PROS:
5. We didn't have to gut through any of Adira and Gray
CONS:
1. I'm tired of Book being a baby.
3. I miss Tilly, but in all honesty, this episode felt tighter and more focused because without Tilly, Adira and Gray, they could focus on 4-5 main characters and the 2 key guests, and it felt much more natural and cohesive than when they try to give everyone something to do.
4. I've started to dread the obligatory Michael and Book scenes. I can't explain why...but I wish they had made a different choice here other than "let's have the captain do missions with her boyfriend rather then members of the crew"
You don't like Tilly, Adira and Gray?
And you don't like that Book is nothing more than Burnham's boyfriend?
That is dangerously close to Fandom Menace thinking!
The absence of Tilly, Adira, and Gray was noticeable and one of two positive things for me in this episode.
The second positive thing was the end scene with Book and the Rodney McKay-style scientist in the bar.
In this scene, Book was not Burnham's boyfriend and not in therapy.
It's hard to put it into words, but this scene, the interaction between Book and Tarka, felt very different than the usual interaction between Discovery characters. Very un-Discovery-like.
EDIT: My biggest worry is, if they are going with this "episodic problem of the week overlayed on a light serialized storyline" format (which it seems they are)...what happens when SNW comes on the air and is basically exactly the same thing? I thought the whole idea of multiple shows at once was to have them all be distinctive from each other in significant ways. DSC S4 has felt more what I would expect SNW to feel like.
The "episodic problem of the week overlaid on a light serialized storyline" structure results in some of the worst pacing issues.
I can not stand the pacing of Discovery. It's too slow and too fast at the same time.
They either rush through the story, sometimes adding unnecessary urgency in form of ticking clocks to it (two this episode! A and B story), or it is too slow because we either deal with boring melodrama or with side quests that have nothing to with solving the big mystery, while the big mystery still looms over the story.
We had two episodes where we didn't get any information about the DMA, one episode without the DMA at all, and then, boom, the DMA is artificial, here is a mini version of the DMA controller, let's do an experiment, during a time-critical evacuation, do it NOW NOW NOW. I don't like that pacing.
The prisoner A plot was such a wasted opportunity. Instead of digging into topics like crime and punishment, guilt and forgiveness, first, the writers added a useless action scene and then we had the urgency, because of the DMA, looming over the story (there are more problems with this plot, but this is just the problem I had with pacing).
Remember DS9 Duet? An entire episode focused on one thing. No larger mystery looming over the story, no rush, no fake urgency, no ticking clock, no useless action sequence.
This is not a new structure for Discovery. They already did the "episodic problem of the week overlayed on a light serialized storyline" in season 3 and this is one of the many problems I had with season 3.
First, we had the "find the Federation" sub-story, we went to Earth, then to Trill.
We hat the seed ship, scavenger planet, Book's planet, Vulcan and Mirror Universe episodes, during which the Burn was at best a background story. Burnham had already collected the black boxes, and Tilly and Adia did some calculations in the background.
The mission Vulcan was nominally about getting data to solve the origin of the Burn, but in reality, it was about Michale Burnham, her mental state, and her relations ship to Vulcan.
Solving the mystery of the Burn was drawn out piecemeal work.
The trailer for both seasons 3 and 4 introduced a big mystery to the season. That is how the audience got introduced to each season. The big mystery is front and center.
This mystery looms over every story, no matter how much the writers try to add episodic stories to the season. With 13 episodes a season, an episode that does not move us closer to solving the mystery will be perceived as slow, boring, and as filler. Especially when these episodes focus on characters that people are not invested in and with the focus on melodrama.
According to Akiva Goldsman SNW will have season-long "character" arcs.
(Picard season 1 had similar pacing issues).