The rage returns in the Rigel VII episode, brought to the surface by the environmental effects of the planet.
I mean, Chapel is not going to look good, sadly, because, well, that is what TOS gave us to work with.I don't think people should remain the same, but Chapel becomes neutered going from SNW to TOS. That's not a good look, no matter how you try to twist it.
True, I had forgotten that one a little. Though, again, I think Pike changing has more to do with the fact that he feels the pressure of time. To lose a bit of certainty and to value life a little differently. I get that people don't change "that much" unless something traumatic happens. I think Pike's counts.The rage returns in the Rigel VII episode, brought to the surface by the environmental effects of the planet.
Well there's always an untreated mental breakdown to account for it!I don't think people should remain the same, but Chapel becomes neutered going from SNW to TOS. That's not a good look, no matter how you try to twist it.
Well... It's never been indicated that Kirk was not GOOD as Chief of Starfleet Operations. He just wasn't happy doing it.(Possibly) controversial opinion: The demotion of Kirk to Captain in The Voyage Home shows that Starfleet/The Federation have become better in recognizing the Peter principle (and remedying) it than companies today.
That's the "forest fires start from one spark" analogy. However, that only happens when conditions are right (i.e. an extremely dry forest). When the forest is saturated by rainfall, the spark fizzles out.
Again, there was no sign given that Ferengi society was at a tipping point.
Actually, it's about a year and change between "Profit and Lace" and "The Dogs of War". And at that point, things have transformed even further: taxation, welfare, etc. So yes, we're talking overnight transformation.
The women's suffrage movement began in the aftermath of abolition. That means it took women in our society 54 years just to gain the right to vote. The forces you speak of take enormous amounts of time and the effort of thousands to overcome.
None that we saw. All we saw was one woman in disguise and another who wore clothes while at home.
Clearly, there were a lot more bigots than feminists. And while numbers alone do not win a battle, they certainly do help.
The only sign we got aside from Ishka was one Ferengi female who made herself a set of fake lobes. And she said to Dax that she would probably never see a female Ferengi again, so she was not aware of any rising tide of discontent, hidden or no.
Also, if there were more women who wanted things to change, why hadn't Zek and Ishka scooped them up? Their case would have been infinitely stronger if they could have produced multiple business-savvy women instead of one.
Well... It's never been indicated that Kirk was not GOOD as Chief of Starfleet Operations. He just wasn't happy doing it.
Yes, sorry about that. I suppose that crept in from my native language. Even when I do/should know the correct expression in English, I won't always spot my own mistakes.Also, "better at"
And again, like most of your statements on this subject, you're ignoring the fact that this is a background story taking place off-screen over a long period of time. We have very few individual facts because the show was never really focusing on that story. That doesn't mean we should just assume that obviously nothing happened to make this possible except what few things we saw on screen.
In other words, there were, in fact, clear signs of other people being unhappy. There just weren't many of them because this story and even Ferengi culture in general was never really the focus of the show and is only even mentioned in a handful of episodes.
And Profit and Lace isn't where it starts. And the Grand Nagus has way more power than any American politician has ever had. And women could vote in New Zealand in 1893. Hell, women who owned land could vote in Friesland or Sweden before the USA even existed. Meanwhile women could not vote in Belgium until 1948 and could not vote at the Federal level in Switzerland until 1971.
Even his physical appearance... looking 'younger' in TOS than in SNW... is not really an issue. Casting choice aside, there can be many in-universe reasons for this 'older' look in SNW: his later residency on Vulcan may have been better for him than we think, he could have been hit with some anomaly that made him appear younger (I hate to use this episode as an example, but TNG's "Rascals"), a horrible accident that altered his face and was given reconstructive surgery to mostly fix it but the byproduct is he appears a bit younger, or any number of other things.
I find an in-universe explanation thoroughly unnecessary. He's simply played by two different actors in TOS and SNW. Boom. That's it. Just like with all the other characters in SNW that apepared on TOS.
You forgot make money.Star Trek was a fever dream of a 1960's TV producer, whose only real goals in life were to be high and get laid.
True, there's no direct indication of that. But there's no indication that he was very good at it, either.
At his disciplinary demotion, they comment "and that as a consequence of your new rank, you be given the duties for which you have repeatedly demonstrated unswerving ability: the command of a Starship." So they do comment on how good he was as a captain, but they don't add 'even though we're deeply sorry to lose you as an Admiral, in which you've shown equal abilities and in which capacity you could have meant even more for the future of Starfleet', or anything to that effect. (In fact, if he really were outstanding as an admiral, they'd probably have come up with a different disciplinary measure, to keep him in that position, though I'll agree that they may have taken into account he didn't like his job).
I don't think he was necessarily 'bad' as an admiral, just that he probably was way better as a captain, and they recognised that.
Yes, sorry about that. I suppose that crept in from my native language. Even when I do/should know the correct expression in English, I won't always spot my own mistakes.
Rewatching Picard Season 1, 2 & 3
The Romulans were right about the Synths, if Picard did not change Soji's mind, the organic beings in the Trek universe would all be dead. Soong lost his influence over them
Raffi calling Picard J.L never bothered me, why expect her relationship with Picard to be the same as his TNG crewmates?
Every generation of Soongs being geniuses interested in the same field was a little ridiculous (yeah it was a way to keep hiring Brent Spiner)
The Soong obsession shifted to cybernetics in 2154, with Arik Soong pondering moving on from genetic engineering to androids.Rewatching Picard Season 1, 2 & 3
Every generation of Soongs being geniuses interested in the same field was a little ridiculous (yeah it was a way to keep hiring Brent Spiner)
We use essential cookies to make this site work, and optional cookies to enhance your experience.