The female voice in Stephen’s head belongs to Cara Coburn (the gorgeous Peyton List), who belongs to a group of “homo-superiors” who dub themselves the Tomorrow People. Before I watched the show, I thought they would be time travelers, a subject I’ve seen explored in Syfy’s Continuum, but this race of people have genes that give them the powers of telepathy, teleporting, and telekinesis. The government knows they exist, and each one that gets captured becomes an Ultra agent, forced to hunt down and neutralize their own kind. I say “neutralize” because Tomorrow People are physically incapable of killing anyone else. As if all this weren’t enough, Stephen gets a video message left for him by his dad, Jack (Jeffrey Pierce), and the head of Ultra, geneticist Jedikiah Price (the creepy Mark Pellegrino) turns out to be Stephen’s uncle. Not sure where he should go from here, Stephen goes to Jedikiah and joins him…but I have a feeling he’s doing it just to get on the inside and help out his new batch of friends. Final review: This is clearly not a show that expects to be taken seriously. Is it a science fiction drama? Yes, but right now, it’s more like an action movie than a deep, dark exploration of the ethics of genocide. As Jedikiah (ugh…I hate that name…someone seriously named their kid Jedikiah?) points out, some of the Tomorrow People are using their powers for evil purposes, and he feels the need to stop them with Stephen’s help, but the special effects (which are hardly impressive) seem to be the star here. One funny scene has Stephen replacing his usual pills with laxatives, which are then stolen by the school bully. “Good luck with the diarrhea,” Stephen mutters. There’s enough to keep watching, at least for a second episode, but the idea of Tomorrow People is far-fetched. This is more escapist entertainment than anything else. Like us on Facebook and follow us on Twitter for all news updates related to the world of geek. And Google+, if that’s your thing!