It was the ones with speaking parts I was thinking of.![]()
Now you’ve lost me.

It was the ones with speaking parts I was thinking of.![]()
Too many blustering warriors straight out central casting. I'll take L'Rell over those idiot Duras sisters any day of the week.Now you’ve lost me.![]()
I do. He was a jerk.Kamarag (though no one remembers this)
I'm pretty sure this Pike is still just supposed to be a regular Captain, not a Fleet Captain.
Well, the two statements come in consecutive sentences from Kirk...
...and seem clearly intended to reflect the same occasion.
But if that's not the case, then there are only two possibilities:
1) Pike was promoted to Fleet Captain some time before Kirk took command of the Enterprise, and for some reason retained personal command of that particular ship despite the promotion
2) Pike was promoted to Fleet Captain some time after Kirk took command of the Enterprise, yet for some reason the two never met when the command was handed off
Why should those be a different thing?
Why would a promotion ceremony be conflated with a handover ceremony?
Kirk meeting the man would involve a relatively compact single event, such as a handshake; even if the two separate ceremonies were held the same day, they would still be separate ceremonies, only one of which would involve Kirk meeting Pike for the first time.
Because we know Pike was a captain already when Kirk was still an ensign.
And because Fleet Captain is a term never used to refer to any of the other captains we know of, so it makes sense that it is intended to be something different.
No one is conflating ceremonies.
Kirk says specifically that he took command from Pike when Pike was promoted.
Someone's upset, lol. Agree to disagree man.
Pike was fantastic. Great lead, and great authoritative presence onscreen. I liked him more than Kirk (who actually make more 'bigoted' comments during his run) .
All the Captains have had anger management issues throughout their respective runs.
Captain Pike is really what this show desperately needed, but sadly may not be enough to elevate everything.
Intriguing... Where would we learn this?
Or then the exact opposite - if there's no data on it, it may either be a marginal phenomenon or then not exist at all.
Why insist the dialogue refers to one and the same event or timeframe? Why isn't that conflating of ceremonies, when two functionally distinct ceremonial occasions are indeed being mentioned?
Absolutely not. There is no "when" there in the dialogue, and inserting a "when" there would alter the whole gist of it.
Timo Saloniemi
Pike is a Captain 13 years before the Menagerie.
Also, that he didn't graduate the Academy until he was assigned to Garrovick on the Farragut
so the Republic was a sort of cadet cruise for him
Best case scenario, Kirk was a junior officer on either the Farragut or the Republic when Pike had already been in command of the Enterprise for some time.
As for the rest, the dialogue clearly is intended to imply that Pike was promoted out of his command and Kirk met him because he took over that command.
Wait, they make TV shows to make money?It was a straight-up business move designed to prop CBS All-Access.
CBS knew Star Trek has a sizeable fanbase that would be willing to pay. This show was put out there to exploit their money to keep CBS All Access afloat.
I'm not surprised they announced a Picard series as a possibility next. Now they'll try to get money from the age demos that are nostalgic for TNG next.
Klingon's have rarely risen above being cartoons.
I do. He was a jerk.
Because they clearly say 'promoted to Fleet Captain.' You get promoted to a rank, Fleet Captain is a rank.Why should those be a different thing?
...whereas during that time he was being violently out of control of his anger at being captive rather than showing the sort of cunning and professionalism we've see from other captains in similar circumstances.
The dialogue makes it clear that anger is the only way to keep the Talosians out of one's head. Why would we criticize Pike for using the one tool at his disposal?
Cause on my read of the episode it's not so much he was using it as habitually succumbing because that was in his character. Maybe it would be worth a rewatch![]()
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