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Let's Review Stargate with Layla and You

Let's Review Stargate with Layla and You

Written by: Layla
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About this listen

🎙️ Let’s Review Stargate with Layla and You is a rewatch of the Stargate franchise where we love the show deeply, question it freely, and have a lot to say about both.

This podcast goes beyond surface-level recap. Each episode focuses on character, power, ethics, and what hits differently when we watch Stargate now — with humor, care, thoughtful reflection, and the occasional spicy aside. Because Stargate has always been about more than aliens and technology; it’s about responsibility, identity, and how we treat one another.

I’m Layla — a therapist and lifelong sci-fi fan — and I rewatch Stargate through lived experience and professional insight, celebrating what holds up and naming what doesn’t.

DEI isn’t an add-on here — it’s foundational. As a disabled, neurodivergent, LGBTQ+ host living with cPTSD, I approach the series with an inclusive and critical lens.

All episodes include full transcripts, because accessibility matters.

Whether you’ve been stepping through the Gate since the ’90s or you’re just arriving, you’re welcome here. This show is built around reflection and conversation — and it’s better when more voices are part of it.

⚠️ This podcast contains mature themes, strong language, and discussions of trauma and sexual violence. Listener discretion advised.

Lets Review with Layla 2023
Art Science Fiction
Episodes
  • Let's Review Stargate SG-1 Solitudes
    Aug 26 2024

    Some Stargate SG-1 episodes prove how well the team works together. “Solitudes” proves why that matters.

    In this review, I look at how Solitudes splits the team apart — physically and emotionally — only to show just how deeply connected they already are. With O’Neill and Carter stranded in hostile conditions, forced to rely on each other to survive, and the rest of SG-1 fighting from Cheyenne Mountain to bring them home, the episode becomes a study in trust, persistence, and choosing not to give up on your people.

    What makes Solitudes so effective on a rewatch isn’t just the fight to survive, but the balance it strikes between fear and humor. Even in near-death situations, the show makes space for wit, meaningful character moments, and the kind of banter that reminds you why these characters work so well together — not because they’re perfect, but because they care.

    This is also a pivotal episode for the series — one that deepens character bonds and opens doors the franchise will keep walking through — but its emotional core remains intimate and human.

    👉 When everything goes wrong and no rescue is guaranteed, what keeps you going?

    🎵 credit goes to “Emotional Mess” by Amy Lynn & the Honey Men

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    29 mins
  • Let's Review Stargate SG-1 Enigma
    Jul 8 2024

    In this review, I explore how Enigma uses first contact, environmental collapse, and displaced people to ask an uncomfortable but enduring question: what do we owe those who have lost everything?

    The Tollans arrive not as conquerors, but as survivors. Their planet has become uninhabitable, even though their technology is far beyond ours. Almost immediately, their presence exposes fault lines within Stargate Command and our broader systems of authority — especially with the introduction of the NID and Colonel Maybourne, whose priorities stand in stark contrast to SG-1’s.

    This episode keeps circling one idea: progress without ethics isn’t progress at all.

    Though Enigma first aired in 1998, its themes feel uncomfortably current — from climate-driven displacement to governments exploiting crisis for leverage. Watching it now, it’s hard not to notice how little the questions have changed… and how much they still demand answers.

    👉 When doing the right thing means standing up to authority, would you take the risk — or follow orders?

    🎵 credit goes to “Emotional Mess” by Amy Lynn & the Honey Men

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    40 mins
  • Let's continue to review Stargate SG-1 Cor-ai
    May 20 2024

    Some Stargate SG-1 episodes don’t end when the verdict is delivered. “Cor-ai” is one of them.

    In Part 2 of my Cor-ai review, we move from the courtroom into the consequences — where accountability is no longer theoretical, and every choice carries weight. Teal’c’s sentence is handed down, alliances are tested, and Stargate Command is forced to confront the limits of its own authority, loyalty, and moral consistency as moral clarity starts to fracture when principles collide with politics, friendship, and fear of loss.

    I also return — deliberately — to the episode’s ableist framing. Not to rehash it, but to show how Part 2 inadvertently undercuts its own earlier justification. In the end, Teal’c’s survival has nothing to do with disability, mercy, or “doing someone a favor” — and everything to do with action, integrity, and sacrifice. That contradiction matters, and I unpack why.

    Christopher Judge’s performance, Teal’c’s unwavering honor, and the final moments of forgiveness and recognition are powerful — and why this story still hits, even decades later.

    This is the continuation of a difficult, layered conversation — one where I stay honest, personal, and fully engaged, while still leaving space for disagreement.

    👉 Did Cor-ai’s ending work for you? Did it redeem the episode’s earlier framing — or complicate it further? And where do you land on justice, forgiveness, and second chances?

    🎵 credit goes to "Emotional Mess" by Amy Lynn & the Honey Men

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    30 mins
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