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Spoilers Star Trek: Prodigy 1x17 - "Ghost in the Machine"

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Well the writer’s were quite ambiguous about the situation, we would only find out if there was a Seven of Nine and Janeway reunion either on Prodigy or a spin-off.

**EDIT**
Or Picard season 3. They may have already written such a scene.
 
PIC - Stargazer comic spoiler:
Seven talks with Admiral Janeway over subspace and they're on good terms.

In a Trekmovie interview last months, the Hagemans said that Prodigy could be open ended and see the crew grow up. It may evolve naturally into a Starfleet Academy show. I don't think the Protostar will go kaboom - if the Unwanted leave it for good, then Chakotay and Adreek-Hu could get the Protostar back and resume their original mission.

In terms of seeing more of the VOY crew down the line, I see Commander Kim as a reasonable authority figure who is overall still young enough to experience fun alongside the kids instead of mere adult annoyance.
*cue eternal ensign jokes*cycle in witty reply*

I couldn't help but notice that Dal doesn't have Chakotay's life-sized Janeway plushie in his bed anymore. (Supernova game).
 
Dal would definitely need to go the Academy if he wanted a place on the Enterprise F bridge one day. I’m not sure what his rank would be though. They could not possibly give him a higher rank than Harry Kim though, it just would not seem fair.
 
Dal would definitely need to go the Academy if he wanted a place on the Enterprise F bridge one day. I’m not sure what his rank would be though. They could not possibly give him a higher rank than Harry Kim though, it just would not seem fair.

If he's really an augment, wouldn't they have to give him some sort of special dispensation ala Julian Bashir? Otherwise he might be carted off to a camp or something.
 
If he's really an augment, wouldn't they have to give him some sort of special dispensation ala Julian Bashir? Otherwise he might be carted off to a camp or something.
unless the veto only applies to humans. And Dal isn’t considered human. Or the laws have changed in the past decade.
 
If he's really an augment, wouldn't they have to give him some sort of special dispensation ala Julian Bashir? Otherwise he might be carted off to a camp or something.
We will have to find out what the solution to this is in Strange New Worlds with Una as it could have set a Starfleet precedent. Starfleet also did not know about Bashir in advance, he did not even know himself at first.
 
As apprehensive as I was when I first heard the plot description for this episode that it would be a holodeck malfunction episode, I got to say I actually ended up enjoying it. They kept it character based with the holodeck programs we see being ones the characters like to run in their spare time, meaning we get to learn something about the cast. Also, it's not technically a "malfunction" since the entire situation was engineered by holo-Janeway, or rather a corrupt code in her programming.
 
I will quite happily watch a signing Murf series. Come on Alex Kurtzman.:D

So I don't think this episode had as much depth as last week's, it felt more like a 7.

The cliffhanger was good though. Is it next week yet?
 
Dal would definitely need to go the Academy if he wanted a place on the Enterprise F bridge one day. I’m not sure what his rank would be though. They could not possibly give him a higher rank than Harry Kim though, it just would not seem fair.
Considering he's an augment, and considering the history of animosity the Federation holds towards said-augments, I suspect that's kind of doubtful. However, it is possible that they may use Dal to do a story about genetic engineering in the Federation, leading to a long-needed lift to such a ban, once they get home, of course. Could make for an interesting series finale two-parter.

I wonder if Bashir's dad is still alive (and in jail)? Update: Nah, his sentence to the New Zealand penal colony was only for two years, but maybe it could lead to a purge of the conviction record.
 
remember reading an interview with Kate Mulgrev in which she mentioned that she would like to bring the entire cast of VOY to Prodigy (so I suspect we could be given more dialogue on what happened to most of the VOY crew via Prodigy).

That would be cool... it shouldn't get in the kids' way of enjoying the series, and the Trekkies would eat it up.

Of course, I still maintain that they're afraid to tell us what happened to Harry Kim. Promote him, and you piss off the people who got a sadistic delight at him being stuck at ensign forever. Keep him at ensign, and you piss off the people who felt he deserved better.

It really didn't make sense to me that SF would discriminate against Seven over her Borg past.

Especially since Icheb wasn't similarly discriminated against.

Given the shorter run-time of each episode compared to live Trek and the overall story structure, there's only so much you can cram into an episode and make it work.

Agreed. They don't need a bunch of backstory... just feature the relevant character in their capacity on Prodigy.

Or Picard season 3. They may have already written such a scene.

We know Seven's returning, and Kate Mulgrew's certainly available.

In terms of seeing more of the VOY crew down the line, I see Commander Kim as a reasonable authority figure who is overall still young enough to experience fun alongside the kids instead of mere adult annoyance.

Maybe he's teaching at the Academy or something. Given all the stuff he did on Voyager, it's a safe bet he knows a lot.

I couldn't help but notice that Dal doesn't have Chakotay's life-sized Janeway plushie in his bed anymore.

Maybe it needed... cleaning. ;)

unless the veto only applies to humans. And Dal isn’t considered human. Or the laws have changed in the past decade.

Dal wasn't augmented, he was created from the ground up, mostly from races who regularly join Starfleet. And who even knows why... maybe he wasn't a failed experiment after all. Rather, he might be a successful one.
 
