Bumping this only so it doesn't pass the one-year mark.
Now we have threads within easy reach for each season.
Now we have threads within easy reach for each season.
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Examples really stands out to me. In terms of the arc, it functions as a perfectly fine entry but as an ethical drama it is very much like TNG.Observations for "The Examples"
Tarka reminds me of Dr. Stubbs from TNG's third season premiere episode "Evolution". Extremely arrogant and thinks of himself as a genius who everyone else needs to catch up to. When he replicated the mashed potatoes and started molding them, it reminded me of Close Encounters of the Third Kind. To quote that film, "This means something!" In Close Encounters, they also encounter truly alien life, such as the Discovery will encounter with Species 10-C.
Down on the planet that Discovery has to evacuate before Species 10-C destroys it, we get to see a very subtle theme in Season 4 that started in "Choose to Live" and is continuing here: Discovery's views on the Justice System. In "Choose to Live", the goal is to bring in J'Vini and allow Ni'Var to rehabilitate her. The sign of enlightened society. In "The Examples", the non-Federation colony in danger believes in punishment. Sentencing people to life imprisonment no matter the crime. Probably to make these criminals into "The Examples" for everyone else, to scare them straight. Not only is it punishment, but punishment taken to an extreme. It's better than TNG's "Justice" when even the smallest crime led to death, but not by much. With the threat of Species 10-C, the authority figure representing the colony is willing to leave them to their deaths, thinking they don't deserve to survive.
Burnham wants to rescue everyone. Except one criminal in particular actually did legitimately commit crimes: theft and murder. He wants to face atonement. Burnham is willing to let him face atonement and comes to terms with the fact that she can't save everyone. This is the first step as Captain in learning she can't be everything to everyone. Book, who went with Burnham, digs in further on the position of saving everyone, which is the first serious wedge created between Book and Burnham.
At the end of the episode, Book and Tarka have their first meeting. They both have the want and the drive to stop Species 10-C no matter the cost. Later in the season, we'll see that if they have to disregard everything in doing so, then so be it.
It would've been nice to see some of Rhys' side of the story, evacuating colonists, but I'm not going to pretend I care about that. That's not the real story. The real story is how should society deal with criminals, different people's values on others' lives and their own, and having the ability to be able to make a tough choice.
The episode isn't perfect, but works on multiple thematic levels at the same time, it continues character arcs from earlier and the season and lays down the foundation for what will happen later, so there are a lot of moving parts, more than it would look like on the surface, so I give "The Examples" an 8.
Ratings So Far
"Kobayashi Maru" --> Original Rating: 8 --> Final Rating: 8
"Anomaly" --> Original Rating: 9 --> Final Rating: 8
"Choose to Live" --> Original Rating: 8 --> Final Rating: 9
"All Is Possible" --> Original Rating: 7 --> Final Rating: 9
"The Examples" --> Original Rating: 8 --> Final Rating: 8
This week I'm watching Episodes 6 and 7. Thoughts on those later.
Since I'm re-rewatching the fourth season anyway, I might as well fill in the gaps from the last time around. I already made detailed observations about the first three episodes and everything I said there stands.
Observations for "All Is Possible"
When Tilly is assigned to train Cadets and finds her true calling being an instructor at Starfleet Academy, that gives her a direction that's uniquely suited to her. One that First Officer definitely wasn't. But that's not what I want to highlight. What I want to highlight is this: We have it truly spelled out what the 32nd Century is like on a Sociological Level for the first time. With FTL travel scarcer and so many worlds that have been cut off from each other, most Federation citizens and those who want to join Starfleet have spent most or all of their time only around their own kind or their own society. They don't have experience dealing with other cultures, other aliens, and other worlds, even within the Federation itself. These cadets, like everyone else in the Federation, have to re-learn how to work with each other. Before the The Burn, that was taken for granted. Which is why Kovich wanted Tilly to help these cadets. Because she's specifically from before The Burn.
Here's where I go political now. There's no way around it: politics, at least American politics, are polarized. Only in the 1850s through 1870s were they worse. The decade leading up to the Civil War, then the Civil War itself, and the Reconstruction after it. For most of the 20th Century, my understanding is that you'd have extremes on the left and the right, but then the middle would prevail. Without that middle, the government constantly teeters on brinksmanship, like we have in the 21st Century. The two sides are dug in; and leaders can't budge out of fear of looking weak.
So is also the case between the Federation and Ni'Var. President Rillak and President T'Rina can't back down from their positions or they will look weak and lose support from their backers. A third side, a moderating side, someone who can make sure someone is serving the Federation's interests and Ni'Var's has to be a bridge. After Burnham takes to Rillak and Saru talks to T'Rina, Burnham and Saru talk to each other and realize Rillak and T'Rina are hoping Burnham and Saru can suggest an alternative they can agree with, but they can't actually come right out and say it. In politics, it's hard to come right out and say anything without weighing how it will be received. It's why I myself would never want to be involved with politics. But, anyway, Burnham offers to be the bridge between the Federation and Ni'Var, in order to allow Ni'Var to rejoin the Federation and have its concerns addressed. This is Burnham putting her background living on Vulcan and being a Ni'Varian citizen to use. Like Tilly in her story, Burnham has something unique to bring the table in this diplomatic situation as well.
Finding out where there's common ground and having two parties that actually want solutions are the way to reach agreements and make sure progress is made. Not wanting to find common ground and preferring to complain about dilemmas instead trying to solve them is a way to make sure no progress is made.
Not a powerful enough episode to be a 10, but a strong enough message on all fronts, showing All Is Possible, that I give this a 9.
I think Jadzia had hosted Dax for a couple of years before DS9, plus the circumstances around transitioning the symbiont was more "normal" and not as traumatic as with Ezri and Adira, maybe the jumbledupness has something to do with that.It feels like the Tal host is a lot less dominant than Dax ever was with Jadzia or Ezri, but then Ezri also felt very young and not much like Dax. So maybe the Symbiont is more a vessel for memories than an actual personality. Ezri felt very jumbled up, and maybe Adira's also very jumbled up.
2?I've watched the two older episodes that we know connect to S5![]()
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