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Spoilers Star Trek: Discovery 3x13 - "That Hope Is You, Part 2"

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no one has an explanation as far as I’ve seen so far.
One possibility: Discovery was about to be recaptured, shields failing, with no guarantee that the spore drive would work. So, blowing up the warp core ensures that The Chain wouldn’t get the drive.

Another possibility: Burnham seemed to believe that the “pesticides” threatened earlier would be harmful to the pursuing ships, so blowing up the Viridian would prevent casualties on the Federation/Ni’Var ships when they caught up with the Viridian.

Or: Burnham realized there weren’t enough explosions yet in this season finale so she created a big one.
 
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Jammer's Reviews, Jamahl Epsicokhan:

This is an episode that cements that this season is barely about anything it seemed to be when it started. The season started as "Rebuild the Fallen Federation!" (The poster art had Burnham holding a tattered Federation flag on a barren planet.) But then a few episodes later, in "Die Trying" it became "Rediscover the Current Diminished Federation!" Now, at the end of the season, it's "Kill Osyraa!" The season gradually went from potentially grand to painfully reductive and unambitious.

Meanwhile, we have the whole arc with the Burn, which suffers from taking a subject of galactic import and making it about one guy's unwitting sci-fi properties and emotional problems. If the message of the Burn is supposed to be "shit happens" — even on a cataclysmic galactic scale because of some random child — then ... mission accomplished, I guess? But that, again, feels reductive and unambitious for such a big mystery. Hell, making Ni'Var be the cause of the Burn, as the Vulcans believed, because of scientific experiments gone bad would've at least offered some sort of lesson about caution or responsibility or fallibility or some such. Here, there's nothing anyone could've done to prevent such a concocted freak occurrence, so I guess all those people died and societies collapsed so we could learn the universe can just blow up whenever because of whatever. Um, yay?

...It's ironic that Discovery, the most serialized of all the Trek series, is one that somehow fails to lay enough groundwork for itself to make sense. Narrative gaps abound, year after year, and it feels like the writers spend time on the wrong things rather than things that might help its main narrative work better...

1.5 Stars
 
P0p1JYs.jpeg


Jammer's Reviews, Jamahl Epsicokhan:

This is an episode that cements that this season is barely about anything it seemed to be when it started. The season started as "Rebuild the Fallen Federation!" (The poster art had Burnham holding a tattered Federation flag on a barren planet.) But then a few episodes later, in "Die Trying" it became "Rediscover the Current Diminished Federation!" Now, at the end of the season, it's "Kill Osyraa!" The season gradually went from potentially grand to painfully reductive and unambitious.

Meanwhile, we have the whole arc with the Burn, which suffers from taking a subject of galactic import and making it about one guy's unwitting sci-fi properties and emotional problems. If the message of the Burn is supposed to be "shit happens" — even on a cataclysmic galactic scale because of some random child — then ... mission accomplished, I guess? But that, again, feels reductive and unambitious for such a big mystery. Hell, making Ni'Var be the cause of the Burn, as the Vulcans believed, because of scientific experiments gone bad would've at least offered some sort of lesson about caution or responsibility or fallibility or some such. Here, there's nothing anyone could've done to prevent such a concocted freak occurrence, so I guess all those people died and societies collapsed so we could learn the universe can just blow up whenever because of whatever. Um, yay?

...It's ironic that Discovery, the most serialized of all the Trek series, is one that somehow fails to lay enough groundwork for itself to make sense. Narrative gaps abound, year after year, and it feels like the writers spend time on the wrong things rather than things that might help its main narrative work better...

1.5 Stars
Oh, he's got the review up? Interesting, it's the first DSC episode he gave below two stars.

I'm gonna read this. Is he abandoning the series at this point? If not, I think it's only a matter of time before he stops reviewing it.

EDIT: At least he admits his bias. Quoting directly from Jammer himself, "My wife liked this episode, and thought it did all the necessary things, which made me think that maybe this show is better for newer Trek audience members versus the fuddy-duddies in the audience like me who bring all their baggage and feel a need to compare it to the glory days."

Jammer, as much as I respect you, sorry but: No shit.
 
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Hey, what are the technical objections to mass-producing spore drives now that there's more than one person around who can activate one? I can't think of a limiting factor other than the number of empaths.

Very beginning of DIS, it was unquestionably described as a computer processing power problem -- Discovery's computer wasn't fast enough for more than very short jumps. The Tardigrade/Tardigrade DNA was a workaround.

After 930 years of computing improvements (hell, after 100 years of advances in computing, including isolinear processors and bioneural circuitry by the 24th century, two major paradigm shifts, three if you count moving to multitronics, that were multiple orders of magnitude more performant than the previous tech), there should literally be no need for a DNA enhanced pilot to navigate federation space, even during TNG time.
 
