Which is why I said...
We’ll see.
Ain’t it?
We’ll see.
Ain’t it?
concepts from TNG -- Bajor, Cardassia, wormholes, Trill, Wolf 359, not to mention the O'Briens and eventually Worf
Agreed, though I'd hardly consider wormholes a "concept from TNG". They're both an theoretically actual thing and something that's been in tons of other sci-fi, including The Motion Picture nearly a decade before TNG started.
Not back then, not really. Wormholes were a fairly obscure solution of General Relativity rarely featured in fiction. You had various space warps and "star gates" and "vortexes," or black holes as passages through spacetime (e.g. in Joe Haldeman's The Forever War, the movie The Black Hole, "The Magicks of Megas-tu," etc.), but ST:TMP's use of the specific word "wormhole" was exceptional in fiction at the time, and rather different from how it's used today. It didn't become a buzzword until Carl Sagan popularized the idea in his novel Contact in 1985. He'd asked physicist Kip Thorne to devise a credible means of FTL travel for the novel, and Thorne revitalized scientific interest in the wormhole idea by determining that it could be made viable by postulating "exotic matter" with properties that could prevent a wormhole's instantaneous collapse.
To the best of my knowledge, TNG: "The Price" was the first mention of the word "wormhole" in film or television since TMP. "The Price" came out in 1989, just four years after Contact. Deep Space Nine premiered in 1993. Stargate didn't come out until 1994, Sliders was 1995, the film version of Contact was 1997, Farscape was 1999, etc.
So yes, in fact, as far as the mass-media usage of wormholes as a story device is concerned, TNG pretty much pioneered it and DS9 took it from there. It sounds surprising in retrospect, since wormholes are such a ubiquitous trope now that we can't imagine a time when they weren't. But this is one of the few areas where Star Trek actually was on the cutting edge of science fiction.
Fascinating stuff. My relatively young age is showing (I’m 33), because yeah, wormholes have truly been a staple of science fiction storytelling for as long as I can remember. Despite awareness that Stargate and its successor TV series arrived considerably later than TNG, my brain has always distorted the chronology such that I’ve believed TNG was riding an existing trope at the time.
Look at DS9. It was built around concepts from TNG -- Bajor, Cardassia, wormholes, Trill, Wolf 359,
While I agree with your main point, I believe Bajor (and even the Ro character) were created specifically for DS9, but they used TNG episode to set up DS9. In a similar vein the Maquis were created for VOY but they used DS9 to set that up.
No, I just checked the various sources (DS9 Companion, Making of DS9, Memory Alpha). "Ensign Ro" was written and filmed in the summer of 1991, and the meeting where Brandon Tartikoff proposed a second spinoff wasn't until the fall of '91, shortly before Roddenberry's death. The show wasn't formally approved for development until late 1991. From Memory Alpha: "Even though this episode proved an inspiration on the creation of the DS9 TV series, it was written at a time before that series was envisioned." From Making of DS9, p. 60, sidebar on "Ensign Ro": "At the time, no one knew what would grow from this single, well-received episode."
The only thing in TNG that was put in to seed DS9 was "Chain of Command," which was the last TNG episode(s) aired before DS9 premiered (during TNG's winter hiatus). And even that had no real connection beyond giving the Cardassians a showcase.
That's fascinating. DS9 would have at least looked entirely different. Cheaper makeup. Green station instead of brown. Horrible shoulder pads.IIRC, Ensign Ro was originally supposed to focus on the Bajorans recovering from the Romulan occupation. Then someone remembered they created the Cardassians, and decided to resurrect them instead.
I don't know. At the very least, I feel certain there had to be plans to bring the Cardassians back when they made The Wounded. After all, they created new costumes, a new ship model and gave the Cardassians a more intricate look then the typical human with a forehead bump. I doubt they'd have gone to all that effort unless there were firm and definite plans to bring the Cardassians back. Likewise, because they had already gone to all that effort, I feel certain they would have gone looking for a way to bring them back, rather than develop a storyline for one race and then decide "oh hey, we can use these guys instead."IIRC, Ensign Ro was originally supposed to focus on the Bajorans recovering from the Romulan occupation. Then someone remembered they created the Cardassians, and decided to resurrect them instead.
At the very least, I feel certain there had to be plans to bring the Cardassians back when they made The Wounded. After all, they created new costumes, a new ship model and gave the Cardassians a more intricate look then the typical human with a forehead bump. I doubt they'd have gone to all that effort unless there were firm and definite plans to bring the Cardassians back.
I thought they all used recycled ships? I know the Pakleds used the omnipresent triangle ship that everyone else uses, and I'm pretty sure the Promellian and Tamarian ships were seen elsewhere.But they created new costumes, models, and elaborate makeup for a number of other species that they didn't bring back -- for instance, the Pakleds in "Samaritan Snare," the Sheliak in "The Ensigns of Command" (although their ship was a modified ST III model), the Promellians in "Booby Trap," the Tamarians in "Darmok," etc. And when they did use a species only once, they often recycled their ships or costumes for different alien species.
I thought they all used recycled ships? I know the Pakleds used the omnipresent triangle ship that everyone else uses, and I'm pretty sure the Promellian and Tamarian ships were seen elsewhere.
Memory Alpha cites the fourth issue of something called "DS9 - The Official Poster Magazine" as source for the claim.What Eschaton said is true, though I’m having a hard time remembering the source. It might have been one of the companion books.
Emergency Janeway Hologram.. For use when you want things jacked up worse than they currently are..
Maybe Barclay tried to send a ship to help, May be a test of the Q drive that went pear shaped and thought they lost the ship. Or some type of emergency and the crew beamed out before the ship was taken.
And it's a hair up version of Janeway from the first 3 seasons..
That would last maybe one episode, and it would have to be comedy relief.They should have Kazon cosplaying as Borg, trying to convince everyone they got assimilated.
Well, it was a joke. More in LD's wheelhouse than Prodigy'sThat would last maybe one episode, and it would have to be comedy relief.
We use essential cookies to make this site work, and optional cookies to enhance your experience.