I'm pretty sure it was a voyager episode. There was a ship i guess interpid class which in combat was able to separated into 3 separated combat ships... each one fighting independently. which ship was that and which episode?
Yeah it was "Message in a Bottle". The USS Prometheus. It has an experimental separation multi-vector assault mode or something. Pretty neat looking ship! http://en.memory-alpha.org/wiki/USS_Prometheus_(Prometheus_class)
I like EMH number two. I think the two of them where funny together. I wish they had found a way to get number two back in Voyager for at least one more episode, like maybe the people in the alpha Quadrant would have used him to send a message back to Voyager. That could have been fun.
Because he's a loon. I liked him as Matthew on NewsRadio, and it fit him well, but didn't care for any of his other characters on other shows, and didn't find him funny as a standup comedian. He seems to have a very narrow range.
Come on, Andy Dick and Robert Picardo were amazingly funny and very EMH-y (new word!) in that episode. I thought they were hysterical and always have fun watching this episode. Plus it's refreshing while rewatching Voyager to see some Alpha Quadrant action. The Romulans and the cool special effects ship were a fun factor to an already good story, I think.
Oh yes, he has great chemistry with Picardo in those scenes. But I don't believe the characterization as a doctor. It's a double act, like Laurel & Hardy.
See I never saw Andy Dick other than that VOY ep so when everyone was all Andy Dick is a dick and it ruins the episode I was pure and naive.
Not to mention, but it was the second Federation starship Judson Scott had hijacked! If the Romulan Commander looks familiar it's because Judson Scott was playing the role, and he had played zone of Khan's followers 16 years earlier in "Star Trek II".
Yes, he was the one who dies in Khan's arms. And Khan says something like: "I shall avenge your death my friend." He's also the one who tries to reason with Khan, to no avail though.
Yes, even without Picard's intervention they were one bucket of bolts of a starship away from losing their livelihood at any rate. I mean their clients had ships that they didn't know how to repair.