The only thing that stuck out to me in the episode was how it was going to be faster to get back to the party by exiting a side door and going back through security (sure it is).
Good point, but perhaps it’s not necessarily to queue to pass trough security again once you are in the system.
Just so they were available for Soong to hit with a car, when he had no way of knowing they would be outside.
yep, that was…extremely fortunate (for soong)!
Well, Jurati fixed him up and she's MIA, though they didn't mention that as an possible option
good point.
Since a person can technically live without it, as long as it was removed and the bleeding stopped, not sure how much advanced tech would be needed.
if they left him without a spleen, with all the medical implications it gives, I guess they messed up the timeline once again. Which they keep doing quite often unfortunately.
Ok, so it's impossible. On a SF show with time travel.
Oh well, if this is your attitude…
The band played on anyway.
Yeah, the scene was written that way.
It's entirely possible that that particular song was already part of the bands repertoire and they just picked up her voice cues to follow along.
Yes, but she would have needed to communicate with the band before and they would have needed to have the parts ready.
Also, it was very apparent that that band was mostly made up of brass lead instruments.
(plus, a big shindig like that doesn't hire a second rate group, they were obviously a well honed band)
true. As I said above, if this scene had been done with a different arrangement, that is without that splendid written brass arrangement, my only issue would basically have been with her singing without a microphone. And without being in the program (at an event like this a random woman does NOT start a song unannounced, security wouldn’t even let her get on the stage).
The Queen had blinking lights on the back of her head in Voyager.
yes, I just find these more annoying. Nothing terrible, anyway.
I've done a number of impromptu singing sessions with bands, and as long as the band is competent and works together (simple enough to say these people do both), and unless the song is very obscure (Pat Benatar is very well known even now), it's not that difficult to play along. I do like the notion that somehow people have less of a problem with the realism of time travel than they do a band knowing how to play impromptu song numbers.
the issue was that it wasn’t in any way impromptu: they had to have scores with written instrumentation.