Not in the penultimate one - there is a black band on the shoulder.Trek Central have put up some pics, with a few additions to the one above. Is Terima wearing a Starfleet uniform?
Also....
#sillyfortilly
Not in the penultimate one - there is a black band on the shoulder.Trek Central have put up some pics, with a few additions to the one above. Is Terima wearing a Starfleet uniform?
Not in the penultimate one - there is a black band on the shoulder.
Also....
#sillyfortilly
How often is therapy in Trek done in a therapeutic setting vs in the middle of the day/battle/staff meeting (an occasional bit of advice in a paused turbolift or a thirty-second whispered aside is not the same thing)I'm assuming it was also dreadful sci-fi when Troi was shown doing her therapy sessions and talkign to people about their feelings in TNG?
When was 'therapy' ever done during a battle? I can't remember any examples. Also why does it matter if therapy happens 'in the middle of the day' should it only occur between 9am - 12pm or in evening?How often is therapy in Trek done in a therapeutic setting vs in the middle of the day/battle/staff meeting (an occasional bit of advice in a paused turbolift or a thirty-second whispered aside is not the same thing)
With an appointment.When was 'therapy' ever done during a battle? I can't remember any examples. Also why does it matter if therapy happens 'in the middle of the day' should it only occur between 9am - 12pm or in evening?
It happens a lot before battles. It's definitely not limited to Star Trek.When was 'therapy' ever done during a battle? I can't remember any examples. Also why does it matter if therapy happens 'in the middle of the day' should it only occur between 9am - 12pm or in evening?
Indeed. Balance of Terror has that.With an appointment.
I think McCoy used to drop by where ever Kirk was to give him "pep talks". (Therapy)
When was 'therapy' ever done during a battle? I can't remember any examples.
Also why does it matter if therapy happens 'in the middle of the day' should it only occur between 9am - 12pm or in evening?
Occupational hazard for me but I have a blue collared worker who describes doing exactly that with their crew.meant the workday...like talking about your feelings anywhere and everywhere.
It happens. People like to unload.I meant the workday...like talking about your feelings anywhere and everywhere.
Again, what examples?Processing their feelings with the counselor/their crewmates while they do something else. Sometimes it works well for a scene, sometimes it doesn't. Depends how it's written.
And how is that unusual? Humans talk about their feelings all the time, especially at work. You complain to your co-workers, you might talk about how stressed you are about a particular project or you might talk about more personal things with trusted co-workers. That's just human nature. Despite what the 24th century tried to tell us, humans are emotional creatures.I meant the workday...like talking about your feelings anywhere and everywhere.
The humans are to evolve beyond emotions.Despite what the 24th century tried to tell us, humans are emotional creatures.
I'm assuming it was also dreadful sci-fi when Troi was shown doing her therapy sessions and talkign to people about their feelings in TNG?
Yes, exactly this.How often is therapy in Trek done in a therapeutic setting vs in the middle of the day/battle/staff meeting (an occasional bit of advice in a paused turbolift or a thirty-second whispered aside is not the same thing)
Culber was.This is actually my point. Troi was a counselor. So it made sense for her to be doing that.
No one on DSC was.
Doesn't matter.Culber was.
They all seemed like normal human interactions to me. Have you never spoken to a friend or co-worker about a problem? Never doubted yourself in the heat of the moment and had someone give you pep talk?This is actually my point. Troi was a counselor. So it made sense for her to be doing that.
No one on DSC was. So it was quite jarring when the chief engineer, the navigator, the captain, and even the goddamn computer started talking like a therapist.
I think Shakespeare would disagree.Spending excessive time talking about feelings violates one of the most important rules of visual fiction - that of show not tell. Having one character tell another that they're upset is the most straightforward, least dramatic, and least compelling way you can resolve an emotional scene.
I think Shakespeare would disagree.
Maybe it violates the rules of drama. Maybe I'm off my rocker but to me the straightforward approach is one that Star Trek has done very well and talking around feelings feels far less helpful.
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