This is why the TNG episode Devil's Due is actually great.The fun part is still to make the wizard less wizardy
This is why the TNG episode Devil's Due is actually great.The fun part is still to make the wizard less wizardy
That was a re-write from Phase II wasn't it?This is why the TNG episode Devil's Due is actually great.
Yeah, that and The Child were the only two if I recall. My controversial Star Trek opinion is that The Child is less good.That was a re-write from Phase II wasn't it?
/pedant onIn the age of innocents and peppermints
Clever.
This is why the TNG episode Devil's Due is actually great.
That was a re-write from Phase II wasn't it?
/pedant on
It's incense and peppermints.![]()
Because I had to do it...TOS: Captain's log, we've encountered a godlike being who grabbed our ship, one of my teachers semi-accidentally inspired an alien world to become Nazis, and Spock's brain was taken as a CPU. Space can be a little weird sometimes.
TAS: Captain's log, we found a fifty-foot tall clone of Spock, entered a reality where we can perceive time going backwards and angered Lucifer by going to the centre of the universe and learning literal magic. Nothing makes any sense any more. PS. I've turned into a fish.
You missed out the most bizarre part of that episode, where they decide to recreate an accident by beaming a sample right next to the warp core and scanning it until it explodes.Because I had to do it...
The transporter turns crew members into children.
"Worms" in the transporter sequence used to be people.
Yeah, that TNG transporter certainly has many unintentional capabilities.
There's two Rikers, too.Plus the TOS transporter creating a good half and a evil half but still whole people. That's s lot of matter conjured up out of thin air.
There's two Rikers, too.
Not to mention the reverse, with Tuvix. Where they crammed the matter of two people into one. The extra matter likely went to the replicator pool.![]()
Once you accept humans are the Big Cheese of the UFP, despite being the new kids on the block, anything is possible.
Reminds me of the way Scrubs handled their musical episode.Murdoch Mysteries did a musical episode this past season, too. (They've previously done two Halloween horror episodes that have no basis in the show's reality - I suppose you could write them off as nightmares) The way they made it possible was that the main character, Detective William Murdoch,
was shot and went into a coma, in which he imagined his friends, colleagues, and random strangers singing. So it wasn't really happening for everybody - it was just his mind messing around with things he heard people saying around him.
I think it was on TV Tropes where I first saw this suggested, but it (kind of) makes sense if you imagine United Earth as the United States and the Vulcan as the United Kingdom.Once you accept humans are the Big Cheese of the UFP, despite being the new kids on the block, anything is possible.
I think it was on TV Tropes where I first saw this suggested, but it (kind of) makes sense if you imagine United Earth as the United States and the Vulcan as the United Kingdom.
At the start of the 20th century, the major powers in the world are (arguably) the UK, France, and Germany. At that point, the US military was relatively small compared to other nations. After World War II, there's been a total reset where the US and the Soviet Union are the new superpowers. In the span of decades, the United Kingdom has gone from an empire the sun never sat on to being a partner and ally to the new upstart.
Basically, it's possible to see the Earth-Romulan War resetting the state of play.
Season 4 of ENT explains/hints at what might have happened. The Vulcan leadership (which has been corrupted by Romulans) is toppled by the Syranite faction, which advocates a different interpretation of Surak's teachings on logic.Which makes one (this one anyway) wonder what was Vulcan's involvement in the war and how did it come out the other end diminished? Or did they stay still and it was Earth that was vaulted into a "superior" position?
Not being an ENT watcher, I don't know where Vulcan and Andoria stood in the pecking order only that they were at each other's ears and antennae (and had been for some time?).
That's pretty much The SInging Detective, isn't it?Reminds me of the way Scrubs handled their musical episode.
Good heavens. It's almost enough to make me interested in ENT.Season 4 of ENT explains/hints at what might have happened. The Vulcan leadership (which has been corrupted by Romulans) is toppled by the Syranite faction, which advocates a different interpretation of Surak's teachings on logic.
That leads to mentions in season 4 of the Vulcans pulling back, becoming more pacifistic, and abandoning aggressive expansion against the Tellarites and Andorians.
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