No.Did Voyager EVER make any sense?
No.Did Voyager EVER make any sense?
They don't need the Tardigrade, though.Really? Because I seem to remember her firing a shit ton of photon torpedoes at Captain Ransom over EXACTLY that sort of issue...
Staments made the jump for Discovery at the end of the latest episode. Thinking about it, Seven would probably be the smartest choice to plug in for the Voyager crew, and then spend a new days regenerating it off.This is kind of what I mean about Voyager not really making sense. On the one hand, the "moral dilemma" episodes were handled incredibly inconsistently and "Shouldn't our top priority be getting home safely?" was used as a plot device numerous times with different approaches to many of them. On the other hand, the crew of that ship single handedly invented or discovered not less than five alternate propulsion systems during their voyages and failed to fully implement any one of them. Even the slipstream drive that got all of them killed in that one alternate dimension still totally WORKED, and would have gotten them home pretty quickly if they'd resolved to use it in short bursts instead of trying to Fast Travel all the way back to Earth. If they'd even TESTED it more often, they probably would have found ways to extent their sprint range, but by the end of the episode Janeway was on full "Well, that didn't work, let's just forget about the whole thing" and they never mentioned it again.
A Voyager episode featuring the Spore Drive would be exactly what you'd expect: Paris or Kim finds some spores in a derelict ship, B'elanna somehow remembers some obscure theory she read about in the academy about how to use the spores for a quantum-displacement translocation drive (which they will totally use as its name from now on because Voyager). They'll get to the "we can only jump a few thousand kiloemters" point within the first twenty minutes of the episode, and then the tardigrade comes aboard about halfway through; they figure out how to use it to run the spore drive, but then somebody (probably Kes or Neelix or, hell, even Chakotay) figures out that the drive is physically harming the tardigrade and now Janeway has to wrestle with the morality of harming or potentially killing one creature in order to rescue her crew. She either decides not to (resulting in the tardigrade being released and then zapping them, say, 5% of the way closer to earth to show its gratitude) or she decides to do it anyway, at which point some sort of quantum tachyonic interference pattern throws off their navigation, Voyager gets lost, the tardigrade escapes and mauls two redshirts before busting out of an airlock and fleeing the ship, and we all learn a valuable lesson about animal cruelty.
Why does Burnham have to say "computer, mirror" when she can just walk over to the sink?
I don't think Chris Hunter's version of Pike would fit into the world of Discovery. 1960's sexism in 2017's version of 2256 doesn't go....Why wouldn't it be okay? I mean, we're currently enjoying a prick in the center chair, too. Nothing wrong with being a prick, in terms of entertainment value.
I find this article amusing:
https://www.inverse.com/article/36807-star-trek-discovery-timeline-uniforms-canon
Apparently the novel "Star Trek: Discovery: Desperate Hours" not only features generous use of the colon in its title but it also features a meeting of the crew of the Pike-era Enterprise and the Shenzhou. However, in trying to explain why the Discovery-era folks look different from Pike's ship, they make things a bit worse for the Discovery producers in their choice of such a different aesthetic for the show.
Why is that? Apparently Starfleet employs different uniforms and different ship designs simultaneously.
That's right-- your uniform can be RADICALLY different depending upon which ship you are assigned.
This also means that there is ZERO reason that we won't see Pike-era TOS style uniforms in the series now.
They don't need the Tardigrade, though.
Staments made the jump for Discovery at the end of the latest episode. Thinking about it, Seven would probably be the smartest choice to plug in for the Voyager crew, and then spend a new days regenerating it off.
Of course, if it was a Voyager episode they'd have to sabotage it anyway. But based on what we've seen thus far of DSC and pretending it's the past of the Voyager universe, they'd be home as soon as they could make their saucer spin.
Janeway broke the temporal prime directive to get her crew home a little earlier than they were supposed to. I don't think anti-augment laws are gonna stop her.Using the Tardigrade DNA was in violation of Anti-Eugenic laws according to the last episode. Now knowing Lorca hes going to ignore that completely, but that is another reason against using the drive.
Really? Because I seem to remember her firing a shit ton of photon torpedoes at Captain Ransom over EXACTLY that sort of issue...
This is kind of what I mean about Voyager not really making sense. On the one hand, the "moral dilemma" episodes were handled incredibly inconsistently and "Shouldn't our top priority be getting home safely?" was used as a plot device numerous times with different approaches to many of them. On the other hand, the crew of that ship single handedly invented or discovered not less than five alternate propulsion systems during their voyages and failed to fully implement any one of them. Even the slipstream drive that got all of them killed in that one alternate dimension still totally WORKED, and would have gotten them home pretty quickly if they'd resolved to use it in short bursts instead of trying to Fast Travel all the way back to Earth. If they'd even TESTED it more often, they probably would have found ways to extent their sprint range, but by the end of the episode Janeway was on full "Well, that didn't work, let's just forget about the whole thing" and they never mentioned it again.
A Voyager episode featuring the Spore Drive would be exactly what you'd expect: Paris or Kim finds some spores in a derelict ship, B'elanna somehow remembers some obscure theory she read about in the academy about how to use the spores for a quantum-displacement translocation drive (which they will totally use as its name from now on because Voyager). They'll get to the "we can only jump a few thousand kiloemters" point within the first twenty minutes of the episode, and then the tardigrade comes aboard about halfway through; they figure out how to use it to run the spore drive, but then somebody (probably Kes or Neelix or, hell, even Chakotay) figures out that the drive is physically harming the tardigrade and now Janeway has to wrestle with the morality of harming or potentially killing one creature in order to rescue her crew. She either decides not to (resulting in the tardigrade being released and then zapping them, say, 5% of the way closer to earth to show its gratitude) or she decides to do it anyway, at which point some sort of quantum tachyonic interference pattern throws off their navigation, Voyager gets lost, the tardigrade escapes and mauls two redshirts before busting out of an airlock and fleeing the ship, and we all learn a valuable lesson about animal cruelty.
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