Other than missing the sarcasm. But, close enough.We agree then--or close to it! I actually didn't realize that. M'Benga was the highlight.![]()
Other than missing the sarcasm. But, close enough.We agree then--or close to it! I actually didn't realize that. M'Benga was the highlight.![]()
No, your sarcasm was clear but not relevant to my point.Other than missing the sarcasm. But, close enough.
Well, that sounds about right. Take a joke and turn in to something serious.No, your sarcasm was clear but not relevant to my point.
Well, let me put it this way. Your sarcasm minimized the points I was making. Now, I'm sure that wasn't your intention or on your mind at all. But, it prompted a reply in the vein of, "no there's more to it than that." That's it.Well, that sounds about right. Take a joke and turn in to something serious.
Yeah, we definitely are alike.
Sighs...Well, let me put it this way. Your sarcasm minimized the points I was making. Now, I'm sure that wasn't your intention or on your mind at all. But, it prompted a reply in the vein of, "no there's more to it than that." That's it.
Now, if you want credit for saying a funny.![]()
I KNOW! I said as much in the post you replied to! Seriously, no big deal. And I officially gave you credit for one funny!Sighs...
My sarcasm was in no way to minimize anyone's points. Not even yours. Literally, it was me riffing on a joke by SF Debris that went through my head.
Except, apparently taking away from you point...I KNOW! I said as much in the post you replied to! Seriously, no big deal. And I officially gave you credit for one funny!
It's just an Easter egg, in the same way that in the very first episode of Star Trek Discovery, Captain Phillipa Georgiou has books on a shelf in her ready room with the titles of a few well-known TOS episodes clearly visible on the spines of said books.wow, I totally missed it. Thanks.
**edit**
I thought Benny Russell was a figment of Sisko’s imagination. So he was actually real. Interesting.
McCoy left his daughter to follow Kirk around the galaxy for 25 years.Yup, can't be a parent and be a doctor.
That's the first thing they taught me in medical school.
No, her body is not still in the transporter buffer. There's an entire scene where M'Benga discovers that she is no longer in the transporter buffer (in fact they state the time that she was beamed out and it coincides with the start of all the craziness) he and Hemmer try to determine where on the ship she was being to, but that information is missing from the system. M'Benga decides to check his quarters because that's one thing his daughter stated earlier in this episode that its a place she wants to see when she is better.Why do I have the feeling that Rukiya's illness plot-line is nowhere near resolved.
Her conciousness is in the nebular with the entity.
But her body is still in the transporter buffer, so what happens if she comes out of the transporter, is she in a coma?
The doctor will probably have a long journey to fix his daughter's illness before coming back to the same nebular to recover her conciousness before the end of the series is my guess.
It's a good thing you can fall back on TOS, TNG and DS9 and VOY, which of course never engaged in humorous episodes.Just shite. 4 is generous. Was raving about THIS show to ppl just like PIC S2 … when it started. This is two comedy/farcical episodes with horrible tonal shifts in each, in a row.
A space entity forcing the crew to experience a child's dying fantasy sure sounds sci-fi to me.What the heck is going on? What am I watching? I came on here to see the ratings and was really surprised this episode scored so high with so many likes. I was 10 minutes in and I could not bear to watch anymore. I don't know maybe I gave up too soon, but seriously the genre of this episode is not my interest at all and I probably will not bother watching the rest. I don't care if the acting or story was the amazing, this episode is not Star Trek or even Sci-Fi in my opinion.
I know, right? Star Trek shouldn't be fun!Not only too early for this type of show, but when you only have 10 episodes in a season to waste it on an episode like this is criminal.
Because in the transporter time doesn't move at all for her.Why hide her in a transporter at all ? Why not suspended animation?
No it's not.It's a bit dubious aiming for a dramatic ending like that in an episode dominated by silliness.
Yeah, a real father would've let his daughter die, instead!Couldn't buy the resolution either. And letting a ten-year-old decide? Evidently the writers don't have children.
The episode’s events are metaphorical code for Rukiya dying, imo
They chose to give a story of coping with death a fairy tale wrapping...
Yeah, a real father would've let his daughter die, instead!
It's also his own daughter. Survival, especially in a positive way, is better than letting her die.Well in this context he might. He's a doctor. He's meant to be a man of science. He knows the odds against his daughter are bad, but he has to hold on to hope. He even had a promising lead from a couple of weeks back.
Well that would surely have led to accusations here of using tech as magic!I think upon reflection it would have felt a bit better if the third party wasn't involved. Some technobabble about how a surge in the transport buffer has led her to jump in time and then make a decision what's best for her.
Anson Mount was amazing in this episode. They should give him every opportunity to play it silly or weird as they can.
We use essential cookies to make this site work, and optional cookies to enhance your experience.