I am watching inside the writer's room. So far this has been the best documentary feature on the TNG season sets.
-Chris
Agreed, it looked incredible. Pretty much my favourite episode, so I love seeing it refreshed like this.Who Watches the Watchers looks fantastic. The shots of the Enterprise in orbit, and all of the external shots down on the planet - wow!
There was a yellow tinge to this episode originally (kind of like the oft described vaseline over the lens look of STNG SD), the colors are simply amazing. I love this episode as much as when it came out, but maybe a little bit more now!
RAMA
I am watching inside the writer's room. So far this has been the best documentary feature on the TNG season sets.
-Chris
I watched it too. What a great panel discussion. I really liked how comprehensive it was, covering the overall series and not just the third season. I was wondering if them moving on to bigger projects, especially with Ron Moore and DS9 and Battlestar Galactica would hinder their opinions of TNG but it sounded like they genuinely loved working there, despite the turmoil in the early seasons. I especially liked what they said about Jeri Taylor. I hope Burnett and Ley, Jr get her for an interview for Season 4. I would love to know what she is up to these days.
I am watching inside the writer's room. So far this has been the best documentary feature on the TNG season sets.
-Chris
I watched it too. What a great panel discussion. I really liked how comprehensive it was, covering the overall series and not just the third season. I was wondering if them moving on to bigger projects, especially with Ron Moore and DS9 and Battlestar Galactica would hinder their opinions of TNG but it sounded like they genuinely loved working there, despite the turmoil in the early seasons. I especially liked what they said about Jeri Taylor. I hope Burnett and Ley, Jr get her for an interview for Season 4. I would love to know what she is up to these days.
It was also interesting to hear RDM's story about the episode Family, and how Gene basically trashed it. I thought it was a great episode. Also, by season 7 the writer's room was running short on people and short on ideas. It was also fun how RDM demonstrated on the white board how they used to break an episode, and later in the special they were saying how seeing the words on the board made it seems like the old days again..lol
They all took what they had learned on Trek to projects they did later. Just look at RDM. When he finally left during Voyager he couldn't stand the direction the show was going. BSG was a direct reflection of everything he felt was wrong with Voyager, and the Roddenberry Box.
-Chris
It probably didn't help that they were spread so thin with four different projects going at once.by season 7 the writer's room was running short on people and short on ideas.
Just watched Ensigns of Command.
"All requests for changes in the text of provision (b) must be submitted in writing or by a terribly complex subspace long as it is encrypted and unreadable, as well as garbled and confused, so as to conform to the provision (a.294 a-c) of the incomprehensible acts of widdershins, Federation document locator number 784830.B340 (Section 876234). All of this is simply to get the text along to subparagraph 832, which is quite a ways down the page. You might think that this is incredibly clever stuff. Boy are you wrong.
Rick is totally getting a Kei and Yuri reference into the text. You know, the two cute girls with the big guns. We might also mention Akira, Ranma Nibunnoichi, Urusei Yatsura, Rhea Gall Force, and a few other animated films. The Federation at this point in time seems more tangled up in paperwork than the Iran-Contra scandal business.
In the text of the treaty, or didn't anyone think about that eventuality when the bloody document was first drawn up? Never mind, it's a rhetorical question anyway, but we just thought we'd try to demonstrate our legalistic cleverness. Just one more until the critical one, where we talk about consultations and that sort of thing.
We can do search-and-replace. Colme to think about it, that's what the Sheliac want to do with the colony on the planet. This section deals with the right of each party to confer with the other in the event something happens with the treaty. This may take the form of normal EM spectrum communication, subspace EM communication, face-to-face meetings, telephone tag, messages in bottles or any other water-tight form of enclosure, gossip, half-truths, outright lies, or face-to-face meetings. Interruption of treaty compliance shall not exceed one (1.00 x 10e8) standard UFP solar year (except during the month of July). See technical TA48589.1742 A-CE58945) for code inputs. LCARS updates on treaty compliance interruptions shall take place at each starbase layover, or when commanded by ranking UFP (or other designated body) officials at Starfleet Headquarters, 24-583 Federation Drive, San Francisco, CA, Earth, Sol Sector. Request for assistance may be placed by transmission to standard Starfleet booster station for channeling to UFP Treaty Office (Sol Sector).
Acceptable if appropriate notification is given to Federation Bureau of Treaties (Sol Sector). See TA 98745.234(I-F) for schedule of codes and temporal adjustment factors. Third Party Agreements. Third party assistance may be requested from a Federation if the destance from the vessel to Sol Sector is greater than 5,000 lightyears. UFP standards measurement bureau units. Assistance may also be requested if the vessel is less than 1,000 lightyears of a standard UFP subspace relay booster station. And that's the way it is."
Another thing I noticed about this episode was even on episode 1, Ron Moore was the Klingon guy. I mean the scene at the end with the Bonding ceremony and the music was almost classic Ron Moore, even if this was his first episode. Later on when I'm done with the season, I might go back and listen to the commentary to see if he brings this up.
Another thing I noticed about this episode was even on episode 1, Ron Moore was the Klingon guy. I mean the scene at the end with the Bonding ceremony and the music was almost classic Ron Moore, even if this was his first episode. Later on when I'm done with the season, I might go back and listen to the commentary to see if he brings this up.
On the commentary for "Sins of the Father" Moore says he became the Klingon guy after Michael Piller asked him to write a memo outlining Klingon history and culture. He still has the memo and reads it out during the commentary.
Jeez, I know Troi was hard to write for, but you'd think they could come up with something better than "The Price." The fakest, smarmiest guy you can imagine steps foot on the ship, and she falls instantly under his spell for no apparent reason. And then they just... lie around in bed sweet talking each other for the rest of the episode.
And I had a really hard time caring about this bidding war over some random alien's wormhole as well (although I admit it was cool hearing these early references to the Gamma and Delta Quadrants).
I also had to laugh at Riker reading his little personal PADD in Ten-Forward. It may have been shot back in 1989, but it looked for all the world like someone today sitting at lunch and checking out their iphone. Lol![]()
In fact any time I watch BTTF2 or Robocop now, I can't help but wonder "Where are all the people walking around with smartphones??"
Yeah it's a small thing, but watching everyone walking around with a PADD of some kind on TNG really does make it feel surprisingly modern. Even if they were depicting the 24th instead of 21st century, it's still about the only scifi show I can think of that actually got that part of our "future" right, and predicted just how omnipresent such technology would be in our culture.
In fact any time I watch BTTF2 or Robocop now, I can't help but wonder "Where are all the people walking around with smartphones??"
Yeah it's a small thing, but watching everyone walking around with a PADD of some kind on TNG really does make it feel surprisingly modern. Even if they were depicting the 24th instead of 21st century, it's still about the only scifi show I can think of that actually got that part of our "future" right, and predicted just how omnipresent such technology would be in our culture.
In fact any time I watch BTTF2 or Robocop now, I can't help but wonder "Where are all the people walking around with smartphones??"
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