Firstly, welcome Florena!
Secondly, getting us back on track with the rewatch...

Banner by Regularamanda
Synopsis:
Daniel's former Archaeology professor dies in an explosion in his lab and Daniel returns to Chicago for the funeral, where he meets up with some of his former colleagues. When investigating further, he discovers that the canopic jar that Dr Jordan was working on has Goa'uld hieroglyphs on it. He brings it back to the SGC where they discover it was one of a pair (Isis and Osiris), and it contains a dead Goa'uld symbiote, but the other one is missing. On further digging they find that Dr Jordan's files had been wiped and he had discovered evidence that supports Daniel's old theories. Back at the SGC, Sam and Janet have discovered that the canopic jar was actually a stasis chamber and that the symbiote was alive until the seal was damaged, which means that there is potentially a second Goa'uld around from the missing jar. Daniel suspects his former colleague Steven Rayner, who has been behaving oddly. Sam, Janet and Daniel head off to Egypt in search of Steven, but when they get to the temple, they discover Steven's not the Goa'uld after all, but Sarah. She is Osiris, and she disappears in a pyramid ship that was hidden in the temple.
Favourite quote:
We have caught nothing. We are fishing.
Review/Analysis:
This is a very Daniel-centric episode, but it's great to see him plunged back into his former life and dealing with the culture clash between his academic past and his Goa'uld-fighting present. For me, the most interesting aspect of Daniel's character is this transformation that he undergoes, and this is one of the best episodes that really throws into sharp relief the life he left behind as compared to the life he leads now.
Of course this is the episode that sets up the Osiris storyline that will run through the next couple of seasons, continuing Daniel's rather unfortunate streak of girlfriends turning into Goa'ulds. The Sarah/Osiris storyline is rather like a less angsty re-run of the Sha're/Amaunet storyline, and I think does show up how Daniel has changed over the course of the last few seasons - he takes it less personally now, having been burnt so hard with Sha're (and Sha're is of course portrayed as the love of his life as opposed to Sarah who is just an ex-girlfriend
), and I think this does show how he's taught himself not to feel things quite so intently, over the course of all his experiences up to now. Which kind of leads in to his whole ascension storyline, as he starts to feel both that he can't win and also that he's losing himself a little - the way he reacts in Menace I think supports this too when his empathy really goes on a collision course with Jack's pragmatism.
Otherwise this episode is mostly notable for the almost complete absence of Jack and Teal'c. I'm not sure quite why it was decided to sideline them in this way, but it does make for a very different feel - much more of a mystery with the brains of the outfit rather than an action-focused episode. And I have to admit the scene with Jack and Teal'c at the cabin is highly entertaining, with Teal'c's boredom, mozzie-fighting, and quite incredible (for him) loss of composure in his pleading to be allowed to return to the SGC.
Implications for Sam and Jack:
Not much, aside from the fishing invitation. This is the second one (I think, unless I've missed one), and of course, since the last one we've had the events of Upgrades/Divide & Conquer, which imbues this one with a whole load of different context. Jack is quite clearly not expecting Sam to actually accept (and I suspect that if she had he would still have turned right round to Teal'c and invited him too), and Sam also quite clearly was never going to - both unlike the one in Nemesis where they really were teetering on the brink. So why does he do it? I think that it's his way of effectively saying that as far as he's concerned they're OK, and testing out that she feels the same, and the tone of both of their conversation and their mannerisms are decidely on the flirty side. It's kind of a microcosm of where their relationship is at at this point - they've left it in the room, agreed not to bring it up, but they both know it's there underneath and are trying so hard not to let it affect their interactions and make sure that even though they can't actually say anything (or not-say anything, as is more their style), they want to still somehow give each other some kind of clue that it is still there and it is still OK. It's sort of their code, I guess. Hence it not really being about the fish
Secondly, getting us back on track with the rewatch...

Banner by Regularamanda
Synopsis:
Daniel's former Archaeology professor dies in an explosion in his lab and Daniel returns to Chicago for the funeral, where he meets up with some of his former colleagues. When investigating further, he discovers that the canopic jar that Dr Jordan was working on has Goa'uld hieroglyphs on it. He brings it back to the SGC where they discover it was one of a pair (Isis and Osiris), and it contains a dead Goa'uld symbiote, but the other one is missing. On further digging they find that Dr Jordan's files had been wiped and he had discovered evidence that supports Daniel's old theories. Back at the SGC, Sam and Janet have discovered that the canopic jar was actually a stasis chamber and that the symbiote was alive until the seal was damaged, which means that there is potentially a second Goa'uld around from the missing jar. Daniel suspects his former colleague Steven Rayner, who has been behaving oddly. Sam, Janet and Daniel head off to Egypt in search of Steven, but when they get to the temple, they discover Steven's not the Goa'uld after all, but Sarah. She is Osiris, and she disappears in a pyramid ship that was hidden in the temple.
Favourite quote:

Review/Analysis:
This is a very Daniel-centric episode, but it's great to see him plunged back into his former life and dealing with the culture clash between his academic past and his Goa'uld-fighting present. For me, the most interesting aspect of Daniel's character is this transformation that he undergoes, and this is one of the best episodes that really throws into sharp relief the life he left behind as compared to the life he leads now.
Of course this is the episode that sets up the Osiris storyline that will run through the next couple of seasons, continuing Daniel's rather unfortunate streak of girlfriends turning into Goa'ulds. The Sarah/Osiris storyline is rather like a less angsty re-run of the Sha're/Amaunet storyline, and I think does show up how Daniel has changed over the course of the last few seasons - he takes it less personally now, having been burnt so hard with Sha're (and Sha're is of course portrayed as the love of his life as opposed to Sarah who is just an ex-girlfriend

Otherwise this episode is mostly notable for the almost complete absence of Jack and Teal'c. I'm not sure quite why it was decided to sideline them in this way, but it does make for a very different feel - much more of a mystery with the brains of the outfit rather than an action-focused episode. And I have to admit the scene with Jack and Teal'c at the cabin is highly entertaining, with Teal'c's boredom, mozzie-fighting, and quite incredible (for him) loss of composure in his pleading to be allowed to return to the SGC.
Implications for Sam and Jack:
Not much, aside from the fishing invitation. This is the second one (I think, unless I've missed one), and of course, since the last one we've had the events of Upgrades/Divide & Conquer, which imbues this one with a whole load of different context. Jack is quite clearly not expecting Sam to actually accept (and I suspect that if she had he would still have turned right round to Teal'c and invited him too), and Sam also quite clearly was never going to - both unlike the one in Nemesis where they really were teetering on the brink. So why does he do it? I think that it's his way of effectively saying that as far as he's concerned they're OK, and testing out that she feels the same, and the tone of both of their conversation and their mannerisms are decidely on the flirty side. It's kind of a microcosm of where their relationship is at at this point - they've left it in the room, agreed not to bring it up, but they both know it's there underneath and are trying so hard not to let it affect their interactions and make sure that even though they can't actually say anything (or not-say anything, as is more their style), they want to still somehow give each other some kind of clue that it is still there and it is still OK. It's sort of their code, I guess. Hence it not really being about the fish

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