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I would think the only advantage is if you have a situation like "CAUSE AND EFFECT". If the nacelle is hit, it is not connected to the ship and won't cause any explosions/warp core breaches.
And it's easier to move just a nacelle out of the way instead of the whole ship
The first ship using that tech should be the USS Rayman XD

"Parody: Modern Trekkies If The Search for Spock Was New"
- by Lord Garth
And why didn't Spock grow one hell of a beard and scalp hair all the way to the ground? XD
 
Holy fuck, so a magic child got sad and magically disabled all the dilithium (they call him psychic or something, but its fucking magic)? This is literally the worst fucking thing in the franchise's history. Nothing in the franchise has ever been this stupid of badly written, Threshold looks like Best of Both Worlds compared to this utter bullshit.

How fucking brain dead are the writers? Who thought that this was in any way acceptable? Its so horrible its actually hilarious. This is so stupid its hard to not just laugh. Fuck Discovery and everyone who works on it in a writing/producing capacity, they are truly the dumbest assholes to have ever worked on an official ST project, and considering how bad Berman/Braga got, thats an impressive achievement.

I'm definitely dropping this shit now, no more giving episodes a chance. I'll stick with Picard and Lower Decks, and maybe hope that a competent writer sneaks their way onto the Captain Pike show, because I did like STD season 2 a lot, and really wanted a Pike show after it.
 
And why didn't Spock grow one hell of a beard and scalp hair all the way to the ground? XD
There were a few I left out. Had to leave it at 10.

There's one in particular -- I'm not going to say which one it is! -- that I left out that I couldn't believe I left out, after I thought about it. Then I realized I'll have another chance to bring it up again when I do one for TVH.

When I'm done with all of these, I'll have all the first four movies, TOS, TAS, and TNG. It'll be fun. But the TOS one will be the trickiest to pull off.
 
Holy fuck, so a magic child got sad and magically disabled all the dilithium (they call him psychic or something, but its fucking magic)? This is literally the worst fucking thing in the franchise's history. Nothing in the franchise has ever been this stupid of badly written, Threshold looks like Best of Both Worlds compared to this utter bullshit.
Only beaten by blinking holograms into crashing XD
Two insanities in one season!
 
I do like Saru and also Stamets and Hugh. Besides Michael these three characters have grown the most and I actually remember their names. The other characters are throwaway imo and have barely been developed after season 3. Tilly maybe a bit.
The other characters are not main cast, that's why they aren't as developed. The bridge crew are supporting characters only.

Then again, I'm a fairly casual watcher and I've still managed to learn all their names, so...
 
It was really nice of Burnham to order Discovery to transport all the Regulators to the ship she was about to blow up, instead of, you know, to the brig or something. Gotta keep that murder count high.
Fuck it. They got what they deserved.

Better to just kick them off the ship there and then than keep them onboard and risk them causing problems at a vital moment.
 
Poor Rachael Ancheril. She got promoted to regular for season 3. Got written out after episode 5 after being in what 3 of those? So what was the point?
She wanted out...I reported it _before_ that episode, but many here didn’t believe it.

Probably so they wouldn't follow.
follow how? The viridian didn’t have a spore drive.

One possibility: Discovery was about to be recaptured, shields failing, with no guarantee that the spore drive would work. So, blowing up the warp core ensures that The Chain wouldn’t get the drive.
ok, maybe blow up *after* trying to see if the spore drive works, then? If it works it’s useless and evil, if it doesn’t there is still time an especially if it works but only after the new navigator has had a couple of tries you don’t blow up by error.

Another possibility: Burnham seemed to believe that the “pesticides” threatened earlier would be harmful to the pursuing ships, so blowing up the Viridian would prevent casualties on the Federation/Ni’Var ships when they caught up with the Viridian.
better forget about the pesticides :D

Burnham realized there weren’t enough explosions yet in this season finale so she created a big one.
you got it!

You're not yet: "Had to watch TNG on televisions that had rabbit ears" old. :p
been there, done that. ;) we used to wake up early on Sunday to watch TNG at 8 on our rabbit-eared TV!

Very beginning of DIS, it was unquestionably described as a computer processing power problem -- Discovery's computer wasn't fast enough for more than very short jumps. The Tardigrade/Tardigrade DNA was a workaround.
I've seen this a lot lately. Please keep posting it, maybe some of the writers will see it and remember what they forgot. ;)

The other characters are not main cast, that's why they aren't as developed. The bridge crew are supporting characters only.

Then again, I'm a fairly casual watcher and I've still managed to learn all their names, so...
I’ve seen three seasons and discovered how Detmer and Owo are called just this year. The others I wouldn’t even recognize.
Fuck it. They got what they deserved.

Better to just kick them off the ship there and then than keep them onboard and risk them causing problems at a vital moment.
death penalty supporter, right?
 
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