Sure -- I'm not saying Shaw isn't an asshole. What I
am saying is that he doesn't need to have undergone a traumatic event to be an asshole -- some people are just assholes. And I'm also saying that while he is an asshole, the fact that he's suspicious of and does not bow to Picard and Riker is in and of itself understandable.
Sure he does. What are a retired admiral and a reserve-duty captain doing giving surprise inspections? With no one above them to confirm the legitimacy of their inspection? And then they immediately try to butter him up and talk him into diverting course? They're being suspicious as all hell, and they both have a history of insubordination themselves.
Sure! But Shaw is an asshole. And right now he's an asshole who has valid reason to be suspicious, even if ultimately we know he should trust Picard.
Nope! The partially-assimilated ship we saw Jurati fly off with at the end of the 2024 scenes was the alternate-timeline CSS
La Sirena NCC-93131, a Confederation of Earth ship. The Prime Timeline's civilian-registered S.S.
La Sirena NAR-93131 originally owned by Cristóbal Rios is the one Raffi is piloting in her undercover work.
This is ultimately a function of the fact that modern American dramatic television uses much more cinematic lighting conventions than it did in the 1990s. Go back and watch a lot of 1990s dramas on modern HD TVs and you'll see that the lighting registers on modern TV sets as overlit and flat. The
Titan-A bridge was not "dark" in the sense of being glumy -- it's clearly "dark" in the same sense that the
Enterprise-E bridge was dark or the
Enterprise-D bridge in
Generation was dark.
That's a legitimate artistic choice, but it's gonna depend on what your goals are. If your goal is to communicate to the audience that a starship is a complex machine and give the impression of a large crew doing complicated work to operate the ship, then having more complex displays is a good way to accomplish that task.
Demonstrating that technology has progressed is a legitimate artistic goal, but it comes at the potential cost of audience members not realizing that that's your intention or not understanding that the ship is more advanced and therefore more automated. You risk the audience just thinking it looks cheap.
... no. Can't say the thought occurred to me.
Yeah, it seemed dramatically arbitrary -- like they wanted both to try to hit the nostalgia button and the "this is a new ship!" button. I think it would have been better to just use Riker's original
Titan and establish that the captain and command crew had not served under Riker.
Raffi is great and I'm glad she's still with us.
I mean, it makes sense that the Borg would have tried to use a computer virus to disable the
Enterprise though. Honestly electronic warfare measures like that should realistically be a standard tactic in space battles. I'm okay with the idea that there was even more going on during "The Best of Both Worlds" than we got to see onscreen -- the lower deckers were working hard, too!
But... why would she cut everyone off for that?
Jurati's Borg will not assimilate you without your consent. If you agree to join them, you
consent to merging your identity with theirs in advance. That's not gonna be appealing for the vast majority of people, but there is probably a minority of most populations who would agree to the kind of intimacy and unity such joining would give them
if they can consent to it. So, not the same thing as "eradicating your individuality" at all, any more than a consensual mind meld is that.
And I for one want to know what's going on with Jurati and her Borg Commonwealth these days!
There's no particular plot reason Elnor couldn't have been assigned to the
Titan as a cadet in his field training a la Nog in
Deep Space Nine or Uhura in
Strange New Worlds. And why
not establish that Romulan society is more diverse and complicated than
Next Generation had implied? The Qowat Milat have been used for some really interesting stuff on
Discovery, and the complication they represent to the authority of the Romulan state is really fascinating! Romulan political elites throughout the
Next Generation era are so duplicitous -- and then it turns out there's this old Romulan semi-religious institution that just
refuses to engage in any sort of duplicity at all! It makes you wonder -- is it possible that the Romulan Commander from "Balance of Terror" (TOS) was influenced by the Qowat Milat? Admiral Jarok from "The Defector?"
And Elnor was not pointless. I
do agree he wasn't developed as well as he should have been, but I saw a lot of potential in him.
All the prior
Picard characters were fun and interesting and would have been worth bringing back.
I see no reason to assume Beverly's situation is related to Section 31 in any way. And Raffi is working for
Starfleet Intelligence, not Section 31.
That's not bad world building. It's a character choice, to signify to the audience that Shaw doesn't respect Picard and Riker and that he's an asshole.
Does Picard have clout there? Gowron was overthrown by Worf and Martok installed almost thirty years ago at this point. It's not even clear that Martok is still Chancellor at this point, and we don't know Worf's pull within the Empire. There's no reason to think Picard as any clout in the Klingon Empire these days.
Because that's not how she thinks of herself, and she doesn't feel resentful and threatened by every aspect of Borg culture even if she now understands how abusive the Queen's "Collective" really was to her. Like it or not, it's the culture she was raised in, and she still thinks of herself as Seven of Nine.
I dunno about that. I could see a plausible alternate version of
Picard where everyone stays aboard
La Sirena as a sort of "found family." Picard and Soji, in particular, might have wanted to stay aboard
La Sirena to get away from both Coppellian and Federation culture's biases. Elnor is clearly gonna go wherever Picard goes. Raffi had been rejected by Starfleet but vindicated in her conspiracy theories, so I could see her not wanting to return to the fleet. Hell, there was a built-in plot device of the Fenris Rangers being an organization they could all join.
Riker didn't summon a fleet of dozens of ships. Remember, Picard had gotten in touch with Fleet Admiral Clancy before the two-part finale and provided evidence of everything he'd found. She had already agreed to send a fleet to Coppellius to protect the androids, confront the Zhat Vash, and defeat the Admonition-Makers. Riker was assigned to command that fleet but he didn't order it out there.
The reason they're not going to Starfleet Command now to get the
Titan-A to change course is that Beverly warned Picard not to involve them -- there's a possibility that whatever hostile actor is stalking Beverly has infiltrated Starfleet Command.
Except Kirk knew about David. Carol hadn't kept David a secret from him -- they had just broken up and she wanted to raise David without Kirk's involvement. Kirk always knew he had a son and that Carol was raising him.
I figure that in-universe, she was reviewing the "hide-in-a-nebula" tactic and/or the Hell-whatever codec, and that out-universe, it was foreshadowing for audience members to understand the situation she was in.
I wonder if the Starfleet recruitment center there also tries to do what it can to fight poverty on M'Talas within the bounds of the Prime Directive? Honestly it's so large I wonder if it might house the Federation Embassy.
I believe
@EJD1984 is making a reference to James Bond's boss in MI6 always using the codename "M."
They did 179 episodes of that. You can watch those instead.
Nope.
Nope.
That's like asking why anyone would find a story about characters successfully coping with trauma interesting: because it helps us deal with our own pain. And, in Jean-Luc's case, because it explains why he's always been so messed up in his personal life!
Yes it is. You just didn't like that it broke
Star Trek's artistic conventions because you're threatened by change.
I took that line to be a reference to the end of "Attached," where Jean-Luc finally puts himself out there and asks Beverly to have a relationship with him but she turns him down.
The Federation might have fought against giving legal recognition to names derived from Borg drone designations, particularly as XBs became more common after the apparent collapse of most of the Borg Collective in "Endgame, Part II" (VOY).