I mean, I could as well but I'd rather just enjoy the scene as intended.Not for me. If I can't analyze a short scene in five paragraphs or more, then I haven't had my coffee yet.
I mean, I could as well but I'd rather just enjoy the scene as intended.Not for me. If I can't analyze a short scene in five paragraphs or more, then I haven't had my coffee yet.
I wouldn't be surprised if this was the opening of the episode. It just feels like one of those one off scenes that would be at the start of a show.
It takes place in a Star Trek universe, so some jokes will make use of aspects of the Star Trek Universe. That's very different from being a self-referential parody.There's a lot of problems with this clip. It's a comic beat, possibly the cold opening of the episode (unrelated to Mariner and Boimler becoming envoys), but outside of the jokes, it doesn't really fit the Star Trek universe. This is a parody clip, and I am really hoping that the show continues to veer away from parody as McMahan insisted it would.
As others have said, this seems to be overthinking it. Some styles of comedy often rely on the absurdity of situations, and I think Lower Decks will be one of those styles of comedies. Wondering seriously why or why not it is possible to replicate a tricorder in Mariner's world is kind of missing the point of this light comedy fare.So this entity can create items from air molecules. That's cool, but doesn't replicator do that, in effect at least? Why does Mariner use this wish-granting entity to do something the replicator can give her? The easy answer is that there's limits built in which means a tricorder is not available to be replicated. That's a worrying thought, because it means Starfleet might be undersupplying its own personnel, not providing them with the latest advances or forcing them to utilize subpar technology.
I don't think the purple stripe is part of the joke. It just indicates that is the newest tricorder to an outside observer. The entity and Mariner know the exact specifications, somehow, to this purple tricorder that advance it further than others.
Logistically, beyond the wish for a tricorder, how is this matter-replicating entity so easily captured? It can travel through bulkheads and into a person's sternum, but not through their arms while being wrestled? Mariner was familiar with it as a "trans-dimensional energy being", so maybe she's dealt with this specific species before. She was pretty adamant that it was a bad guy who zaps people (but it never zapped her), and that it could be placed safely inside a storage pod. But then she lets it go to create the tricorder and power crystal, which uses up much of its mass.
As a smaller creature, the entity attempts to kill the Captain, whereas it only wanted Mariner and Tendi to supplicate themselves. Obviously it knows alot (tricorder designs, storage pods), so it probably recognized Captain Freeman, and by killing the Captain, it wanted to take over the ship with little recourse from the crew. I don't know if it died (I would doubt it) or just entered the Captain's body and left of its own accord at some future period (or even possesses her as some plot point in the episode). We'll have to wait and see what the episode gives us..
It seems like CBS likes to use the first scene of episodes as the teaser clip, for some reason.
What was funny ?
Humour is subjective. If you didn't find it funny, people explaining why it is funny probably won't magically make it funny for you.What was funny ?
That was awesome. I loved how Mariner immediately tackled the energy being, despite its threats.I thought that putting an energy being, the type always threatening the crews, into a headlock was pretty funny. YMMV.
There's a lot of problems with this clip. It's a comic beat, possibly the cold opening of the episode (unrelated to Mariner and Boimler becoming envoys), but outside of the jokes, it doesn't really fit the Star Trek universe. This is a parody clip, and I am really hoping that the show continues to veer away from parody as McMahan insisted it would.
So this entity can create items from air molecules. That's cool, but doesn't replicator do that, in effect at least? Why does Mariner use this wish-granting entity to do something the replicator can give her? The easy answer is that there's limits built in which means a tricorder is not available to be replicated. That's a worrying thought, because it means Starfleet might be undersupplying its own personnel, not providing them with the latest advances or forcing them to utilize subpar technology.
I don't think the purple stripe is part of the joke. It just indicates that is the newest tricorder to an outside observer. The entity and Mariner know the exact specifications, somehow, to this purple tricorder that advance it further than others.
Logistically, beyond the wish for a tricorder, how is this matter-replicating entity so easily captured? It can travel through bulkheads and into a person's sternum, but not through their arms while being wrestled? Mariner was familiar with it as a "trans-dimensional energy being", so maybe she's dealt with this specific species before. She was pretty adamant that it was a bad guy who zaps people (but it never zapped her), and that it could be placed safely inside a storage pod. But then she lets it go to create the tricorder and power crystal, which uses up much of its mass.
As a smaller creature, the entity attempts to kill the Captain, whereas it only wanted Mariner and Tendi to supplicate themselves. Obviously it knows alot (tricorder designs, storage pods), so it probably recognized Captain Freeman, and by killing the Captain, it wanted to take over the ship with little recourse from the crew. I don't know if it died (I would doubt it) or just entered the Captain's body and left of its own accord at some future period (or even possesses her as some plot point in the episode). We'll have to wait and see what the episode gives us.
So, I agree with the OP. The scene could've been better handled, without resorting to a self-referential comedy skit. The idea, already present from the first episode, that these Ensigns just shrug and eye roll when dealt with the cosmic horror of the universe, is great and the bread and butter of McMahan's vision for the show. But they might want to be a little more nuanced in how that is presented at times.
Especially if they are cold openings, and are in the same vein as the cold openings for Brooklyn Nine-Nine. The openings for BNN are stand-alone gags that very rarely (practically never?) have anything at all to do with the rest of the episode.Maybe because it isn't very spoilery?
I loved it, dude. Can't wait to see episode 2!
See, they want to make spin on the "malevolent energy creature", but in the practice they do very little with the parody potential. Also, they make Mariner wish for... Totally generic thing, where they could make either something funny in general or some more clever ST reference. Banana - hot was amusing. This one isn´t.
Good point.Humour is subjective. If you didn't find it funny, people explaining why it is funny probably won't magically make it funny for you.
I think a series can do that very well. Both MASH and Brooklyn 99 both are excellent examples that I have watched recently.Much of this is the thoughts I kind of had. I guess the scene is sort of humorous but it's hard to both take the scene as the comedic bit it's supposed to be but take the series "seriously" on some level if we're supposed to care about aspects like the stuff with Mariner and her parents.
I think a series can do that very well. Both MASH and Brooklyn 99 both are excellent examples that I have watched recently.
This series isn't "MASH."
I mentioned in past posts/threads that I hope it will be like Bob's Burgers.Yes it can.
This series isn't "MASH."
Yes...and?Yes it can.
This series isn't "MASH."
Nice to know they're getting more "Rick &n Morty"-ish in this episode...LOVE IT!
See, they want to make spin on the "malevolent energy creature", but in the practice they do very little with the parody potential. Also, they make Mariner wish for... Totally generic thing, where they could make either something funny in general or some more clever ST reference. Banana - hot was amusing. This one isn´t.
MASH got more serious as the series moved on. The humor was much more juvenile in the early seasons, but even those seasons had serious moments.Yes...and?
The levels of absurdity that show did in a military setting still surprise me. My wife and I are currently rewatching it from Season 1 and the stupidity and childish nature of some of the jokes early on were the very definition of immature.
I am quite aware. My wife and usually completely the whole series at least once a year since we got married.MASH got more serious as the series moved on. The humor was much more juvenile in the early seasons, but even those seasons had serious moments.
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