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What are your controversial Star Trek opinions?

I like SNW Chapel. But I'd like her even more if, having decided to make a nurse who was entirely UNlike Majel Barrett's Chapel, they had given her a different name to go with it.
I like Jess Bush's character a lot, but making it Chapel, like with the other characters, feels like overcompensation.
 
I like Jess Bush's character a lot, but making it Chapel, like with the other characters, feels like overcompensation.

Yeah, I like the actors playing the legacy characters (though the jury is still out on Scotty 3.0). But going with so many familiar faces feels off, especially with 3 Legacy characters hard wired into the show already.

If Bush played “Andra Sutherland” instead of “Christine Chapel” would anyone have noticed.
 
Yeah, I like the actors playing the legacy characters (though the jury is still out on Scotty 3.0). But going with so many familiar faces feels off, especially with 3 Legacy characters hard wired into the show already.

If Bush played “Andra Sutherland” instead of “Christine Chapel” would anyone have noticed.
Here's my take, for good, bad or indifferent:

A prequel is something that I think should set up "Oh, I didn't realize" moments for the audience. Yes, I'm aware of the time and writing difference from show to show, but I'm ignoring that because the purpose of SNW is to give some life to characters we knew next to nothing about. @Turtletrekker already posted the video of Chapel and the 4 minutes of time she had out of the 70+ episodes of TOS that gave her something to do. She did even less in the films.

So, SNW allows me to go "Oh, wow there's a lot more history to this character than just, 'I'm sad because my fiancé died and I'll stay on this ship.'" It gives some much needed context to relationships, not the least of which is why Spock hid his mind (no katra at the time) inside Chapel when Henoch commandeered his body.

Would anyone have noticed? Probably not. But, what they are doing is extremely enjoyable. It's a reminder that characters are not just born perfect whole cloth, and remain stalwart paragons of virtue until their dying day. They are supposed to be people, living, breathing, failing and learning people.
 
She also hasn't lost her fiance.

Something like that might just mess someone up.
True, but there wasn't even a hint for 2 1/2 seasons after What Are Little Girls Made Of that she would be as flirty or have close friends like SNW Chapel. She longed for Spock, but knew it was hopeless, and that was about all there was to her character.
 
True, but there wasn't even a hint for 2 1/2 seasons after What Are Little Girls Made Of that she would be as flirty or have close friends like SNW Chapel. She longed for Spock, but knew it was hopeless, and that was about all there was to her character.
Right, and, well, makes sense as a trauma response. Losing one's fiancé is going to mess someone up. They are not just going to go, "*shrug* Shit happens."

How much time was given to Chapel to give the hints that are being requested? More than that, what the hell did Chapel do that people actually remember?
 
Right, and, well, makes sense as a trauma response. Losing one's fiancé is going to mess someone up. They are not just going to go, "*shrug* Shit happens."

How much time was given to Chapel to give the hints that are being requested? More than that, what the hell did Chapel do that people actually remember?
Sure, losing someone you love does that, for quite a while and it varies from person to person. But it would be unusual for there to be not so much as a glimmer for two and a half years.
 
Sure, losing someone you love does that, for quite a while and it varies from person to person. But it would be unusual for there to be not so much as a glimmer for two and a half years.
Unusual, yes, but not out of the realm of possibility.

And, to reiterate, Chapel didn't do a whole lot with a personality in the show.
 
Without getting into Jess Bush' Chapel being nothing like Barrett's or going into all wild theories about how one might devolve into the other, I have no interest in seeing the nurse of Pike's Enterprise turn into a wallflower pining for one man for the rest of her life. And if somehow a tragedy befell her that turned her personality upside down, I would wonder what was wrong with 23rd century psychiatry. she already went through war, FFS.
 
Clearly the 23rd century is lacking in appropriate psychiatric counseling for Starfleet officers and other starship personnel, as all the mentally disturbed and sociopathic Captains and flag officers can attest to. Ben Finney was allowed to be a boiling cauldron of resentment and jealousy for the better part of 17 years, up to the point where he faked his death to frame Kirk and then endanger more than 400 officers with death when he sabotages the Enterprise's engines.

As late as 2399 you have Starfleet officers like Raffi who just fall off the grid and suffer from narcotics abuse and psychiatric issues and Starfleet just shrugs and goes, "oh well. We tried. Or not. Not our responsibility."
 
Here's my take, for good, bad or indifferent:

A prequel is something that I think should set up "Oh, I didn't realize" moments for the audience. Yes, I'm aware of the time and writing difference from show to show, but I'm ignoring that because the purpose of SNW is to give some life to characters we knew next to nothing about. @Turtletrekker already posted the video of Chapel and the 4 minutes of time she had out of the 70+ episodes of TOS that gave her something to do. She did even less in the films.

