I'm talking about the episode where a bunch of old fashioned Irish folks are found, saved, and living on the Enterprise with their animals, and then their previous shipmates are found on another planet cloning themselves.
I reckon that it isn't the most unusual Star Trek episode, but I couldn't help noticing that the emphasis of the show is a little bit diabolical.
Think about this. On one hand you have Irish farmers. On the other hand you have people cloning each other. The Irish farmers get 30 minutes of screen time. The cloners get only 15. If any rational person were telling the story, it seems to me that the emphasis would have been the other way around.
Only in Star Trek could the discovery of people cloning themselves be treated as a secondary plot.
I reckon that it isn't the most unusual Star Trek episode, but I couldn't help noticing that the emphasis of the show is a little bit diabolical.
Think about this. On one hand you have Irish farmers. On the other hand you have people cloning each other. The Irish farmers get 30 minutes of screen time. The cloners get only 15. If any rational person were telling the story, it seems to me that the emphasis would have been the other way around.
Only in Star Trek could the discovery of people cloning themselves be treated as a secondary plot.