He was genetically engineered by a Soong. That's close enough to earn him the "augment" title. Semantics are irrelevant to the Federations attitude towards them. The Synth attack on Mars didn't help matters any, either.
 
He was genetically engineered by a Soong. That's close enough to earn him the "augment" title. Semantics are irrelevant to the Federations attitude towards them. The Synth attack on Mars didn't help matters any, either.
Also, whatever happens to Una next season happened in the 23rd century, not in the early 2500s. Something might have changed. For Una though, all that they would need to do in Strange New Worlds is a ‘Measure of a Man’ style episode with Brian Brophy. They could have called it ‘A Measure of Humanity’ but they cannot, because Una is Illyrian. Or is humanity only limited to humans in Star Trek? :shrug:
 
It will be an interesting story to tell for SNW, sure, but I'm positive nothing will ultimately come of it. We already know that bigotry against augments (justified or not) lasts well into the 24th century with Bashir and his parents' decision to genetically alter him. One of the many problems with doing prequels is making some attempts at preserving the established canon of "future history". Augment restrictions are a big one in Trek lore.

I can't remember the specifics of that particular DS9 episode ("Dr. Bashir, I Presume"), but I have a vague recollection that his career as a SF officer may have possibly become in jeopardy because of it. If that was the case, they would have been willing to fire a highly competent doctor and officer (and war hero) for an illegal act that he was not responsible for nor party to the decision to make it happen. Even if I'm mis-remembering that part, the anti-augment policy is still in place, as far as we know, as there has been no on-screen evidence to the contrary. Either way, Dal would likely have no hope of going to the Academy unless a major shift of policy occurred to allow it.
 
Arik was busy after the events seen in ENT. Clearly he didn't totally abandon eugenics and genetic engineering despite the final scene of "The Augments" showing him taking an interest in cybernetics that will someday lead his family to create androids like Data. You can't keep a geneticist away from the petri dish for long.
 
Arik would not be alive during the time of Prodigy, unless he had extended his life or placed himself in to cryostasis. It could just quite simply be another Soong who created Dal. Alternatively, Dal could have been from the 22nd century if Arik did indeed create him. Dal himself might have been the one put in to cryostasis in which case he will never meet the person who created him as it has been well over 200 years. His Ferengi mother might have bought his cryochamber on the black market.
 
It will be an interesting story to tell for SNW, sure, but I'm positive nothing will ultimately come of it. We already know that bigotry against augments (justified or not) lasts well into the 24th century with Bashir and his parents' decision to genetically alter him. One of the many problems with doing prequels is making some attempts at preserving the established canon of "future history". Augment restrictions are a big one in Trek lore.

I can't remember the specifics of that particular DS9 episode ("Dr. Bashir, I Presume"), but I have a vague recollection that his career as a SF officer may have possibly become in jeopardy because of it. If that was the case, they would have been willing to fire a highly competent doctor and officer (and war hero) for an illegal act that he was not responsible for nor party to the decision to make it happen. Even if I'm mis-remembering that part, the anti-augment policy is still in place, as far as we know, as there has been no on-screen evidence to the contrary. Either way, Dal would likely have no hope of going to the Academy unless a major shift of policy occurred to allow it.

When it was discovered that Julian Bashir was secretly augmented, he was nearly kicked out of Starfleet and stripped of his medical license due to the augment ban. He only was allowed to stay because his father did it to him without his consent and agreed to take the punishment of jail for two years in a penal colony on his behalf. “For every Julian Bashir we may also get a Khan Noonien Singh,” the judge said when meting out punishment.

It’s revealed in a later episode with the Jack Pack, “Statistical Probabilities,” that Bashir’s exemption was very much a one off situation and that all other genetically enhanced humans are highly suspect and even banned from holding most any jobs of importance in the Federation. The ones we meet are kept under strict supervision at a place called the Institute not unlike a mental facility for the dangerous and unsound.

Strange New Worlds expands on that by showing that the term “augment” and subsequent Federation ban doesn’t just apply to humans, but any alien race that tries to enhance their DNA for the purpose to become smarter or stronger.
 
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Another great episode. My main feeling each week is that each Prodigy episode is fresh and new (even from a long time fan's perspective). I never felt they were just resting on their laurels. It not only serves as an episode of the week but it honors the concepts of previous great Star Trek episodes while also moving the story along. They really nailed it with this series. Hats off time and time again.

Murf singing = awesome. I almost expected Vic Fontaine to show up.
 
  1. Arik would not be alive during the time of Prodigy, unless he had extended his life or placed himself in to cryostasis. It could just quite simply be another Soong who created Dal. Alternatively, Dal could have been from the 22nd century if Arik did indeed create him. Dal himself might have been the one put in to cryostasis in which case he will never meet the person who created him as it has been well over 200 years. His Ferengi mother might have bought his cryochamber on the black market.

    They specifically say it was not Arik Soong who created Dal, but one of his “protégés”. That could be someone who knew him at the end of his life, or perhaps took up his work after he abandoned it. But likely not a Soong, given they made that distinction.
 
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