Considering the high percentage of stupid admirals, probably not.Because I would like to believe that Starfleet has more than one exceptional crew?
Considering the high percentage of stupid admirals, probably not.
Hence Kirk's warning to Picard in ST:GEN....Must be the position. I bet they were perfectly capable back when they were captains.
Yes. Hence my intense distrust of 007.Seven ate nine?![]()
That's funny...Well, given that Picard hates admiral banquets, I don't think he'll agree to become one anytime soon.
Must be the position. I bet they were perfectly capable back when they were captains.
That scene has never sat well with me. Kirk didn't know Picard, so for all he knew, Picard was the sort of man who would be happier in the Admiralty. I understand it was more an expression of his own regret, but even so, not everyone is wired the same, and Kirk should know that.Hence Kirk's warning to Picard in ST:GEN....![]()
009 was a clown.
That scene has never sat well with me. Kirk didn't know Picard, so for all he knew, Picard was the sort of man who would be happier in the Admiralty. I understand it was more an expression of his own regret, but even so, not everyone is wired the same, and Kirk should know that.
I don't know. We never saw Kirk command a battle group or fleet that I can recall. Maybe Kirk becoming Admiral was just an example of the Peter Principle - a person will be promoted to the point of their own incompetence. His best destiny was to be a starship captain. But Picard was commanding small fleets as a captain. Hard to argue that the captain's chair commanding a single ship was the place where he could best "make a difference", like Kirk was trying to tell him.If Kirk could have commanded a battle group or something like that, he wouldn't have resisted.
I
Star Trek Generations and Insurrection have aged better than Star Trek First Contact. All the TNG films have their issues, but GEN and INS capture the spirit of TNG much better than Picard going full Ahab on a bunch of Borg. Now I'm a little older and wiser than when ST:FC came out, I actually think it's the inferior of the three (NEM is still the worst).
Kirk had a senior crew that sacrificed their careers (only Sulu escaped) to follow him around for 30 years, he had an ego to boostThat scene has never sat well with me. Kirk didn't know Picard, so for all he knew, Picard was the sort of man who would be happier in the Admiralty. I understand it was more an expression of his own regret, but even so, not everyone is wired the same, and Kirk should know that.
Unpopular Opinion: Prequels and alternate time lines are dumb ideas for new Star Trek movies and TV shows. If a new series or new movie was set in the 25th century it could honor Star Trek's history without being constricted by it. The future is the way to go. TNG became an icon because it was set 80 years past the days of Kirk. This must be an unpopular opinion because every major Star Trek release after 2002 has been a prequel. It's a pity we had to wait until Picard Stewart turned 80 for this to change.
Kirk had a senior crew that sacrificed their careers (only Sulu escaped) to follow him around for 30 years, he had an ego to boost
Status quo...keep the status quo, Jean-Luc.Kirk had a senior crew that sacrificed their careers (only Sulu escaped) to follow him around for 30 years, he had an ego to boost
I would agree with that, to the point that I would rather revisit all of the Kelvin films vs. most of the TNG films, with First Contact being the outlier, but only by a thin margin. It might beat out Beyond.New hot take: The Kelvin films are, *on average*, more entertaining than the TNG films.
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