*cringe* I would have gone for 'secondary character', lol.
It would be no more of a 'crutch' than Picard being able to blow up the Borg Cube by firing at a spot that Data stated "does not appear to be a vital system" in Star Trek: First Contact. (Sorry that never made sense to em as Dr. Crusher stated she removed all the Borg Implants and corrected the DNA changes at the end of BoBW II. If Borg tech IS still in Picard, it's amazing in 3 years it never reasserted itself.)I sure hope not. I don't want there to be a TOS crutch to solving the problem. I'd rather this Spock just be a blood-thirsty murderer.
Kirk will appear, but it will be James R. Kirk. The man who commanded the Enterprise for a special mission to the edge of the Galaxy. He was cashiered out of the service for falsifying his logs after being turned in by Spock.
That's actually a VALID question too (IE HOW did Spock contact "The Keeper" as he NEVER had any direct contact with "The Keeper" (or any other Talosians) in the TOS Pilot "The Cage"
Sybok's mother was a Vulcan princess. Sarek was married at least 3 times.I'm looking forward to Michael's sex change to change into Sybok -- adds up (raised as siblings), and Spock saying "he's my brother, he was raised as my sister" would have just confused matters.
My thinking is that Pike spoke with Spock more about what happened at some point after they left Talos IV. It may be mentioned in this season of DSC, but if not, my thinking is Pike, Number One or Boyce mentioned it to Spock. He is, after all, Senior Staff on Enterprise, so he may be privy to information as to what happened on Talos IV.It would be no more of a 'crutch' than Picard being able to blow up the Borg Cube by firing at a spot that Data stated "does not appear to be a vital system" in Star Trek: First Contact. (Sorry that never made sense to em as Dr. Crusher stated she removed all the Borg Implants and corrected the DNA changes at the end of BoBW II. If Borg tech IS still in Picard, it's amazing in 3 years it never reasserted itself.)
IE - As long as the interaction makes sense TO THE STORY - it's fine. Hell, it may answer HOW Spock was able to get in contact with "The Keeper" on Talos IV to make sure Pike would be welcome to live with them after his accident - and to plan the court martial 'illusion' to keep Kirk and Co. busy until they got there in TOS S1 - "The Menagerie"
^^^
That's actually a VALID question too (IE HOW did Spock contact "The Keeper" as he NEVER had any direct contact with "The Keeper" (or any other Talosians) in the TOS Pilot "The Cage". The lat thing we saw of Spock prior to the ending was him standing in the Transporter Room exclaiming "The Women". So, here's WHERE Spock met and interacted with "The Keeper" (or some Talosians) directly; and knew of a way later to contact him and tell him of what happened to Pike, etc.![]()
Early on last season, I had a similar idea as well. In fact, I thought he was going to show up before Spock - saving the latter for the penultimate piece to Burnham's arc. I think post-Farragut/Tyco Kirk would make for a great character study. Like you say, he most certainly had PTSD but I've always wondered if he might not have even been a little suicidal.I made a joke on another thread about Kirk being a Section 31 agent, and Yistaan responded with his own well-liked post:
The more I think about it, the more this joke idea appeals to me. You have a character (young Kirk), a Lt. or Lt. Cdr. who is sidelined after the Farragut incident. His whole crew downright obliterated by an uncaring universal anomaly. He may have seen action in the Klingon War, too.
He's suffering from serious PTSD on Earth when recruited by Section 31. He could be our hero, not Georgiou, in the S31 show. Originally seeing validity in its actions to work around and above the law for the good of the Federation, as he grows more aware of the Section's sinister side, he also gains more control over his faculties.
He realizes that the core mission of Starfleet is diametrically opposed by the criminal activities of Section 31. The right hand man of Georgiou, who he only sees as a retired, highly decorated Starfleet captain, her attempts to manipulate him fail, and he enters a precarious situation with an unhinged commander in an unauthorized, officially nonexistant agency that he must navigate. The show ultimately becomes Kirk vs. Georgiou. Good vs. Evil. Right vs. Wrong. Law and order vs. Anarchy and chaos.
Partitioning Kirk to the S31 show and leaving Spock to make cameos on Discovery might also be good for decompartmentalizing these two TOS characters from each other.
Early on last season, I had a similar idea as well. In fact, I thought he was going to show up before Spock - saving the latter for the penultimate piece to Burnham's arc. I think post-Farragut/Tyco Kirk would make for a great character study. Like you say, he most certainly had PTSD but I've always wondered if he might not have even been a little suicidal.
So my thought was - back when Mirror Lorca was just a fan theory - that Kirk would be just the kind of person Lorca would take under his wing: someone whose tactical aptitude scores exceed any other graduate in the academy's history but was on the verge of washing out. Or worse.
