Hey, again there is an urgent emergency and they absolutely need to use the spore drive. What is this, third episode in a row?
It's not the same, it's much better than that. Enterprise being the only capable ship had to happen by chance each time. Whereas Discovery itself is unique. The explanation is literally the premise of the show.This is exactly the same as the Enterprise being the only ship in the quadrant every episode or film.
Wasn't the Admiral's worry about the need to get it done as quickly possible the reason for giving the Discovery the mission?Shouldn't it be better to send three conventional ships, have them blast the jail ship to bits, and then hope that perhaps one of the three ships makes it out, than to offer the S-drive to the Klingons on a spinning platter?
Timo Saloniemi
Sure it is, since "meh" is actually used by people, and its use is attested since at least the 1990s by both Mirriam-Webster and OED.It isn’t even a real word...
Yup. It causes a lot of worthless arguments.Damn, Trek fans are a literal bunch.
Wasn't the Admiral's worry about the need to get it done as quickly possible the reason for giving the Discovery the mission?
It's the oooold star trek writer's crutch. Like, in the first two seasons of TNG, how many episode's hijinks began with a scientific or exploration mission? About 3.Hey, again there is an urgent emergency and they absolutely need to use the spore drive. What is this, third episode in a row?
I don't think they know how his "ghost ship" ghosts, they just figure he's can tell them enough.Which, when you think about it, made no sense, considering Lorca didn't understand enough of the theory to possibly make it work. Now if they captured Stamets as well, the Federation might be in trouble.
Yeah, sure. It is just that this is a bit special case because there is the moral implications for the drive and they have to debate each time who gets to be tortured this time to solve the urgent emergency.It's the oooold star trek writer's crutch. Like, in the first two seasons of TNG, how many episode's hijinks began with a scientific or exploration mission? About 3.
How many episodes began with a "distress call"? About 30.
Even if Discovery is leaning on the same crutch, they're trying to jazz it up. In one episode it's a destroyed relay, in another, a destroyed ship, in another, a colony in distress(okay, that's the least jazzed up), and in another, It's their own captain who's in distress. And in another it's ambassador nice vulcan, with a psychic distress call. Now that's how you do a distress call!![]()
L'Rell: "We have no devil, Lorca, but we understand the habits of yours."I don't think they know how his "ghost ship" ghosts, they just figure he's can tell them enough.
But Lorca was too tough for these cowardly Klingons!
L'Rell "How many lights, Lorca!"
Lorca, "I don't know, I can't see, and I don't care. Go to the devil..."
Right! How come they can get this right, but the D7 so wrong?
I remember somebody (Fuller? Kurtman?) said that hate the Klingon Ship's neck. Maybe Fuller, at the beginning of this year. But maybe I'm wrong.
what a jerkface.I think it may have been Fuller as he was the one pushing for a complete overhaul of the klingon makeup. I think the idea of re-imagining everything about the Klingons gave him a boner.
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