I don't get why people have such issues with Fair Haven, actually. I was tempted to save it considerably earlier, just to shake things up a bit.
I could never get past the idea that it was somehow considered a healthy answer to Janeway's desire for a relationship to pair her up with a fictional character. I mean, if I seriously tried to tell people Mr. Darcy was my boyfriend, I'd be put away. Even if he did look like Colin Firth, and even if he was a really high-quality blow-up doll....
Yes, but imagine, if instead of a doll, it would be a simulacrum so realistic that it'd be nearly impossible to tell it from the real thing. Some people would start to prefer simulated relationships to real ones with all their pitfalls, especially shy people, or people who are self-conscious about their appearance.
Yes, but imagine, if instead of a doll, it would be a simulacrum so realistic that it'd be nearly impossible to tell it from the real thing. Some people would start to prefer simulated relationships to real ones with all their pitfalls, especially shy people, or people who are self-conscious about their appearance.
More to the point, everyone on Voyager is Janeway's subordinate and therefore off limits for romance. The EMH was right, a hologram was her only choice.
Given her situation, that's an unrealistic stricture, as it effectively bars her from forming a long-term relationship for an indefinite period -- possibly for the rest of her life.everyone on Voyager is Janeway's subordinate and therefore off limits for romance.
A relationship with a fictional character doesn't qualify as a relationship. And I think it's fair to say the EMH is hardly a dispassionate advisor when it comes to holograms. That said, I never had a problem with him being in a romantic relationship with a flesh-and-blood person. But he's a sentient being, not a fictional character. (In-universe, obviously.)The EMH was right, a hologram was her only choice.
Consensus seems to be that it didn't! Seriously, when KJ was reluctant to shut down the malfunctioning holodeck in "Spirit Folk," I for one wondered if she was putting the continued existence of her imaginary boyfriend over the continued existences of Tom and Harry. Not a good look, KJ!That doesn't mean that it will make a good story, though.
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