The Cockney one.Dick or Jerry?
Why she wasn't mentioned by Spock remains a mystery though.
Spock's been alive for almost 200 years. We've seen a fraction of that on screen. He's probably mentioned her a lot.(Why she wasn't mentioned by Spock remains a mystery though
They totally teamed up. Of course they got their asses kicked, but it was worth it.But did Spock and Michael prank each other, or did they sometimes team up against the full Vulcan bullies we see Spock dealing with in TAS and Star Trek 2009.
Why she wasn't mentioned by Spock remains a mystery though.
This. Anyone who thinks there's some "mystery" in need of explanation here must either never have watched TOS, or not paid attention while doing so. It's exactly in line with Spock's character as portrayed there over and over and over again. Another example besides the ones you mention is when Chapel asks him point blank in "What Are Little Girls Made Of?" (TOS) if he's ever been engaged. He doesn't answer. Then in "Amok Time" (TOS) we find out he's been engaged since he was seven!Not really. By his own admission Spock was never prone to discuss matters of a personal nature. Kirk didn't know that Sarek and Amanda were Spock's parents until after they were already on board the Enterprise, and even then Spock didn't volunteer the information until asked. He tried to take off and take care of Pon Farr without letting Kirk in on what was happening. Kirk and Spock had served together for over 20 years and Spock never mentioned Sybok. This is no different.
(Kirk and McCoy are seriously holding the idiot ball in "Journey To Babel" though. Even if his parentage could somehow implausibly not be specified in either his service or medical records, Spock repeatedly mentioned that his mother was human and his father was a Vulcan ambassador in previous episodes. Put two and two together, will ya fellas?)
(Kirk and McCoy are seriously holding the idiot ball in "Journey To Babel" though. Even if his parentage could somehow implausibly not be specified in either his service or medical records, Spock repeatedly mentioned that his mother was human and his father was a Vulcan ambassador in previous episodes. Put two and two together, will ya fellas?)
-MMoM![]()
Not to mention Cousin I'it.To be fair, the fact that Sarek has a human woman in tow apparently comes as a surprise to Kirk and McCoy when the doors swoosh open; there isn't all that much time for them to do the math.
I mean, if Spock is so secretive about what he had for breakfast or why he's currently dying, imagine how little advance information the Vulcan Diplomatic Service will divulge about this random Ambassador Vulcanname who is about to come aboard...
(What I then have to wonder is why, if Vulcans are infamous for never providing a point man and his informative briefcase, the pilots of Kirk's shuttle didn't surreptitiously send up a few advance facts about their passengers?)
As for Michael, Sarek now has quite a pattern. I don't think we have much reason to think Spock's extended family would be limited to a single half-brother and a single adopted sister! Indeed, "Yesteryear" suggests the average member of Sarek's family is unable to keep track of his or her innumerable relatives, so that a Cousin Selek can easily slip in when needed.
Timo Saloniemi
Especially if his foster sister was a mutineer who was widely hated across Starfleet for her perceived role in starting the war with the Klingons. Spock has to deal with enough prejudice just for being a Vulcan; imagine if Baily or McCoy found out he was the foster brother of Michael Burnham!Remember: Spock didn't even tell his Captain and shipmates that Sarek of Vulcan was his father until more than two years into Kirk's five-year mission. As late as the koon-ut-kalifee marriage ceremony all they knew is that Spock's family owned the arena in which the ritual combat would take place and that his family was one of power and influence in Vulcan society. If Spock could hide the true nature of his father's career and the existence of his half-brother Sybok for so long then not mentioning Michael Burnham suddenly seems not only possible but very easy to do for a guy who managed to hide that his own dad was one of the Federation's most respected and accomplished interstellar ambassadors.
I thought Loud as a Whisper was one of the better Season 2 episodes, but yeah that death scene was corny as hell.Jesus, early TNG could be friggin' brutal.
How do you keep your boss in the dark about such high-profile parents without getting court-martialled for that alone? Has that ever been asked by anyone in fandom across the decades?
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