they could. but I prefer a 10 part arc that includes this part as wellHeh ...
They could probably make that into a 5 or 6 episode tale.
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they could. but I prefer a 10 part arc that includes this part as wellHeh ...
They could probably make that into a 5 or 6 episode tale.
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A lot of discussion as to whether she was fired, she quit, was reassigned, or discharged has to do with some poor writing choices and this was just one of them in the episode. Don't get me wrong, I enjoy Picard, I actually really liked the first two episodes, but this third episode felt more poorly written to me.
"I never believed Starfleet would give into intolerance and fear" - uhh, have they not watched Deep Space Nine?
In 0x03 when raffi is snapping at picard for living in his fancy house while she lives in her hovel in the desert...
It feels to me like the motivation of the writers is to be cynical about the idea of the federation.
Just about all of it.Rafi is a drug addict.
How much of her anger is projection and self-loathing?
I think that's ultimately what matters no matter the "facts" of the situation.Yeah it’s the abandonment/hurt that’s really behind it all.
[QUOTE="DarthPipes”]The problem with the Raffi character, along with the fact that the show’s plot is juggling too much and some of it doesn’t make sense, is indicative of what the true problem with this show is. This show is DESPERATELY trying to be edgy, topical TV. At times it seems like it’s just copying Ron Moore’s playbook for Battlestar Galactica. Starfleet and the Federation have become evil and intolerant, check. A character is a drug addict, check. Another character has PTSD, check. Throw in a mystery box in Dahj (which could be interesting but past history suggests it won’t be) and the show wants to loudly declare that they are “daring” television. Just concentrate on being good television and the rest can fall into place.
Rafi is a drug addict.
How much of her anger is projection and self-loathing?
But overall, this all is a far cry from Roddenberry's idea of a humanity that has undergone a development. The late 24th century of Picard is a mere mirror of our time, and not any longer a vision of the future.
I think that’s overstating the distance Starfleet has fallen. Aside from the one traitor, none of them seem evil, and only intolerant specifically toward people from nations they have been enemies with for a long time. That’s not the perfect idealist Starfleet of TNG’s era but it’s not evil.
I agree it wasn’t well explained why Rafi was drummed out of Starfleet instead of just getting reassigned.
Rafi is a drug addict.
How much of her anger is projection and self-loathing?
After this episode... I'm really having a problem with using this new federation\starfleet image as a natural progression of the federation\starfleet we last saw in DS9\voyager. In 0x03 when raffi is snapping at picard for living in his fancy house while she lives in her hovel in the desert... it kind of throws into question everything I know about the state of living in the federation. Adding to the fact that they are producing humanoid androids and storing them in boxes for labour, choosing to not help the romulans makes no sense either.
It feels to me like the motivation of the writers is to be cynical about the idea of the federation. Trying to put current day values and government structures into one that was not intended to be that. Just so they can have the protagonist(s) struggle against them. I feel like that is backwards to what star trek was intended to be... which to me was writing stories that show how the more positive outlook of our future deals with situations we struggle with today or might struggle with.
The real story shouldn't be this synth story... but it should have been about how the people of the federation deal with a collapsing empire after a critical natural disaster.
She's not a drug addict until the show tells us she's a drug addict. Actor interviews don't count.
Most of the ideas for improving this part of the backstory for Raffi and Picard would involve giving Raffi even less of a reason for hating Picard. There in lies the problem. The braintrust of Picard producers apparently decided that Raffi needs to be furious with Picard, and this what they came up with. It falls dead flat. It makes no sense that she would be "fired", or to blame Picard for it or anything that happened to her in the years after that. It is just important that she be mad at him, for whatever reason, and so this is what they decided to do to establish that. It was yet another storytelling Fart.
She smokes snakeweed (the 24th Century equivalent of pot).
Hugh was subtle, too subtle maybe in that if I didn't know ahead of time he was coming his namedrop by Soji might have been missed entirely by me and I wouldn't really know who this character was.
Everyone who smokes pot is an addict? Nancy Reagan, is that you?
She's not a drug addict until the show tells us she's a drug addict. Actor interviews don't count.
Everyone who smokes pot is an addict? Nancy Reagan, is that you?
Ol' Bernd is being hard to please, reliably, again.
http://www.ex-astris-scientia.org/episodes/pic1.htm#theendisthebeginning
Yet he gave "In the Pale Moonlight" an 8 without mentioning the failings of humanity or how we're not evolved or a vision of the future.
It doesn't say explicitly that at all. It instead, IMO, implies that Picard provided her purpose and protection. When he resigned her behavior suggests that, and her reaction and rants during his visit to her, plus her providing of help and showing up on the ship tells us that as well.
Because of her drug history, I think she's a somewhat unreliable narrator. Only somewhat. She's telling the truth as she sees it, but it's filtered through a lens. She was probably very good at what she does and that's probably also what kept her going.Rafi is a drug addict.
How much of her anger is projection and self-loathing?
There are plenty of ways you could have made it so Raffi had a beef with Picard that made more sense that what we got.
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