you heard of her? T'Pring of of "Amok Time" (TOS) and Valeris of Star Trek VI: The Undiscovered Country Gul Dukat of DS9 (the ultimate Problematic Fave Who Thinks He Is A Cinnamon Roll) Seska of Voyager L'Rell of Discovery And along the way, we talk about fandom's attitudes towards characters who do terrible things or represent terrible ideas, fan fiction as a safe place to explore ideas which don't have a place in canon, and more!
The crew kicks off the second season of Star Trek with a bang, or, at least, the implication of banging. Our second female crew member points out how Vulcan culture is subtly inspired by pizza. Star Trek predicts the future with the first-ever reference to internet pornography. We get lost in the throes of Plak Tow at the mere mention of T'Pring. These are real things, I swear. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
Captain Sean Holmes and First Officer Brian Massey are back! This time we review The 1st Episode of the 2nd Season of Star Trek: The Original Series. In this episode, Spock undergoes a Vulcan stage of life known as the Pon Farr where he is forced to mate with his bride, T'Pring. T'Pring evokes her right to have Spock fight for her. However, she chooses Kirk as her champion, leaving Spock with a devastating choice... pd_s2_e1.mp3File Size: 34622 kbFile Type: mp3Download File [...]
Episode 30: "Amok Time", in which Spock once again but most spectacularly comes under the influence of something (hormones) that causes him to show emotion! Olly and I delve into the logic, the character development, the world building (it's literally one building on another world, but hey), and so much more. Checkov! Checkov's wig! Chapel's burning lust for Spock! Spock's lava lamp! Vulcan's principle export (lava lamps)! This has the beautiful Arlene Martel as T'pring, Celia Lovsky as T'Pau, and a guy as Stonn (okay, not a great character). Olly and I battle to the death over whether production order or broadcast order is most important. And I sing the fight music!
Through several incarnations of Star Trek through TV and film we've almost continuously had a Vulcan influence. From Spock to Tuvok, from T'Pring to T'pel, to T'Pau. Who's your favorite Vulcan and who did it best?!
We review one of the most iconic Trek episodes: "Amok Time." Join us as we have soup thrown at us, learn about the mysterious pon farr, and debate whether it's fair to call T'Pring a villain. Hosts Andi, Grace, Jarrah, and Sue Editor and Producer Jarrah Contact Us! crew@womenatwarp.com Twitter: @womenatwarp Facebook: http://facebook.com/womenatwarp Support the Show! http://patreon.com/womenatwarp
Spock Reflections. By the time The Undiscovered Country rolled around, Spock was a wise "old" man who had learned to balanced logic with emotion and intuition. We saw a further evolution of this on The Next Generation in "Unification." And by the time we met Spock in an icy cave the 2009 J.J. Abrams Star Trek, well, he was very wise indeed. But how did he get there when we've seen so many other Vulcans never come close? The explanation might just lie in comic form. In this episode of Literary Treks, Matthew Rushing and Christopher Jones explore IDW's four-part Spock Reflections series by Scott & David Tipton to find out what events not shown onscreen influenced Spock's understanding of human friendship and illogical problem solving. Unseen moments from his childhood on Vulcan, post-Amok Time encounters with T'Pring, mentoring Saavik, and secret missions with Pike all played a roll in getting Spock to where we eventually find him. And it all centers around a touching coda to Star Trek Generations.
Our 50th episode! News: The shuttlecraft was auctioned off for $70,150. Our friend Rob Blatt is watching and blogging about Every Star Trek Ever. Ten Forward: David Livingston on TNG Star Trek in pop culture: Buck Rogers in the 25th Century Episode Insight: "Amok Time" from TOS S2E1 Character Insight: James T. Kirk Subspace Communications Collectables: Barbies and Enterprise-D