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Tilly was reminding me of someone something fierce. It just clicked. We have our new Ezri.

At first I kinda disliked her for being "every sympathetic socially awkward character ever" but she grew on me. I´m highly courious what Discovery will do with character development.
 
At first I kinda disliked her for being "every sympathetic socially awkward character ever" but she grew on me. I´m highly courious what Discovery will do with character development.

I hope they don't write her so on-the-nose going forward. Right now, she seems like a too-obvious audience identification character designed for maximum adorkability on Tumblr. They have a tricky path ahead, but I hope the praise heaped on the character by the cast means the production team has managed to avoid a Wesley 2.0.
 
Between static cling and sheer volume, Isn't her hair going to be super attractive to the cosmic spores when it's not tied back?

A sneezing fit might launch Tilly into another Galaxy
 
Not just due to that. It's the introduction of surprising, unexpected information that throws you, not what information it happens to be. Like if you're about to shoot the bad guy and they take their mask off and it's your significant other who you trusted implicitly...or if you run to greet your friend and hug them after a long time gone and it's a stranger instead.

That bolded part.... I see that as one and the same. There is a significant different between "oh, new information!" and "Oh God... my arch nemesis whom I was about to kill is actually my wife?!?!?!" One may delay your actions, the other will almost certainly change them.

Simply introducing new, unexpected information is not in and of itself important, but what it actually is, is significant. But I think we are just stating similar things, differently.
 
From a normative standpoint, Tilly may be considered annoying due to her quirks.

But if she is indeed meant to have a form of neurological diversity that is still stigmatized and pathologized in the 21st century, then this is a step forward. Just as there is no "standard" human race or culture, there is no "standard" human brain type. Rather, the latest research shows that there is a broad range; and there is nothing "bad" or "wrong" about being different in this way. But society is still a long way from truly accepting this type of biological difference as just another expression of human genetic diversity.

It makes sense that the enlightened Federation of centuries in the future would have a place for all in Starfleet, especially since various alien species might have forms of neurology and mentality that would be radically different that the nominally "normative" human range. For instance, Vulcans might be considered sociopathic from a human normative standpoint due to their lack of emotion. Or would such species be forced to have therapy sessions and take pills that make them more like humans so that they can work with humans, just because they are different?

Kor
 
Just listened to a podcast where someone's first impression was that Tilly was sorta the new Barclay. :vulcan:

Ezri, Barclay, Hoshi. All characters who don't entirely have their sh*t together. It's interesting.
 
Ezri was at least easy on the eyes. But I agree that Ezri sucked as a character. Jadzia overshadowed her in every way.

I'm not going to pick on Tilly though, too easy of a target. I'm getting Neelix/JarJar vibes from Tilly on this show, but hopefully the character won't go in that direction. The "I'm going to be a Captain" line was so cringe though.

It's obvious Tilly is meant to be an intentional mouthpiece character for the nerdy audience of the show. We'll see how effectively that plays out. Worst case scenario, Tilly will be a very sympathetic character to kill off. Kind of like the overly eager cadet in Wrath of Khan. We knew he was doomed from the getgo.

I always felt they couldn't replace Jadxia, so they tried to make her exact opposite.

Edit:

My view on Tilly is that she's just an awkward cheerful person who is perfectly at home in the Google-esque Starfleet which was how it was supposed to be between Enterprise and Kirk's time. There's nothing wrong with her but she's an explorer and not a soldier.
 
A Trojan Redhead. The most adorable infiltration imaginable.

Never mind the spore drive. They should make it the Tilly's Hair drive.

It could harness the radiation of awesomeness coming from Tilly's hair and win the war with the Klingons in two hours.

(Ordinarily it would be one hour, but you've got to allow one hour for the crew to bask in the awesomeness and thus be inspired to fight on. Because Tilly's hair is just that awesome.)
 
Nothing would make me happier than Tilly being the ultimate mastermind behind all this, sitting in the captains chair surronded by the crew's corpses and a devastated Klingon fleet.
 
The important thing about Tilly's presentation in the episode was that she was a complete professional in a crisis. Calm, firm and decisive.

I'd have been worried about the character if they portrayed her as something of a liability or less capable, but they didn't.
Agreed. Lorca appears to be an out of the box thinker (even in personnel issues) and is perfectly wiling to look beyond some obvious "superficial" peculiarities if he thinks the person will improve his crew (even cadets). Likewise I don't see the persnickety Stamets accepting a crewman into his department who wasn't completely qualified to handle whatever tasks are assigned, although Lorca could easily have overruled him on this.

I find Tilly interesting in a NOT Wesley Crusher kind of way. Her growth should be worth watching.

I didn't find her annoying, but I did find her character as out-of-place given the tone of the show.
I think she is supposed to look out-of-place, at least on the surface. But as we saw when she was on the Glenn, maybe not so out-of-place.
 
This was an oddly 20th-century viewpoint, I thought. It's 2017, and I'm not at all surprised to hear names I've never heard before, or to see names that deviate from traditional gender distinction. I'd think it would be perfectly common by the 23rd century, especially in an organization made up of many worlds. But I guess baby boys are still dressed in blue in the Trek future.
One of my classmates in college was a woman named Michael. We did a group project together and she told me about her name, but it was so long ago I don't remember the details. Anyway, something being atypical doesn't mean it never happens.
 
Just listened to a podcast where someone's first impression was that Tilly was sorta the new Barclay. :vulcan:

Ezri, Barclay, Hoshi. All characters who don't entirely have their sh*t together. It's interesting.

Three of my favorite characters. I hope Tilly lives up to the comparison!
 
She's more over the top than Ezri. Ezri was sweetly vulnerable. This cadet is (thus far) gratingly annoying.

Yeah, but she's also fairly original as a character. She';s refreshing, if not annoying at times but the complete package is pretty cool.

Heck, and why not, if this weren't Star Trek, the character trope would end up as the 20th potential girlfriend for Raj in "The Big Bang Theory". :lol:
 
Hoshi was nervous about deep space travel and freaked out over dead alien bodies and feeling the warp reactor shuddering but for the most part she wasn't a bag of frayed nerves who adorably blathered her way through conversations. Archer kept her under his wing from the day she boarded Enterprise and she was a regular presence on the bridge where both her captain and her friends could keep an eye on her. We don't yet know how often Tilly will interact with the rest of the lead cast or if she'll even appear in every episode.

So yeah, similar...but not so much.
 
Tilly is pretty shit so far. Guess an "adorable" female character was needed, "innocent and pure"?

The character is a walking stereotype. And her speech at the end was just stupid writing. Basically announcing character growth, like we're all stupid people who wouldn't pick up on it simply by watching the show. If there's more to her then meets the eye at first, let us discovery that, instead of telling us outright. Is "Show, don't tell" that unpopular now?

"Hi, I'm Cadet SuperCute SpecialNeeds - that's pretty much the first thing I tell everyone I meet because I just wandered in from a sitcom. I think maybe it was The Big Bang Theory."

This.
 
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