Other way around, I think...
Isn't possession of a person's body a pretty literal example of the possessor living vicariously through the possessee?
In a sense, I would....I can't cruise along at 35 MPH on my own...living vicariously through someone refers to actions you can't do under your own power.
I don't think a car is a great example, since it's not a sentient being, but it works. I think the idiom requires sentience on both sides.
Fact is, Jadzia should have died in battle, to show how war actually is.
She should, in fact it wouldn't have been hard at all.
In the battle, big hit on Defiant where Jadzia is at the helm, she gets thrown back suddenly in a shower of sparks.
Sisko: "Get her to sickbay, Mr Nog, take the helm!"
Then the battle proceeds as in the episode, at the end while celebrating...
Sisko: "Sisko to medical bay, how is Jadzia doing?"
Bashir: "I'm sorry Captain, she's dead, I've managed to save the symbiont, but Jadzia was killed instantly..."
Actual proper war death, sudden, brutal, pointless, cruel.
They had a good opportunity to kill her in a much more meaningful way in 'Change of Heart'.
Pity...
Worf wanted to kill muniz when he was pretty much in the same situation. Worf is a klingon, he's supposed to believe that dying while performing your duty is the best thing that can happen to you.They had a good opportunity to kill her in a much more meaningful way in 'Change of Heart'.
Pity...
Would anyone ever have been able to forgive Worf if he left his wife to die? Even if it was for the greater good.
Sorry, what? What's this about the fragile hair? Sounds a bit far-fetched!
It looks like they would have saved a lot of money if they had thought about the wigs immediately instead of resetting her hair continuously which must have been tiresome and did nothing to improve her mood....
According to several production people both Crusher and McFadden had become "whiners" during Season One. Gates McFadden's fine, long, red hair, lost its style under the hot studio lights, so Continuity kept sending her back to have her hair washed and reset, and makeup redone. This cost the production money in lost shooting time and, consolidated with other complaints about whining (and the stand-off with Maurice Hurley), led to her not having her contractual option picked up. It's not why McFadden was fired, but was a contributing factor in the complaints about why her character wasn't working.
When she returned for Season Three, Paramount spent money on a range of expensive red wigs that could be pre-styled, and would hold their style for longer. Then Marina Sirtis began to (half-jokingly) complain at conventions that she still had to wear her cheap, artificial, brunette fall, and this was eventually replaced by a real-hair fall for Season Four-Seven.
Fact is, Jadzia should have died in battle, to show how war actually is.
^ On that hair conversation I'm currently rewatching DS9 and I'm constantly wondering if Terry Farrel's extremely long ponytail is actually a clipped-on extension.
Fact is, Jadzia should have died in battle, to show how war actually is.
No. As I said in an earlier post war doesn't stop at the frontline and having her die in battle would have just opened the door to rationalize her death as "honorable".
I still think the best way to have Jadzia's death showcase the true horrors of war would have to simply have her be on a section of the Promenade that gets hit by a torpedo during a fight, or better yet in a supposed "safe zone" on the station that, despite all preparations was not safe enough and when the defiant returns from battle Worf and Sisko discover Jadzia's remains, along with those of a number of the station's civilian staff/traders. They died of asphyxiation after a rogue torpedo had caused some sort of leak.
In war no place and no person is safe, hospitals and schools and children and the elderly all fall victim to it. And I think that's something that often gets glossed over in media.
^Jadzia slowly suffocating in what amounts to an air-raid shelter and Worf discovering her body, completely untouched and as if sleeping is banal and undramatic?
I assume the writers wanted to keep Dax if they weren't going to have Jadzia. In a sense, the symbiont is as much of the main cast as anyone, although I think we only see it on-screen once. It's also possible that some of the Season 7 episode concepts were already in the works at the time of the break-up, and since quite a few of them are Dax-centric, maybe the writers thought it would be easier to tweak one character than entire episode ideas.
Personal preference would have been that Jadzia was reassigned, I would have rather had even more Dominion War-oriented episodes with flashy space battles, political intrigue and stuff, and fewer episodes centered on the characters and their feelings.
Please go on, ITT! I'm honored that you chose to quote something I said weeks ago, out of all the POVs in this thread, now I'm interested in why you think DS9 is the most emotionally invested Star Trek series and how that pertains to my observation!
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