Thus far, it has not been obvious to me.A and C are obviously true, B is nonsense. C is what I find distasteful.
Thus far, it has not been obvious to me.A and C are obviously true, B is nonsense. C is what I find distasteful.
I really can't help with that.Thus far, it has not been obvious to me.
ObviouslyI really can't help with that.
It's the implication that the death was a) deliberately funny and b) Connolly was an audience surrogate for daring to challenge Burnham and c) some how we are supposed to take pleasure in his death.
People can find it funny-I don't but that's not the issue. My issues are around the implications towards the writing staff.
Huh, where does the idea of him being an ”audience surrogate“ come from? I didn‘t get that at all from the episode.b) Connolly was an audience surrogate for daring to challenge Burnham
It‘s the same actress in both seasons.Ex Astris Scientia/Bernd Schneider points out in his episode review that Burnham appeared younger in the Learning Center flashback than in the moving-in flashback, and ops to disregard the “New Eden” older-child Burnham.
Any ideas why the season 1 actress may not have been reused, other than availability?
Fan speculation because he was explaining himself to Burnham in a condescending tone.Huh, where does the idea of him being an ”audience surrogate“ come from? I didn‘t get that at all from the episode.
Fan speculation because he was explaining himself to Burnham in a condescending tone.
Huh, where does the idea of him being an ”audience surrogate“ come from? I didn‘t get that at all from the episode.
I find it amusing people are speculating on how S2 flashback Burnham looks older than S1 flashback Burnham. Well, duh, they liked the original actress and reused her, but sadly didn't have a time machine available to de-age her.![]()
I find it amusing people are speculating on how S2 flashback Burnham looks older than S1 flashback Burnham. Well, duh, they liked the original actress and reused her, but sadly didn't have a time machine available to de-age her.![]()
Wouldn't be worth the outrage. You think people think the death was poorly handled now...It really says something about fans interpreting Connolly that way.
"He challenged Burnham and then gets killed! That's the writers sending a message to critics of Burnham!!!"
It almost makes me wish Burnham expressed joy out of his death just to see more outraged reactions from that group of fans. Almost.
Yes.Is suspension of disbelief so hard to muster?
Which, in my opinion, Connolly's death wasn't glossed over. The humor seems to be read in to it, and doesn't strike me as intentional.It's even worse than just glossing over the death of an extra and acting like it's no big deal, IMHO.
I don't think that Connolly was meant as some message that anti-Burnham fans deserve to die or anything. I do think that he was meant to be purposefully annoying - including mansplaining to Burnham. I also think the implication - that it's okay and even a bit funny that he died because he was an arrogant jerk - is pretty mean spirited. I might accept that from a jokey horror film or something, but I don't like it in Trek. It's even worse than just glossing over the death of an extra and acting like it's no big deal, IMHO.
That said, this is not an issue I care much about, quite honestly.
I would say another obvious purpose in between those two was to be an annoyance. So it makes sense that the writers would embody him with characteristics they would find annoying, and/or imagine their intended audience would find so.Connolly was there for two purposes: 1. To throw Burnham and the audience off of the idea Spock would board Disco. 2. To die.
There is no ulterior motive. He was a fucking redshirt (in blue). Anything else is reading too far into the purpose of the character.
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