Again, "acting" based on her interaction with Saru vis-a-vis Burnham going rogue.
It's still stupid. They should have introduced a lower deck character who can act like Edington did on DS9.
Again, "acting" based on her interaction with Saru vis-a-vis Burnham going rogue.
There's always exceptions to the rule of course. But while Jean-Luc Picard's speech Measure of a Man was okay. His overly self-serving speech about the rights of the Borg now named Hugh, superseded the opportunity to destroy an enemy that assimilated entire civilizations was cringe-worthy as written and ranged really hollow when he delivered it.Like in "Measure of a Man" where the federation were right or "I Borg" oh wait
There's always exceptions to the rule of course. But while Jean-Luc Picard's speech Measure of a Man was okay. His overly self-serving speech about the rights of the Borg now named Hugh, superseded the opportunity to destroy an enemy that assimilated entire civilizations was cringe-worthy as written and ranged really hollow when he delivered it.
Any apparent connection between the pandemic and the show hinges on the use of the number “19.” I can’t see this as anything other than pure coincidence. When was the script of 3x07 actually written...?
The official names COVID-19 and SARS-CoV-2 were issued by the WHO on 11 February 2020. Prior to that, the temporary name 2019-nCov was given in Jan 2020.
Given everything else that was going on, is it reasonable to assume that there would be script re-writes and pickup shoots just to include this?
Honestly, let’s stay well clear of Q-Anon territory, shall we...?
I would not put it past the writers to use SB-19 as a Brexit reference.
If nothing else, Burnham is following the grand Trek tradition of speechifyingThe speeches written for the character of Michael Burnham are so far overall much better than the hypocritical "The Federation is always right" diatribes delivered by Patrick Stewart as Jean-Luc Picard during the entire run of TNG. YMMV.
I'm not making any particular claim, just that I would not be surprised. ("would not put it past" does have a particular meaning, no?)Or...prerhaps it was just a random combination of letters and numbers the writers assigned.
Crazy...I know! But it is possible.
I doubt it. I think they're just taking a break from it.Is the Detmer plot all done?
Because everybody in the Federation does? The Vulcans were still very much Feds when this happened - perhaps more so than before, the experiment being dictated upon them from on high and all.
The Burn being in 3019 would give a slightly different fix than Booker's guesstimate, but not grossly so. And it would be our first real fix, beyond "over a century ago". (Or then it's a total coincidence, or more related to the filming having been conducted in 2019 than to anything else.)
Timo Saloniemi
What if it refers to a place rather than a time...
Like StarBase-19 ??
I’m saying not everyone will be mixed, not that there won’t be mixing. Even today there are people who’s ancestry is limited to one region. My mother has two ethnicities : Scots and English and both are on the same island.
My mother's family has been America since the 1600s.. There are no doubt people today who's ethnic background has remained unchanged for millennia either through isolation or choice. The more cosmopolitan planets are more likely to have people of mixed backgrounds than a remote colony world settled by a single species.And how far back does this go? We’re talking or about 1200 years of interstellar mixing here...
i really don’t see the problem: we really didn’t know much about her apart from her being michael’s mother and messing with time travel, so it’s not as if they changed the character to bring her there. Perhaps she always felt a calling to become a nun. Perhaps the idea of complete candor alluded her. Perhaps it just seemed the most logical way to integrate in a future with no stable points of reference.Gabrielle Burnham. I have no problem with her being in The Future. My rationale is that when she was sucked back through the vortex/wormhole/whatever, she ended up on Terralysium in this future. Or at least some sort of Class M planet, if not Terralysium. I can suspend my disbelief there. But then there's her being a Qowat Milat...
I can see how they drew a roadmap to get her there. This is how I reverse-engineered the way they got there
So not much further back.My mother's family has been America since the 1600s..
I guess that the sentilese...There are no doubt people today who's ethnic background has remained unchanged for millennia either through isolation or choice. The more cosmopolitan planets are more likely to have people of mixed backgrounds than a remote colony world settled by a single species.
File this under "Technically possible but highly, highly unlikely." If she had a calling to become a nun, she'd have been more inclined to raise Burnham on religion. In "New Eden", when Pike asks Burnham and Owosekun if they've been in a church, Burnham gives a very wishy-washy answer. I'm thinking if Gabrielle were religious enough that she'd have thoughts about becoming a nun, she would've had Michael go to church. From the looks of "New Eden", Pike was the only one of those three who was raised on religion.Perhaps she always felt a calling to become a nun.
That sounds more like it. If "Perpetual Infinity" is anything to go by. I'd go with this one.Perhaps the idea of complete candor alluded her.
This.
I'm getting sick of the melodramatic tears. It happens so often that it doesn't feel authentic anymore and thus I feel nothing.
perhaps she felt the calling but hated religion! As you said, technically anything is possible, the character is almost completely new.File this under "Technically possible but highly, highly unlikely." If she had a calling to become a nun, she'd have been more inclined to raise Burnham on religion. In "New Eden", when Pike asks Burnham and Owosekun if they've been in a church, Burnham gives a very wishy-washy answer. I'm thinking if Gabrielle were religious enough that she'd have thoughts about becoming a nun, she would've had Michael go to church. From the looks of "New Eden", Pike was the only one of those three who was raised on religion.
File this under "Technically possible but highly, highly unlikely." If she had a calling to become a nun, she'd have been more inclined to raise Burnham on religion. In "New Eden", when Pike asks Burnham and Owosekun if they've been in a church, Burnham gives a very wishy-washy answer. I'm thinking if Gabrielle were religious enough that she'd have thoughts about becoming a nun, she would've had Michael go to church. From the looks of "New Eden", Pike was the only one of those three who was raised on religion.
In terms of Europeans in North America, that's about as far back as you can get.So not much further back.
No idea what you're saying here.I guess that the sentilese...
We use essential cookies to make this site work, and optional cookies to enhance your experience.