I’ll be sad if Sara Mitich and Ronnie Rowe Jr don’t appear at all this season. :/ also I miss Detmer.
Has Ronnie Rowe been in any episodes since they came to the 32nd century?
He seems to appear on a lot of Canadian programming on the CBC up here.
I’ll be sad if Sara Mitich and Ronnie Rowe Jr don’t appear at all this season. :/ also I miss Detmer.
Honestly, after five seasons of nothing but the opposite, Rayner is refreshing as hell, as was Lorca. I like a blend of character types on a crew and that does not mean excluding characters like Rayner, who is also interesting as a Kellerun.
If we go by the explanation in TNG's "The Chase," the Progenitor's tech wasn't targeted and allowed for weird variations too. It took billions of years to go from primordial ocean with rudimentary potential for life to modern humans. Lot of other non-humanoid forms of life in Earth's history between those two points.Sounds a bit uncontrollable. I don't think Spock 2.0 and predatory worms were part of the programing.
IMDB shows him in twelve season 3 and six season 4 episodes.Has Ronnie Rowe been in any episodes since they came to the 32nd century?
He seems to appear on a lot of Canadian programming on the CBC up here.
I thought it was the proto-matter.Carol specifically says it was to be used on a "lifeless space body," and the fact it had to use the Reliant and the Mutara Nebula for its source matter was what made the planet inherently unstable.
Well it had a target/goal: the humanoid form. It didn't eliminate non-humanoid development, it just made sure some lifeforms would be humanoid.If we go by the explanation in TNG's "The Chase," the Progenitor's tech wasn't targeted and allowed for weird variations too. It took billions of years to go from primordial ocean with rudimentary potential for life to modern humans. Lot of other non-humanoid forms of life in Earth's history between those two points.
That's what David said. So, it's success was not guaranteed.I thought it was the proto-matter.
The question is whether he's really doing something useful there, or not. My impression is that the authorial intent is that he was not. I don't know how to prove it one way or the other.
Gray and Adira are a nice couple but they hired some very inexperienced actors to play them. Normally Trek hires some actors with mileage on them. I think we all saw this coming though. Ironically, these were probably their best performances yet.7/10
I don´t want to complain too much but this is technically 4th season of strictly procedural puzzle mystery and in this case it has so far not much of tension to support itself. Although I was able to predict Jinaal´s test of character as soon as they said the creatures have their nest there it was kinda neat... As the most poeple I enjoyed Cruz´s performance and Rayner´s "bonding" with the crew. Grey is still kinda impossible to care about.
Grey is still kinda impossible to care about.
Normally, they do, which at least means the most annoying episodes have something to watch.Normally Trek hires some actors with mileage on them
Low bar.Ironically, these were probably their best performances yet.
the symbionts, which have surgery as part of their life cycle
I'm pretty sure it was established that once a symbiote is joined, it has to keep joining or die.
The (non-canon) post-DS9 novels went with the idea that the Trill symbionts are related to the parasites from TNG's "Conspiracy." However, in that case, the Conspiracy parasites are revealed to be a genetically modified corruption of the symbionts.I’ve always wondered how the symbionts, which have surgery as part of their life cycle, could have evolved. Anybody have any ideas?
Come to think of it, do we know for a fact that they evolved? Could they have been created?
We know Bix is at least eight hundred years old, and according to Adira, it's rare for a symbiont to live that long. Even though Adira themself is host to a symbiont that's also been around at least eight hundred years, given one of the previous Tal hosts was wearing a Starfleet uniform from S1 of Picard.As for how long symbionts live? Canonically, we don't know. In the novelverse, old symbionts grow to very large size (the "Annuated") and retire permanently to the pools. But it doesn't look like Bix was that old.
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