...You're making Star Trek.If you have to resort to a lame device like "...And then the space alien erased or altered everyone's memories!"...
...You're making Star Trek.If you have to resort to a lame device like "...And then the space alien erased or altered everyone's memories!"...
If it weren't for the Metrons, their blast shield wouldn't have saved them.I don't think it was on kill; remember, kill mode turns a target into Vaporized Particle Cloud or Giant Human sized Chunky Salsa.
Most of us has seen the effect of a person being killed by a Phaser.
Go back and watch it, there were 3 shots fired, 2 visible shots landed and left small burn holes.
But given the previous leg infection, crappy diet of giant bugs, there's a high probability that multiple stun shots that landed (assuming all 3 shots landed, 1 shot landing might've been off frame) would've easily killed the Gorn Pilot.
IRL, Police who use "Less Lethal" options like 'Tasers' or 'Bean Bag Rounds' have on occaision been able to incur enough injuries that somebody with pre-existing medical conditions or injuries could die.
So it stands to logical reason that 3 successive Stun or Medium Phaser shots could do the same to the Gorn Pilot who had a long term leg infection, wasn't anywhere close to 100% dietary health, & not wearing any form of body armor or shields.
Incase their calculations were wrong and it came back down to the lower atmosphere.
Which they were correct to prepare for.
It's not like this action of igniting the atmosphere was done with scientific precision.
This is MythBusters level of Red Neck Science w/o advanced tools.
Guess the problem & solution.
Hide behind the "Blast Shield", hope for the best and that you don't die.
Not surprised by Metrons needing to provide "Divine Intervention" to save their experiment from going up in smoke.If it weren't for the Metrons, their blast shield wouldn't have saved them.
(watch for the bright bluish-white glow during the explosion)
The explosion did actually engulf the entire planetoid from top to bottom.
Heh ... Like that's not something we've been collectively doing since 1966.Again, that’s all supposition that’s not supported by what we’ve seen in the episode.
Unless instead of a Gorn, it was a Borg Queen; and instead of La'an it was Ben Sisko. That man would have shot to kill too.The death of Gornette was one of those moments that made me frustrated by the dramatic limitations of prequels.
Like, if this were DS9, she was definitely going to come back to the station and join the roster of recurring species outcasts. There's so much interesting stuff to do with that character, don't cut it off too quick!..
My bad. Damned if you do, damned if you don't.Fine. I was trying to make the list of recycled TOS elements as comprehensive as possible to head off any potential "You forgot about..." comments at the pass, but if it bugs you, ignore the sehlat.
The katra thing I'll stand by, though, since Vulcans are exceptionally secretive and no one on the Enterprise crew had previous familiarity with them in TSFS. Suddenly in SNW, it's common knowledge.
Sarek seemed convinced that Kirk should know and even with the admiral they both note they don't know if they believe it, not that they'd never heard of it.My bad. Damned if you do, damned if you don't.
Fair enough about katras. I don't know that I'd say it's treated as common knowledge, but I don't know that I would have ever categorized it as secretive. Given Vulcan is a founding member of the Federation, I can't really imagine major cultural aspects such as that being kept a secret. And IIRC, Sarek seemed to think Kirk was aware of his potentially having Spock's katra in TSFS. Kirk's ignorance of Vulcan culture is epic, it seems. But I could be misremembering.
Lower Decks crossover doubled down on Pike going to Talos IV though unless his recovery somehow ends up being classified.Fine. I was trying to make the list of recycled TOS elements as comprehensive as possible to head off any potential "You forgot about..." comments at the pass, but if it bugs you, ignore the sehlat.
The katra thing I'll stand by, though, since Vulcans are exceptionally secretive and no one on the Enterprise crew had previous familiarity with them in TSFS. Suddenly in SNW, it's common knowledge.
If you have to resort to a lame device like "...And then the space alien erased or altered everyone's memories!" to make your continuity match with a previous show, it doesn't "track perfectly."
Again, Better Call Saul has demonstrated that it's completely possible to make a great, dramatically compelling prequel show that doesn't contradict its parent show. (Occasionally recontextualize, yes. but not contradict.) So SNW has no excuse for getting things wrong or ignoring stuff willy-nilly.
Ah, someone else watched the episode with the subtitles on, I see!
That VOY scene STILL bugs the hell out of me. The "Of course, the whole bunch of them would be booted out of Starfleet today" line is SO condescending and smug, and a pretty disrespectful thing to put into an episode celebrating the 30th Anniversary of Trek.
I am 100% convinced that the finale of SNW will skip past or retcon the end of "The Menagerie" somehow to give Talos IV Pike a happier ending.
Not good Star Trek, mind you, but they are undeniably making Star Trek....You're making Star Trek.
Everything old is new again!Heh ... Like that's not something we've been collectively doing since 1966.
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Unlike many here, I actually have no problem with what they've done with the Gorn in SNW as a whole. The idea of developing the Gorn as a truly alien species from our perspective was great, although sometimes the execution lacked.The Gorn are a nonstarter monster of the week from TOS.
A new alien would have saved a lot of headaches and added drama.
Indeed. And that made the episode all the more predictable.La'an killed the Gorn because canon demanded it. Can't have a friendly Gorn lady on the ship for a few episodes steamrolling TOS Arena canon after all.
Well, that's the thing. In TOS, stuff like mind melds and Pon Farr were treated as surprising brand new discoveries about the Vulcan people. Now with them being commonplace on prequel shows like SNW, now it just seems like Kirk & McCoy were either unusually thick or spectacularly forgetful.Fair enough about katras. I don't know that I'd say it's treated as common knowledge, but I don't know that I would have ever categorized it as secretive. Given Vulcan is a founding member of the Federation, I can't really imagine major cultural aspects such as that being kept a secret. And IIRC, Sarek seemed to think Kirk was aware of his potentially having Spock's katra in TSFS. Kirk's ignorance of Vulcan culture is epic, it seems. But I could be misremembering.
That drove me nuts too from a scientific perspective. But those are common mistakes in SF."Hey, I'm on a barren rock that somehow has a breathable atmosphere... Oh look it gets so close to the gas giant that the gasses actually blanket the entire moon... but hey, I'm sure there's food here somewhere."
I was thinking the Gorn was already pretty sick from badly infested injuries. A stun might have been deadly. But that's me making it make sense when maybe it doesn't.A Gorn LGBTQ+ Pride flag? .... Sure... ?l!?
You'd think the phaser would have been on stun, not kill.
I proposed earlier in this thread that this might be the incident that inspired his actions in The Galileo Seven.Same way Spock gambled that it would be seen by Kirk's Enterprise when he ignited the remaining shuttle fuel at the end of The Galileo Seven.
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