Marathon reply session!

Lotsa thought-provoking stuff in this thread...
One more thing. I'm really let down at how many different mysteries this episode explained away:
1. The dumb line introduced about "bio-neural readings" last episode showing it was Michael is handwaved
2. Gabrielle mentions in an offhand way in her log that she saved the New Edenists without really explaining how
3. Gabrielle tells Spock that she reached out to him because his dyslexia
4. The episode more or less closes the door on anyone else ever wearing the Red Angel suit
5. Sphere data - which was established as something Control wanted in Project Daedalus - is now the McGuffin for the entire season arc
6. Dark matter saved from asteroid in first episode is now used for technobabble solution (albeit with little success).
Basically, part of why this episode was so unsatisfying is it (and the previous episode) are pretty transparently just an awkward retcon of whatever the former showrunners planned, attempting to wedge them into Kurtzman's new story idea.
It's not surprising at all if one author starts a book and another author finishes it, what you get comes across as pretty incoherent.
It's a sure sign of sloppy writing when a story merely shows (or even just tells!) the audience that a thing happens, without sufficient explanation as to why and how. The underlying assumption is that if the audience saw or heard something, they'll simply accept it at face value without asking questions... even if the thing practically
screams for questions to be asked. It's been a recurring complaint even on shows as complex as
Game of Thrones (especially the last couple of seasons, since Benioff and Weiss went past what Martin had written and had to rely on their own devices), and Trek has certainly never been immune... but it also hasn't usually indulged quite as
blatantly as the past couple of weeks.
The show is very disjointed, probably from the mid-season change in the writer's room.
I don't really understand why the show would be doing this kind of blatant mid-arc course-correction (or misdirection) to begin with, even though we're all speculating about it being the case. Okay: the showrunners were shown the door.
But that was specifically said to be for behavioral reasons (even though "creative differences" is a standard-issue Hollywood excuse!), and the rest of the writing staff remained the same, no? So why would anyone involved (including Kurtzman) think that the change called for a screeching pivot in the direction of the story arc, or that attempting one was a good idea?
...Stamets has remained the technobabble guy, but given his background as an astromycologist it's pretty inexplicable he's just doing generic "tech" stuff now - especially considering in his back and forth earlier in the season with Reno it was clear that he doesn't know that much about normal Federation tech.
It's a thankless job, but at least he's in the episodes. Meanwhile, where
is Reno? Everyone seems to have enjoyed Tig Notaro's appearances so far, so why not use her more? Heck, for that matter, where is Cornwell? For a serialized story, DSC seems to have a hard time remembering who's on board from one week to the next.
This is what I mean about having too critical a mindset when watching a TV show.
If one takes just a moment or two, almost everything can be explained in some fashion.
This seems like a contradictory position to take. A show can ask audience members to turn off their critical thinking skills and just let "entertainment" wash over them (I usually try to avoid those kinds of shows, because I
enjoy critical thinking, but YMMV)...
or a show can ask them to put in the effort of filling in the narrative connective tissue that the writers have left out. But it can't really ask both things at the same time, at least not without generating cognitive dissonance.
The version of Control that "assimilated" Leland IS from the future. It used the wormhole from Mama Burnham's latest incursion to infiltrate the S31 ship computer. The "present" version of Control was destroyed earlier in the season.
None of what we are dealing with now is from the future, the future Control came back to try to help it's modern day self become fully sentient, but they stopped it when they spaced Ariam. The sphere data is also from the present, it is just all of the stuff that it experienced in the thousands or millions of years that it was around. Modern Control wants the data, because it can usually to finally become fully sentient.
I think
@SolarisOne has the right interpretation of things here... but the simple fact that something as important as this (the nature and motivation of the villain!) could so easily be understood in different ways by different viewers says that the writing suffers from a serious lack of clarity.
That, and it would explain the extreme interest in humanity... though it would be weird that [the Borg] would try to prevent First contact though... in any case, if they do it right, it can be the coolest thing ever
Would you want to put money on that outcome? We're talking about the DSC writers here. If they do it
badly, which seems the far safer bet, it would be a narrative clusterfuck of massive proportions.
Overall, it wasn't the actual Temporal [Cold] War that was the problem, it was the way it was eventually handled that became the issue.
(Nazi's invading the USA and so forth)
No, it was a problem from the beginning. The
concept of a stealth war across the timestream, being fought with the lives of unwitting proxies, isn't inherently a bad one... in fact it can be done well or even brilliantly; Asimov's classic novel
The End of Eternity springs to mind as an example.
But to do it well, you have to do the heavy lifting up front to make the story structurally sound... among other things, you have to establish the existence of players with a POV from outside the (malleable) timestream, you have to establish clear and meaningful stakes, you have to have a solid grasp of causal logic, you have to devise and use a consistent set of time-travel rules employing that logic, and you have to have some emotionally resonant conclusion in mind from the start.
Asimov did all of that. Berman and Braga did precisely none of it. They just threw random puzzle pieces at the audience for three years, without any sense of the bigger picture those pieces supposedly fit into.
...now I'm pretty sure it will not make sense at any point. The actions the RA and Control take simply are completely illogical. The Control could have done absolutely nothing, and would have gained access to the sphere data, when Discovery delivered it for the Starfleet to research. And the RA just makes no sense, she is hopping about bizarrely, but somehow utterly fails to actually do anything that would help her main goal, i.e. stopping the Control.
Indeed! In particular, I wondered this...
I still don’t understand why Dr. Burnham brought the sphere to Discovery so they would protect or delete the data. The sphere was dying when it trapped Discovery. ... Why didn’t Dr. Burnham use her abilities to keep everyone away from the sphere and just let it die?
One can fanwank that to an extent...
We are to assume that whatever alternatives you're thinking of did not work.
...but that doesn't really accomplish much, because it still begs the question: why did the writers have Mama Burnham say she'd steered the Sphere toward Discovery in the first place, if that fact would invite the questions (and require these assumptions) from the audience, when it would have been far easier just to skip that bit of dialogue completely, and let everyone continue to assume that the encounter with the Sphere was
unrelated to the main RA plot?
As long as there's any technology on a planet, Control can track it.
How do you figure? I haven't seen anything on-screen to suggest this.