So, SNW allows me to go "Oh, wow there's a lot more history to this character than just, 'I'm sad because my fiancé died and I'll stay on this ship.'" It gives some much needed context to relationships, not the least of which is why Spock hid his mind (no katra at the time) inside Chapel when Henoch commandeered his body.

Would anyone have noticed? Probably not. But, what they are doing is extremely enjoyable. It's a reminder that characters are not just born perfect whole cloth, and remain stalwart paragons of virtue until their dying day. They are supposed to be people, living, breathing, failing and learning people.

fair point. I just equate it to having Burnham being Spock’s sister. It just wasn’t necessary, especially when the original characters like La’an, Ortegas, Hemmer, etc… have all been fine.

In the case of Spock and Chapel, I just don’t think everything needs an explanation. She pined for him in TOS, it doesn’t enhance the story for me that she aided (in an indirect way) in breaking up his arraigned marriage, knew about Sybok when Kirk and Bones didn’t and humiliatingly broke up with him via a very public song and dance number.

But to each their own. I still enjoy the show.
 
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fair point. I just equate it to having Burnham being Spock’s sister. It just wasn’t necessary, especially when the original characters like La’an, Ortegas, Hemmer, etc… have all been fine.

In the case of Spock and Chapel, I just don’t think everything needs an explanation. She pined for him in TOS, it doesn’t enhance the story for me that she aided in breaking up his arraigned marriage, knew about Sybok when Kirk and Bones didn’t and humiliatingly broke up with him via a very public song and dance number.

But to each their own. I still enjoy the show.
None of it is necessary. TOS stands apart but it isn't because of Chapel or her stunning character development.

Without getting into Jess Bush' Chapel being nothing like Barrett's or going into all wild theories about how one might devolve into the other, I have no interest in seeing the nurse of Pike's Enterprise turn into a wallflower pining for one man for the rest of her life. And if somehow a tragedy befell her that turned her personality upside down, I would wonder what was wrong with 23rd century psychiatry. she already went through war, FFS.
Dude, psychiatric care in the 23rd century was nuts, were the primary cure was meds that erased your memory.

There's a lot wrong with psychiatric care in Star Trek.

And trauma will do that to people and not all seek help.
 
Clearly the 23rd century is lacking in appropriate psychiatric counseling for Starfleet officers and other starship personnel, as all the mentally disturbed and sociopathic Captains and flag officers can attest to. Ben Finney was allowed to be a boiling cauldron of resentment and jealousy for the better part of 17 years, up to the point where he faked his death to frame Kirk and then endanger more than 400 officers with death when he sabotages the Enterprise's engines.
Speaking of Ben Finney, I wonder when in the SNW timeline they'll get around to installing the button on the arm of the captain's chair that can kill a man with a single press and no confirmation.
 
And trauma will do that to people and not all seek help.
My point is that they would need to bend over backwards to create a tragedy so traumatic to see this one character, already a survivor of several incidents capable of producing trauma, to turn her into the TOS Chapel. This version is shown to be too strong.
 
My point is that they would need to bend over backwards to create a tragedy so traumatic to see this one character, already a survivor of several incidents capable of producing trauma, to turn her into the TOS Chapel.
No, not really. It could be the last one in a long string.
 
As a vegetarian, I don't eat bacon. But, even if it wasn't, I stay away from eating pig products. I'm with Jules from Pulp Fiction. I wouldn't want to eat an animal that eats its own feces. Sorry.

This bacon craze, I don't get it. I never saw the episode were Spock loves bacon, but the thought of Spock grinning over bacon makes me cringe. Just like the thought of Spock saying "Sponge Robert".

Seriously -- another Controversial Opinion -- I don't get what you guys see in SNW. "It's like TOS!" No, it's not. Other than some visual cues, the two shows could not be more dissimilar. And it sounds like it's going to become sillier and sillier. You only like it because it's the Flavor the Month.
I know the "Sponge Robert" thing was a joke, but it's another reminder that many writers think Spock is just some kind of robot. He calls Pike "Chris" and Kirk "Jim", so he'd be perfectly capable of using "Bob".:p

But that aside, I've tended to see SNW as a sister show to LDS than anything much to do with TOS.
I tend to agree. Though that isn't my issue with the show, it just feels very been there, done that. There's seemingly very little imagination involved.

Watching the first season, it reminded me more of mid-run TNG than anything TOS related. Of course, it is a mileage may vary situation.
That could be why I liked it so much at first.
 
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