There's actually an Andorian on Lower Decks whose name conforms to the LitVerse's naming scheme.Andorians
Undetermined as of yet; DIS et al. continue to virtually ignore the novels' four-gender system
There's actually an Andorian on Lower Decks whose name conforms to the LitVerse's naming scheme.Andorians
Undetermined as of yet; DIS et al. continue to virtually ignore the novels' four-gender system
You and everyone else claim so. I am not convinced Jennifer Sh'reyan qualifies.There's actually an Andorian on Lower Decks whose name conforms to the LitVerse's naming scheme.
I mean it's literally a litverse style last name for an Andorian of one of their feminine genders. How can that not qualify?You and everyone else claim so. I am not convinced Jennifer Sh'reyan qualifies.
No, I do not think so.This is incorrect. The files that Adam Soong examined at the end of PIC season 2 were dated 1996 and titled "Project Khan." There is no reason a project involving the Augments' initial conception would be named for Khan specifically, since he was just one of hundreds, and nobody could have known at his conception that he would be the most successful or dominant one. The only way "Project Khan" makes sense was if it was a project commissioned after the Eugenics Wars to attempt to replicate the Augments. We already know from Enterprise that the Soong family does continue the Augment project on its own in future generations.
Spock
SNW continues to present a take incompatible with pre-streaming novels
Gorn
SNW's take is utterly incompatible with pre-streaming novels
Klingons
DIS and SNW ignore the existence of the QuchHa', have a different background for human-looking infiltrators, and set up a different backstory for Klingon escalation in the 2260s
Mirror Universe
DIS's depiction of Emperor Georgiou is, of course, utterly incompatible with pre-streaming novels
No, I do not think so.
https://twitter.com/TerryMatalas/status/1507790980304424961
Terry Matalas tweeted in advance of PIC 2.10 to the effect of going further than VOY 3.08 in reconciling Trek with real-life at the time of broadcast. His team concluded Spock was wrong in TOS 1.22 about his dates due to record destruction, thereby precipitating Pike in SNW 1.01 giving the sequence of the Second Civil War --> Eugenics War --> World War III, with the first one recycling real-life 2010s-2020s footage from the Trump presidency.
That may be what they intended, but I stand by what I said: Assuming that the eugenics program was always exclusively about Khan is a profound misunderstanding of "Space Seed." The idea of a "Project Khan" only makes sense after the fact. If the makers of PIC season 2 intended differently, it still doesn't make sense, any more than anything else about PIC season 2 made sense.
Picard Season 2 was more of a homage to Star Trek IV than anything else. And it basically showed Troi as a failure as a consoler. Fingers crossed for Season 3.
How was she a failure? A therapist can only address the issues their subject can or will discuss. Picard never came to her to deal with any unresolved issues related to his mother, and it never manifested as issues with his duties. We’re talking about a man in his late fifties by the time he even meets Troi, his coping mechanics were well in place by then, and so far as we saw, he never approached her for advice on why he couldn’t connect on that deeper emotional level that are considered part of romantic relationships, or about any lingering trauma related to his mother’s death.
For that matter, many issues don’t manifest for years or decades, especially when it comes to abuse and trauma suffered in childhood. I mean, just to bring up the obvious, we didn’t even hear Sir Patrick Stewart acknowledge the abuse he suffered as a child until, what was it, the late 2000s, early 2010s? When he was in his sixties/seventies?
A therapist is supposed to help guide their patients to answers they’re ready for, while also not causing negative responses by pushing them to something too soon. Troi was certainly not the only therapist Picard saw over his life - I’m sure he was evaluated by other therapists after Wolf 359, saying nothing of Troi’s successor on the Enterprise and certainly others during the Romulan refugee crisis, and none of them addressed this issue either.
I’m sure my therapist has thoughts about things that I’ve spoken about that could lead to discussions of other issues, I’ve been seeing my current therapist for about four years now. But he has to weigh bringing any of them up with the fact that I may not be ready to discuss them - if a patient is not ready, will not discuss something, bringing it up unprompted and trying to make them do so anyway can just destroy the bond of trust and willingness to open up between patient and therapist.
Picard’s issues about his mother were never something he pursued discussing with Troi, so far as we’ve seen. As a result, she had no real justification just dropping on him unprompted.
2003 was the first time I remember hearing about it, when A&E's Biography did an episode about him.we didn’t even hear Sir Patrick Stewart acknowledge the abuse he suffered as a child until, what was it, the late 2000s, early 2010s? When he was in his sixties/seventies?
How was she a failure? A therapist can only address the issues their subject can or will discuss. Picard never came to her to deal with any unresolved issues related to his mother, and it never manifested as issues with his duties. We’re talking about a man in his late fifties by the time he even meets Troi, his coping mechanics were well in place by then, and so far as we saw, he never approached her for advice on why he couldn’t connect on that deeper emotional level that are considered part of romantic relationships, or about any lingering trauma related to his mother’s death.
For that matter, many issues don’t manifest for years or decades, especially when it comes to abuse and trauma suffered in childhood. I mean, just to bring up the obvious, we didn’t even hear Sir Patrick Stewart acknowledge the abuse he suffered as a child until, what was it, the late 2000s, early 2010s? When he was in his sixties/seventies?
A therapist is supposed to help guide their patients to answers they’re ready for, while also not causing negative responses by pushing them to something too soon. Troi was certainly not the only therapist Picard saw over his life - I’m sure he was evaluated by other therapists after Wolf 359, saying nothing of Troi’s successor on the Enterprise and certainly others during the Romulan refugee crisis, and none of them addressed this issue either.
I’m sure my therapist has thoughts about things that I’ve spoken about that could lead to discussions of other issues, I’ve been seeing my current therapist for about four years now. But he has to weigh bringing any of them up with the fact that I may not be ready to discuss them - if a patient is not ready, will not discuss something, bringing it up unprompted and trying to make them do so anyway can just destroy the bond of trust and willingness to open up between patient and therapist.
Picard’s issues about his mother were never something he pursued discussing with Troi, so far as we’ve seen. As a result, she had no real justification just dropping on him unprompted.
She's an empath. She should have felt it.
She's an empath. She should have felt it. Why can't Picard commit? It could be a Hallmark Christmas movie.
Tell me you don't know how therapy works without telling me you don't know how therapy works.
Like, what exactly do you want her to do? She's read his file; she knows that his mother committed suicide when he was a kid. She also knows that Jack Crusher died under his command and probably senses that he's in love with Beverly. So, yeah, she probably knows that Jean-Luc is all kinds of fucked up in his personal life. But if he sets a boundary of not being willing to discuss this with her, there's nothing she can do. She has authority as a medical officer to order him to accept mental health treatment insofar as his mental health issues affect the performance of his duties. But his inability to maintain stable intimate relationships clearly never affected his job performance. Being in Starfleet doesn't mean Deanna gets to order him to deal with his mommy issues so he can finally start dating.
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