• Welcome! The TrekBBS is the number one place to chat about Star Trek with like-minded fans.
    If you are not already a member then please register an account and join in the discussion!

Spoilers Star Trek: Picard General Discussion Thread

True. Also, isn't Del Arco just a sweetie - he knows his character is going to get killed off, but he still cares about ongoing storylines of the show.

It's also interesting she says the crew is not yet a family or unit... That is what I feel, too.
 
Star Trek: Picard Showrunner Michael Chabon Explains the Season Finale's Big Moments
https://www.ign.com/articles/picard-finale-michael-chabon-data-death-seven-raffi-star-trek

looks spoilerish at first sight, so I put it here.
ETA: Heh. Laris & Zhaban:
“I mean, we loved them,” laughs Chabon. “And it was really fun to write for them. And we expanded, particularly, Laris' role sort of on the fly as we were writing, because she was so awesome. But the degree to which those characters just so quickly became seemingly so beloved was a surprise. Definitely.”

So the question remains: Will they be fecking back in Season 2?

“We have no plans to ignore that enthusiasm,” Chabon responds. “Let me say that.”
 
Season 2: everyone dies.
giphy.gif
 
Unless Soji isn't going to be in Season Two, I don't see how that's possible.
Hmmm. 3187 minus 2396 (when she was created)... It's too late at night / early in the morning to do math in my head... wait, no, I've got this...

... do you think Soji could still be around after 791 years?
 
Soji and her people are 'biological synths'. Why wouldn't that also come with a natural age limit (just like the one Picard's been given)?

Also, even if it didn't come with an age limit, Data's age was unlimited, too, and he still survived less than a century. The galaxy is a dangerous place for adventuring souls.
 
Hmmm. 3187 minus 2396 (when she was created)... It's too late at night / early in the morning to do math in my head... wait, no, I've got this...

... do you think Soji could still be around after 791 years?
Absolutely.
... do you think Soji could still be around after 791 years?
I know there's always been an "everyone dies well before they should have to" fetish in Trek, but...
Also, even if it didn't come with an age limit, Data's age was unlimited, too, and he still survived less than a century. The galaxy is a dangerous place for adventuring souls.
New bodies can now be made without too much trouble. Doesn't matter if you're OG biological or a Synth. Again, Trek doesn't like going there, but has still invented multiple ways to cheat death and just chooses to ignore them most of the time.

In sum, you're damned right I think the individual known as Soji Asha can definitely make it that long, and beyond.

Also, even if it didn't come with an age limit, Data's age was unlimited, too, and he still survived less than a century. The galaxy is a dangerous place for adventuring souls.

He chose to die (both times).

* * *

Oh, and just so you know, I'm not backing down from this hypothesis, unless someone can convince me that all of the ways that Trek has invented to perpetuate individuals indefinitely are fake news (especially the one used to save Picard--remember, they had to intentionally make his new body mortal, which is why they made a point of saying so explicitly.)
 
Last edited:
I think the problem is that people don't understand just exactly what Soji and her kind represent. They either (wrongly) think her people are like Data on the inside or like Augments (I've seen both hypotheses in this forum over the past few weeks).

They're not just enhanced run-of-the-mill biology--they're new biology that mimics the functions of the old, but that incorporates the best parts of the artificial. They are, in effect, what the Borg have always claimed they wanted to be, far moreso than Data himself ever could have been--a perfect blending of the two.

Now, given that Trek loves to come up with game-changing stuff and then promptly forgets it, we probably won't see the effects creating such a new biological paradigm would have on a setting. But let's be clear. We're not in Kansas anymore, folks.
 
Absolutely.

I know there's always been an "everyone dies well before they should have to" fetish in Trek, but...

New bodies can now be made without too much trouble. Doesn't matter if you're OG biological or a Synth. Again, Trek doesn't like going there, but has still invented multiple ways to cheat death and just chooses to ignore them most of the time.

In sum, you're damned right I think the individual known as Soji Asha can definitely make it that long, and beyond.



He chose to die (both times).

* * *

Oh, and just so you know, I'm not backing down from this hypothesis, unless someone can convince me that all of the ways that Trek has invented to perpetuate individuals indefinitely are fake news (especially the one used to save Picard--remember, they had to intentionally make his new body mortal, which is why they made a point of saying so explicitly.)

I don't really disgree with what you're saying here but it isn't actually a defence of your original claim. Specifically:

Unless Soji isn't going to be in Season Two, I don't see how that's possible.

There's a huge difference between 'Soji could still be alive 800 years later' and 'Soji obviously should/must still be alive 800 years later'.

And yeah Data chose to die - in less than century because of his character. So why should Soji not eventually make the same choice between now and 800 years later? And that's without even pointing out the many times Data was nearly destroyed without any choice, the many other androids we've seen destroyed, the fates of Lore and B4 or the fact that Dahj demonstrably didn't last 4 years (and Saga and Jana presumably not much longer than that).

If the writers chose to have Soji still alive in dsc s3, there would be nothing unbelievable about that. But if they chose to have her long dead as Garth said there would be nothing unbelievable about that, either. 800 years is a long time and Soji is neither invulnerable nor necessarily exclusively motivated by her own interests and we don't even know if she would want immortality at all or whether she was actually designed to be immortal in the first place.
 
Last edited:
As far as Trek crossovers go, it's better than Star Trek-Transformers... I guess

To view this content we will need your consent to set third party cookies.
For more detailed information, see our cookies page.
T3kHW5P.png
 
If you are not already a member then please register an account and join in the discussion!

Sign up / Register


Back
Top