Physicist Sulu or Dr. PiperProbably going to introduce another TOS character. Bones I'm guessing.
Season 1 - Kirk
Season 2 - Scotty

Physicist Sulu or Dr. PiperProbably going to introduce another TOS character. Bones I'm guessing.
Season 1 - Kirk
Season 2 - Scotty
Yeoman Smith not Jones.Physicist Sulu or Dr. Piper![]()
I like this explanation. It makes sense.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.
Because God forbid Spock ever think of an idea for himself. No, he has to be inspired by something one his shipmates did five years before.I proposed earlier in this thread that this might be the incident that inspired his actions in The Galileo Seven.
It makes sense to me, but then, I grew up watching TOS in syndication in the 70s. The Spock that TOS presented was a very serious & mysterious guy who didn't share much of anything with his shipmates. In WNMHGB, Spock says that one of his ancestors married a human female. Before long, they said that Spock was half human (Probably because that was simpler than saying he was 1/16th human or something). By "This Side of Paradise," Spock says his mother was a teacher and his father was an ambassador. (Note the past tense, perhaps implying they were dead.)Since my Star Trek viewership started with TNG (I only have vague memories of seeing the faceless lady from "Charlie X" and getting nightmares as a result so avoided it as a child), so I never had the direct perspective of Vulcans as a super mysterious people. With the understanding of Vulcans being longterm allies of Earth and founders of the Federation, I have always found the idea that pon farr was secret - the basic mating practices of our closest allies - to be patently absurd. That would require no human biologist or sociologist or anything akin to do any kind of real inquiry into the Vulcan species or culture. And if they barred humans from exploring such things, then that would need to be clearly stated for it to make sense.
Except for Spock losing his temper and going nuts on a regular basis.Abrams opted for something like that approach, at least nominally presenting and prompting Quinto to portray him very closely in the footsteps of Nimoy.
There is nothing so binding to a fan as their own headcanon.Sounds like a "but my headcanon/fanfic" problem.
I bet you're right.Probably going to introduce another TOS character. Bones I'm guessing.
Season 1 - Kirk
Season 2 - Scotty
Did you watch TOS?Except for Spock losing his temper and going nuts on a regular basis.![]()
Yes. When TOS Spock lost his temper, he was usually under some sort of mind control ("This Side of Paradise"), his internal biology was doing wacky things ("Amok Time"), or an alien was possessing his body ("Return to Tomorrow"), or time travel shenanigans that didn't make much sense because it was the third season ("All Our Yesterdays"). All external forces acting upon him. On TOS, Spock acting emotional was a sign that something was not right.Did you watch TOS?![]()
Yeah:...Except for Spock losing his temper and going nuts on a regular basis....
O'Reilly, fingers crossed!Probably going to introduce another TOS character. Bones I'm guessing.
Season 1 - Kirk
Season 2 - Scotty
Did I catch that right - When the Metron made Erica "forget" - he mentioned something like they "might need to make all of humanity forget the Gorn" & vice versa?
Like - are the writers building in a retcon of epic promotions, where everyone actually forgets all the intricate Gorn stories, just to have "Arena" play out with Kirk not knowing what a "Gorn" is?
He lost his entire planet. Even Immunity Syndrome noted Spock being impacted by the loss of 400.The Abrams/Kelvin Spock lost his temper because of stuff he was emotional about, i.e. internal forces, like getting teased by Vulcan children, his mother Amanda dying, Vulcan blowing up, Kirk goading him, or Kirk dying for five minutes. That's the difference.
....wut?Apologies if this has been posted (and surely it has) but the writer of the episode stated on a podcast that the planet in Terrarium is indeed Cestus III. (Just to be clear, he doesn't actually say Cestus III, he says "same planet") Which is why there is a Vasquez rock near the shelter.
These writers man, seriously.Yeah, that's not Cestus III from TOS. At all.
Don't TEMPT the Writers.At this point I am just waiting for the Borg to show up on SNW.
But how are they going to pull it off this time?At least "Regeneration" worked and very well, being a follow-up on the Borg sphere crash debris from First Contact.
If the Writers ever bring in the Borg in SNW, I blame you for giving them that idea.They won't. They're not doing the Borg in SNW.
I hope the Hell not.
Okay, then I'll blame him then!StarTrek1701 mentioned it first. Don't rope me into this.
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