Memory Alpha: The Series.
What show do you write for?
Memory Alpha: The Series.
What show do you write for?
The one that involves watching various interviews where the production teams go into the modern production process.What show do you write for?

I haven't described anything or made any argument. You haven't either, you're just saying things without backing any of it up.The one that involves watching various interviews where the production teams go into the modern production process.
Mind, your argument is especially funny given the writers of TNG/DS9/VOY/ENT who did have a production schedule like you described had time to put together and use non-digital world bibles.
I think a writer's primary job is to entertain first.Part of having a job as a writer is doing in-depth research into things.
That was in a writer's Bible.I think a writer's primary job is to entertain first.
Of course they still they just all got put on administrative leave when they're organisation was outlawed.Temporal Accords. Starfleet time agents now never existed.
I'll have to watch the episode again because I didn't get the sense that the planet Qo'nos was actually destroyed, just that it became uninhabitable after all the dilithium explosions.Between Romulus, Vulcan, and now Kronos Alex Kurtman has now truly blown up every single major alien homeworld by now, hasn't he?

Daniels had to take on a whole new identity.Of course they still they just all got put on administrative leave when they're organisation was outlawed.
Sadly the writers of this episode couldn't escape from their usual problem of not doing more then a surface level of research.
Because "Dilithium reactors used on planetary surfaces going up in the Burn caused all the planets in the Klingon Empire to become uninhabitable" doesn't really work with the Klingons unless you erase the portion of their belief system that had them building no-technology monastery and hunting worlds.
As much as I loved that intimate Jay-Den/Darem moment, there’s also a part in me that felt it wasn’t totally earned, at least not yet. I feel like the last time we saw them interact was in the premiere, when Darem was a massive bully towards Jay-Den for no reason. Him being the one who notices that Jay-Den needs help and encouragement felt like a bit of a sudden turn, even if I’m taking last week’s episode into account. Last week Darem seemed to have learned that he doesn’t need to be the leader. But does that also mean he’s suddenly a sensitive friend in tune with the emotional well-being of everyone around him? What might have made more sense is if Darem had talked to Jay-Den about his parents and how they are having unrealistic expectations of him as well. Might have felt like a more natural bonding moment. And played right they still could have come as close as they did in “Vox In Excelso”.
And happier I could not be.It’s a tv show, not a term paper or an entry in Memory Alpha.
I'm pretty sure "Master Debater" predates South Parkm not sure I do. Googling it it’s apparently a catchphrase from a South Park episode. Is that what you — and possibly the writers — are referring to with that?![]()
I'm pretty sure "Master Debater" predates South Park
IIRC, tear ducts are not essential to crying,OK, I kinda liked this episode but I have one issue: Klingons do not have tear ducts so therefore cannot cry. Come on writers! Keep to the canon!!
They hunted because that's the Klingon way.Jay-Den's family setup, in particular, didn't make much sense to me, as they seemingly lived as hunter-gatherers, yet still had access to a starship and could leave the planet? The budgetary limitations of the show were really evident here, as I could see alternate takes of this where we got to see a real Klingon settlement.
If he were any other man....When the debate gets overheated at the end, I didn’t get where Caleb yelling “You stabbed your family in the back!” came from. And that strikes me as pretty unforgivable — any other Klingon would have killed him for it.
I remember "The Toy", 1982, where Richard Pryor's character would call Jackie Gleason's character, Ulysses Bates, "Master Bates".I'm pretty sure "Master Debater" predates South Park
Did anyone notice that The Doctor messes up the quote from The Drumhead?
What Picard says in The Drumhead:
"With the first link, the chain is forged. The first speech censured, the first thought forbidden, the first freedom denied, chains us all irrevocably"
What The Doctor says:
"With the first link, the chain is forged. The first speech censured, the first thought forbidden, us all irrevocably."
I wonder if Robert Picardo just flubbed the line and nobody caught it or if the script got the quote wrong?
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