"We've evolved"Yeahbut,
"No, we will not break the rules."
-Michael Burnham
It's a bit on-the-nose, isn't it?
-Captain Jean Luc Picard
Yup. Star Trek has never been subtle. Since we insist upon comparing shows.
"We've evolved"Yeahbut,
"No, we will not break the rules."
-Michael Burnham
It's a bit on-the-nose, isn't it?
Don't careWhatever one thinks, one thing is certain: CBS doesn't see it all as one license!![]()
I got the distinct feeling that the crew of the USS Shenzhou really were not typical Star Fleet "soldiers" and that's exactly the way Georgiou wanted it.^ For me its not her flaws, its the whole righteous Starfleet vibe she has going on, she would not fit as a crew member under Captain Kirk. Actually the Discovery version of Starfleet are run by a bunch of wimps. The 'we're not soldiers, we're explorers' rubbish is right out of the Kelvin verse, yep that's it, these are the Kelvinversion of the characters, the Prime versions would expect to kick butt when the Klingons showed up!
Honestly (no joke) I can't make it through a TNG episode these days without nodding off. It's all just so stilted and sterile and (to use your word) boring. At this point, I find even ENT easier to watch...
I would say, though, that I can still enjoy seasons 5, 6, and most of 7.
I might have missed it, what leads you to believe Lorca selected his crew? As opposed to he was assigned by Starfleet to command a ship with a pre-existing crew?she was't technically part of the original crew he selected
He selected some of the crew specifically to make Burnham feel at ease. That's why there are former Shenzhou crewmemebers coincidentally on board.I might have missed it, what leads you to believe Lorca selected his crew? As opposed to he was assigned by Starfleet to command a ship with a pre-existing crew?
Well, it has to be more than just coincidence that a large portion of DISCOVERY's crew is from the Shenzhou. (especially the bridge crew)I might have missed it, what leads you to believe Lorca selected his crew? As opposed to he was assigned by Starfleet to command a ship with a pre-existing crew?
Well, we got Worf's backstory.![]()
He selected some of the crew specifically to make Burnham feel at ease. That's why there are former Shenzhou crewmemebers coincidentally on board.
At least I'm pretty sure that is said or implied in the show.
From Memory Alpha (https://memory-alpha.wikia.com/wiki/Worf#Origins_and_early_development):Funny thing about Worf - when is his back story first established - given that originally the Klingon empire was part of the Federation in S1 (and S2?) was he actually an orphan or simply a federation citizen from the Empire?
Worf's originally planned backstory, in the "TNG Bible", was that he had been on a Klingon ship in one of the last Earth-Klingon battles; and had been rescued by Starfleet, at the age of 8. The episode "Heart of Glory" established the slightly different backstory involving the sneak Romulan attack on Khitomer.
Well, it has to be more than just coincidence that a large portion of DISCOVERY's crew is from the Shenzhou. (especially the bridge crew)
Detmer and Saru. Who else is from Shenzhou?
The entire bridge crew no? Lots of people eating together away from Burnham.
No, only bridge crew from Shenzhou are Saru and Keyla Detmer. Lots of people eating away of Burnham aren't proof that they are from Shenzhou. Burnham is widely know as first mutineer and person who started war.
Picard - I prefer movie Picard to TNG PicardFuck, if you don't like Burnham's Starfleet righteousness I'd hate to think how you must perceive characters like Picard and Janeway.
I got the distinct feeling that the crew of the USS Shenzhou really were not typical Star Fleet "soldiers" and that's exactly the way Georgiou wanted it.
She had a ship full of scientists and wanna-be explorers on purpose.
She seemed to have a more of a "Motherly-Teaching" type of Captaincy, especially with her bridge crew.
I also believe that Lorca did the exact same thing, but for a completely different reason...
He wanted a crew that would be completely malleable and would never question any of his orders.
Burnham being the one sole exception.
(but he had nefarious reasons to bring her on board and she was't technically part of the original crew he selected )
What better way for him to complete his MU escapades than to pick people who just lost a Captain and ship due to a perceived case of insubordination. They became his "sheep for the slaughter".
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How do you explain the idiot Admiral who got killed in the first episode, if folks like him ran World War Two on the Allied side, the Germans/Italians and Japanese would have won! He was Neville Chamberlain in a uniform.
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