Can his first officer be Sela?Armus spinoff please.
A reformed Armus who's risen through the ranks of Starfleet and come the 26th Century is the Captain of the Enterprise-H.
This show would be amazing.
Can his first officer be Sela?Armus spinoff please.
A reformed Armus who's risen through the ranks of Starfleet and come the 26th Century is the Captain of the Enterprise-H.
This show would be amazing.
No, it’s an all Ba’ul and Sheliak crew.Can his first officer be Sela?
Very true, but at least we can make them the best portrayal of what former Trek producers strived for. At least we can honor these heroes' planet history told in the form of TOS than claiming the events from January 6th, 2021 lead to WORLD WAR III. LOL!!!You're very welcome.
Unfortunately, in the TV landscape of today that means they'd have to be extra dark and extra edgy, with some convoluted tragic backstory.
The problem is they'd probably become the new Borg, with so much known about them and defeated so many times that they stop being a mysterious threat and just become part of the furniture.I don't know about anyone else, but I liked the fact we only saw them once on ENTERPRISE. Keeps the mystery up.
SNW would be a great way for them to appear again. I really liked them.
If our experience with Ilia is the standard for Deltans then he'd have to take an Oath of Celibacy to serve in Starfleet, so as to not damage any of the sexually immature species he'd serve with. Would be great to see the Deltans return in a series, get to know them beyond just that.Deltan male captain.
His sexuality is his superpower. Meaning it’s a danger he has to keep in check. Except of course when he doesn’t. With humans and aliens of all varieties. In surprising novel subtle and splendid ways.
We learn as much about the Deltans as we have the Vulcans and reconsider our own sexualities and interpersonal connections through them as we have stoicism and logic through Vulcans.
That was the 23rd century. This would be a more sexually mature 25th? Or the oath could apply to his Starfleet crew but not visitors to the ship or aliens they meet.If our experience with Ilia is the standard for Deltans then he'd have to take an Oath of Celibacy to serve in Starfleet, so as to not damage any of the sexually immature species he'd serve with. Would be great to see the Deltans return in a series, get to know them beyond just that.
So basically it's "The Joy of (Star Trek) Sex"?That was the 23rd century. This would be a more sexually mature 25th? Or the oath could apply to his Starfleet crew but not visitors to the ship or aliens they meet.
There’s just so many ways you could explore sex, ammirite? In ways big and small, nuanced and gross, male and female, trans and cogenitor, young and old, Mugatu and orchid…tender and vicious, curious and dumb, on and on. Captain McShaved could be our guide and champion through it all.
As performed by Jim Z. Kirk, Jr.So basically it's "The Joy of (Star Trek) Sex"?
It's be fun having a Tellarite captain. He'd insult and belittle all his subordinates as a matter of culture, they'd give it right back to stay in his good graces, and he'd get upset if his subordinates didn't argue with him about every order.
Good analysis. The "silent enemy" avoided this, appearing in only one episode. So people in universe must assume that the shroomies are still out there somewhere, and that they are incomprehensible but definitely dangerous.The problem is they'd probably become the new Borg, with so much known about them and defeated so many times that they stop being a mysterious threat and just become part of the furniture.
^ that’s interesting. I wonder, do they (the original Borg) say, would they say, “Resistance is futile” to everybody? It was futile for the humans/Federatiom, but would their words tactics have been different for others?
I didn't mind the Borg in TNG as other than BoBW they never really faced the unstoppable force of the Collective and even then a fleet of 40 ships were decimated. VOY seemed to have a single small starship defeating them every few weeks instead of coming up with more and more clever ways to evade or avoid encounters, they were quickly declawed.Good analysis. The "silent enemy" avoided this, appearing in only one episode. So people in universe must assume that the shroomies are still out there somewhere, and that they are incomprehensible but definitely dangerous.
I would have handled the Borg the same way, with appearance in only one episode.
If that had been the case with both opponents, an implication would have been that there are dangerous/daunting forces out in the galaxy. Ones too powerful to be coped with by mere humans. Actually, that would have also been implied by the events of The Neutral Zone (TNG), where we saw the effects but not the culprits.
The Dominion War presented opponents who were formidable, but not so overwhelmingly powerful that resistance was futile. And because of the first encounter of the Borg by the Enterprise D, the anti-Borg ships (that is, actual warships) had been under development.
I didn't mind the Borg in TNG as other than BoBW they never really faced the unstoppable force of the Collective and even then a fleet of 40 ships were decimated. VOY seemed to have a single small starship defeating them every few weeks instead of coming up with more and more clever ways to evade or avoid encounters, they were quickly declawed.
Given how often fantasy can have a nonhuman lead character, I'm baffled that scifi doesn't do it more often. I'd love a Betazoid, Andorian or Trill captain.
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