It's how I got my penthouse apartment overlooking the harbor.
Ahem -- it's spelled "harbour", eh? Sorry.
It's how I got my penthouse apartment overlooking the harbor.
They don't use hairpins in the 23rd Century.
Nah its all anti-grav fieldsHair clips are alive and well in the TOS timeline.
An organization able to control the timeline itself would be answerable to no one.
I thought they work together so well I checked their relationship statuses. I found out Wesley separated from his wife a month after the episode was filmed and Chong's boyfriend has been absent from her social media for some time (and she said her dog was her twin flame recently).
Anyway thats a long winded way of saying I wouldn't be surprised if they are dating in real life.
<The ghost of Gene Roddenberry pulls out his "The Enterprise ensures JFK's death" pitch once again>The theme of this episode is one that I've seen explored in other stories, the "would you go back in time to prevent a tragedy" question. Such as killing Hitler before he came to power (or taking him out of play in another way, as you can do in the game "Titanic: Adventure out of Time"). In this case, it's suggested that preventing the horrific events would have made things worse in the long run.
L'aan makes an offhand remark as Kirk moves to steal a car. "This is private property." Now, the implication is that Kirk does not understand this coming from a more advanced society where perhaps an AI computer controls all transportation? Picard tells us "there is no money" so he is growing grapes and making wine at the government's behest and then it is distributed probably via a social credit system. So is Sisko's dad. No wonder there is no crime. No one would dare would they? One false move, and the nanny state cuts your access to your social credits which they control. The AI no doubt reads all communications like Google's AI "reads" all your emails. This is fascism with a velvet glove. Freedom is an illusion they create as they control every aspect of your life. It's all "for the common good." I would leave Earth immediately if I were trapped there but perhaps there is no ship available for the non elites. Very few humans seem to have escaped this. Even colonies work on this system.
Because they nailed it.Damn it, why do I get misty eyed every time I write about this damn thing?!?
Nah, it's much better than Riverdale.Nancy Drew on the CW at the moment has ghosts and demons, which makes it comparable to Supernatural. It's still practically Riverdale
Yep. Trek was designed for the post-war TV audience, which was one of several reasons for setting it on a "modern" American naval vessel. And the generation that mostly kept it alive and agitated for its revival were Boomers.Yeah. To me, TOS is very much influenced by the Post WWII zeitgeist, The Federation is America. The Klingons are the Russians. The Romulans are the Chinese. And the Vulcans are the Japanese, an enemy turned firm ally. While Japan wasn't conquered per se, it was defeated and occupied. This might partially be influenced by living in Japan during the 60s and 70s as an Air Force brat.
Hell yes. I find the lack of discipline and self entitlement amongst the modern characters to be soooo frustrating. People are literally dying right now but let's take some time to kiss and talk about our relationship before we go on this dangerous mission. 100 people just died while you were hugging! No wonder so many characters are orphans.Yep. Trek was designed for the post-war TV audience, which was one of several reasons for setting it on a "modern" American naval vessel. And the generation that mostly kept it alive and agitated for its revival were Boomers.
It hasn't changed as much as some folks would like to think.
Like the Shadows on BABYLON 5, who believe growth and evolution occur best through strife and conflict?
Does that imply that there was actually an armed conflict between Earth and Vulcan? It's still one of the most "What the hell are you talking about?!?" lines in Star Trek. Crazier than anything Janice Lester even thought about.Yeah. To me, TOS is very much influenced by the Post WWII zeitgeist, The Federation is America. The Klingons are the Russians. The Romulans are the Chinese. And the Vulcans are the Japanese, an enemy turned firm ally. While Japan wasn't conquered per se, it was defeated and occupied. This might partially be influenced by living in Japan during the 60s and 70s as an Air Force brat.
The only time it really stood out to me was in The Broken Circle when the urgency is so dire that they need to STEAL THE ENTERPRISE and they are in the middle of said heist (which, forget their careers, could really get them all killed if April goes all Commodore Norrington on them) when they pause for yuck yucks with Erica about "Spock's thing" - er, "how Spock will order the ship into warp". Never mind that I don't like that shtick to begin with.Hell yes. I find the lack of discipline and self entitlement amongst the modern characters to be soooo frustrating. People are literally dying right now but let's take some time to kiss and talk about our relationship before we go on this dangerous mission. 100 people just died while you were hugging! No wonder so many characters are orphans.
I appreciate that science, social, and relationship stories are import ingredients but at least if the writers had the naval model as a base template it might be less silly. I could certainly live with the Last Ship in space as a storytelling model for Trek.
My autocorrect is set to American spelling. I don't bother fighting it anymore.Ahem -- it's spelled "harbour", eh? Sorry.
Yeah I think you're right. The issue is shoe horning hijinks or emotional drama into scenes where the context doesn't warrant it. Other times it works really well, like a lot of Chapel's wry comments that she slips into conversations.Does that imply that there was actually an armed conflict between Earth and Vulcan? It's still one of the most "What the hell are you talking about?!?" lines in Star Trek. Crazier than anything Janice Lester even thought about.
The only time it really stood out to me was in The Broken Circle when the urgency is so dire that they need to STEAL THE ENTERPRISE and they are in the middle of said heist (which, forget their careers, could really get them all killed if April goes all Commodore Norrington on them) when they pause for yuck yucks with Erica about "Spock's thing" - er, "how Spock will order the ship into warp". Never mind that I don't like that shtick to begin with.
That said, Spock getting called for playing his lute too loud was delicious and I have to say I like anytime they are able to underscore the "city in space" aspect of the Enterprise.
If they can manage time and place (and they've done it well enough so far) it's fine. But yes, we've come a really long way from even Encounter at Farpoint's "Is this an OFFICIAL report, lieutenant?" let alone the starship PT109 of TOS.
"Permission to speak freely?" "When do people NOT speak freely around here?"
this has literally never happened. what a silly take.Hell yes. I find the lack of discipline and self entitlement amongst the modern characters to be soooo frustrating. People are literally dying right now but let's take some time to kiss and talk about our relationship before we go on this dangerous mission. 100 people just died while you were hugging! No wonder so many characters are orphans.
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