Greg, no one has ever accused Sarek of being a good parent and role model. 

I agree that would be an interesting angle to explore, though based on what's presented on screen, and if we take the deleted scene from TFF into account where Spock and Sybok reenact the day Sybok left Vulcan, Spock was still a child when Sybok was exiled. If Michael were around prior to Sybok's exile, I'm guessing it would likely only be a year or so. Sybok had already moved out of the home, which would explain why we never seen him in any of the flashbacks in season 2. I'm guessing the only time he showed up was for Vulcan Thanksgiving dinner, which I imagine for that family was hella awkward.I'd be interested in a Disco project that dealt with Burnham and Sybok. I'm not sure how many other people are, but I'd like it. Drill down into his character, and he's rather fascinating in what he says about Vulcan philosophy and, more broadly, religious history. Sybok is the heir to the heretical traditions, essentially a modern Gnostic to the traditional Vulcan orthodoxy. I could see Sybok having real issues with his father trying to fit Burnham into the traditional Vulcan mold.
if we take the deleted scene from TFF into account where Spock and Sybok reenact the day Sybok left Vulcan, Spock was still a child when Sybok was exiled.
There's nothing wrong with the idea of Sybok. It's just he was introduced in a very bad movie.
I remain amused by the realization that all three of Sarek's children hijacked Starfleet vessels at one point. Spock stole the Enterprise in "The Menagerie," Sybok stole the Enterprise-A, and Burnham famously staged a mutiny on her ship.
Talk about a track record!
David Goodman is no longer writing the Spock book. He mentioned it in a podcast interview I listened too awhile back.
There's nothing wrong with the idea of Sybok. It's just he was introduced in a very bad movie.
I wouldn't mind seeing him explored on DISCO or whatever.
If someone wanted to tell a story about Sybok's past, they'd only have to honor what actually ended up in the final cut. They could use ideas from a deleted scene if they wanted to, but they certainly wouldn't be forbidden to contradict it.
Yes. Sybok was the best part of ST V, and it's not fair to treat the character as toxic just because of his context.
I've been a little disappoint how little we've seen of Sybok in the tie-ins. The Final Frontier is not a great movie, but I think the character Sybok has a ton of potential, and could be great if the right writer came along with the right story.
EDIT: I was actually writing this post before I saw Greg and Christopher's.
I liked Sybok as well, a lot of that has to do with the performance of Laurence Luckinbill. I'll admit, at first I was a bit put off that Spock had this never before seen half-brother.
It was no more off-putting than TWOK revealing that Kirk had a never-before-seen adult son. Or "Amok Time" revealing that Spock had a never-before-seen fiancee.
And "Amok Time" is one of those that backs up TFF in a way in that Spock doesn't discuss private matters even with his closest friends unless he has no choice.
See also "Journey to Babel," where Spock doesn't mention that Ambassador Sarek is his father until Sarek and Amanda are literally aboard the ship. Nor do Kirk or McCoy know that Spock has been estranged from his father for eighteen years; Amanda has to explain this to Kirk.
Probably part of the reason the "Discovery" team wasn't too worried about adding Burnham to his family history. There are a lot of hidden skeletons in the Sarek family closet.
The original team, perhaps. Unfortunately the season 2 team didn't see it that way and instead tacked on the utterly nonsensical "The entire existence of this starship and every member of its crew is now permanently classified in order to cover up just one mission they were on."
I think the Burham angle was just part of that though. They seemed to want to explain why there was never any mention of the Discovery and spore drive again.
Then they could've done the exact same thing they did with the Mirror Universe at the end of season 1 -- just classify those specific events. (You don't need to explain why the ship wasn't mentioned, since there are lots of ships that never got mentioned again -- Decker's Constellation, Tracey's Exeter, Wesley's Lexington, you name it.) The only reason they could've had for the absurd idea of classifying the entire existence of everyone involved with the project (which would be impossible to achieve given all the people they interacted with over their lives, and would only draw attention to the thing that's supposed to be covered up) was as a really, really terrible excuse for the lack of mention of the people involved. Which, again, there doesn't need to be an excuse for.
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