I made a joke on another thread about Kirk being a Section 31 agent, and Yistaan responded with his own well-liked post:
The more I think about it, the more this joke idea appeals to me. You have a character (young Kirk), a Lt. or Lt. Cdr. who is sidelined after the Farragut incident. His whole crew downright obliterated by an uncaring universal anomaly. He may have seen action in the Klingon War, too.
He's suffering from serious PTSD on Earth when recruited by Section 31. He could be our hero, not Georgiou, in the S31 show. Originally seeing validity in its actions to work around and above the law for the good of the Federation, as he grows more aware of the Section's sinister side, he also gains more control over his faculties.
He realizes that the core mission of Starfleet is diametrically opposed by the criminal activities of Section 31. The right hand man of Georgiou, who he only sees as a retired, highly decorated Starfleet captain, her attempts to manipulate him fail, and he enters a precarious situation with an unhinged commander in an unauthorized, officially nonexistant agency that he must navigate. The show ultimately becomes Kirk vs. Georgiou. Good vs. Evil. Right vs. Wrong. Law and order vs. Anarchy and chaos.
Partitioning Kirk to the S31 show and leaving Spock to make cameos on Discovery might also be good for decompartmentalizing these two TOS characters from each other.
the Kirk/S31 stuff reminds me of Alias.. with JJ Prise. Where Sydney thought she was working for the CIA etc doing good, but was in fact with the bad guys, and her finding the good people in it, and going after the bad people. Not a bad premise, and in the LitVerse, Kirk has a passion for seaking out S31 and destroying it, maybe this is what lead to that, and why in Disco(ball) that Everyone seems to know about S31 and in Ds9 its a undercover squirrel section..
I wouldn't mind that type of series, Kirk and Georgou and a Teacher/mentor relationship, It would just be the timing on when Kirk finds out that he's a bad guy, and then goes after S31.
I noticed that in Disco, that they mentioned "Control" Was that in Ds9 or was it a take away from the LitVerse??
Slap me sideways, I'd watch the hell out of Young Kirk in the S31 series. Initially I thought it'd be a semi-redemption/anti-hero story for Georgiou and her bringing down S31 to tidy up the eventual timeline, but having her be the primary frenemy to a young Kirk is WAY better.
+1 for 'squirrel section'
Anyway, David Mack (write of Control) has implied to us in the Lit forum that it was just a coincidence and not related. As if that is gonna stop us, haha.
Also, James R Kirk was Burnham's best friend at the Academy and later lover. Spock's turning him in forever ruined any chance at reconciliation between him and Michael. From that point on he had no sister.Kirk will appear, but it will be James R. Kirk. The man who commanded the Enterprise for a special mission to the edge of the Galaxy. He was cashiered out of the service for falsifying his logs after being turned in by Spock.
Sybok's mother was a Vulcan princess. Sarek was married at least 3 times.
KIRK: The man may be a fellow Vulcan, but that doesn't...
SPOCK: You do not understand me, Captain. Sybok, also, is a son of Sarek.
KIRK: He's your brother brother? You made that up.
SPOCK: I did not.
KIRK: You did too. Sybok couldn't possibly be your brother because I happen to know for a fact that you don't have a brother.
SPOCK: Technically, you are correct. I do not have a brother.
KIRK: You see?
SPOCK: I have a half-brother.
KIRK: I've got to sit down.
McCOY: Let me get this straight. You and Sybok have the same father but different mothers.
SPOCK: Exactly. That is correct. Sybok's mother was a Vulcan princess. After her death, Sybok and I were raised as brothers.
KIRK: Why didn't you tell us this before?
SPOCK: I was not prepared to discuss matters of a personal nature. For that I am sorry.
Sarek's first wife was from Earth, according to his eponymous TNG episode. So, he either wasn't married to Sybok's mother
Either that, or they WERE married and the marriage was later annulled (so effectively it never happened). The latter explanation is what the novelverse has gone with.
As for Sybok: I can't remember, is he supposed to be older or younger than Spock? Perhaps Sybok has already been exiled from Vulcan as of DSC's time.
I hear he went nuts and tried taking over the Enterprise. That story about the transporter accident doubling things was a cover up to hide his existence.Also, James R Kirk was Burnham's best friend at the Academy and later lover. Spock's turning him in forever ruined any chance at reconciliation between him and Michael. From that point on he had no sister.
Aren't the Talosians supposed to appear at some point? Perhaps they have something to do with the "Spock murdered people" (i.e. an illusion).
Yes, we're also suppose to see the planet Talos as well.
Kurtzman very specifically stated that, in one of the first few interviews he gave about Season 2.Has this been stated officially or is it yet another fan theory?
We use essential cookies to make this site work, and optional cookies to enhance your experience.