Janeway didn't stick by him until Seven slapped some sense into her. She basically told her you don't turn your back and ignore the issue of someone with a learning disability. You face it and find a way to treat it and deal with it. Seven told her that due to my being Borg, there are somethings I might not fully understand either. If I don't learn as you wish me too, will you turn your back on me too? Before that, Janeway was acting like Nurse Ratchett.I loved how Captain Janeway stuck by him through all of this, even though she was against telling him at first about the incident. Picardo blew me away in this episode.
Before that, Janeway was acting like Nurse Ratchett.
Before that, Janeway was acting like Nurse Ratchett.
Something about the thought of a combination Janeway-Kai Winn is both alarming and AWESOME!
Before that, Janeway was acting like Nurse Ratchett.
Wiki writes:
Nurse Mildred Ratched is the head administrative nurse at the Salem, Oregon State Hospital, a mental institution where she exercises near-absolute power over the patients' access to medications, privileges, and basic necessities such as food and toiletries. She capriciously revokes these privileges whenever a patient displeases her. Her superiors turn blind eyes because she maintains order, keeping the patients from acting out, either through antipsychotic and anticonvulsant drugs or her own brand of "therapy", which consists mostly of humiliating patients into doing her bidding. Her greatest success is the stuttering, suicidal Billy Bibbit, who is so terrified of her that he does whatever she says.
Clearly not tirelessly enough seeing how the solution was so simple. From what they showed everytime he acted up, they just simply shut him down. Janeway didn't "reason" with him because she admitted she still saw him as a hologram. The solution rested in Janeway finally seeing what he was becoming, real. That's why trying to rewrite his programming wasn't working. His mind didn't work that way anymore, it now works like every living thing. That is why the the first words in the book are so profound: "So starts the first day of the rest of your life." The Doc. had been born again.^ Keep in mind, Janeway had already seen the Doctor fall to pieces because of this once before. So I'll give her the benefit of the doubt and say that, 18 months ago, she worked tirelessly with him to overcome his breakdown, but hit a wall.
Nope.Perhaps you are calling Janeway's reprograming the Doctor her "lobotomizing" of the EMH, but even that doesn't fit since at this point in time no-one has ruled on his "sentience", and he's already been reprogrammed significantly in season 2's "Swarm" by Harry and B'Elanna.
I don't think I'd want every episode to be like this one, but it's clear that they had a lot of fun making it, and it was enjoyable to watch.
I will say that in the scene where Janeway is recruited to be Arachnia, Robert Beltran seems to be completely uninterested in anything to do with the show. If you really want to get deep into it, you might say that Chakotay's still in denial over the Kashyk kiss, but it seems more likely that the actor was just feeling goofy. He's already got a smirk on his face long before anyone's said anything remotely humorous.
"Broken Bow" was inspired by "Bride of Chaotica" of all episodes... man, there are a lot jokes that can be made there, but I'll leave them for the ENT haters.![]()
"Broken Bow" was inspired by "Bride of Chaotica" of all episodes... man, there are a lot jokes that can be made there, but I'll leave them for the ENT haters.![]()
It was?
Oh, I was just making the joke that because "Bride" mentioned toilets, "Bow" was inspired by the episode and proceeded to do the same.
I haven't watched Broken Bow in almost ten years. I try to push Enterprise to the back of my mind.
However, I have been thinking of giving it a chance lately. I did like Twilight
I haven't watched the show since it ended with a few televised exceptions, but the same can be said for me with Voyager (although I tune into that on TV more often). I liked it well enough, but it was really only in its last two seasons that I felt like a big-time fan.
I haven't watched the show since it ended with a few televised exceptions, but the same can be said for me with Voyager (although I tune into that on TV more often). I liked it well enough, but it was really only in its last two seasons that I felt like a big-time fan.
ENT disappointed me amazingly.
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