I saw that a half dozen times? before noticing that line... a groan but a groan can be enjoyable...Sisko: Hammock Time!
Emissary comes across as a sort of film. Everything is heightened, more significant, more emotional. When the regular episodes get underway, suddenly everything is more detached.
Okay, good one... I think there's been far too much coddling of Trek fans who supposedly need things comfortable, easy, and familiar. Is this Star Trek or isn't it? Drop them in the deep end, but do it in a riveting way that holds onto viewers. I now love the idea of a weirded out Sisko and son, who find nothing easy or comforting at DS9 for many episodes. I'm all for denying viewers comfort...Interesting observation. Never had that thought that explicitly, but I think it's correct.
I suppose in Emissary the alienness of the station is an integral part of the story being told, and it can be safely done so since it is still only the pilot episode.
It is, however, slightly ad odds with the more general Trek formula 'here we are coasting along in an unknown, dangerous area in this little relatively safe haven we call our ship that feels like our temporary home, and then something happens to challenge or imperil us'. In a way, all other series conforms somewhat to that, even if they are in the midst of enemy territory, such as in Voyager or 3rd season Enterprise. So the station had to feel like 'home' relatively quickly, and let the threatening 'alienness' be found on Bajor and its conflicts, the Gamma quadrant, but not as status quo on the station - as an individual emerging crisis at best (station hit by an ion storm, station hit by an unknown virus or unknown defense programs stored in Cardassian computers, etc).
I suppose they could have been still bolder and presented the station as an alien place where Starfleet officers didn't feel at ease for much longer. That would have made for an interesting series, but perhaps the leap from the standard in a single series would have been too big - DS9 stepped far enough out of the standard formula as it was. But perhaps such a thing could have been done in a new Trek series after people had grown accustomed to DS9.
Were the holosuite's safeties off … or on?Just reminded of this one:
In Badda-bing Badda- bang, after the caper has been successfully pulled off, Miles rejoins the rest of them after his “”strip search.” Bashir says, “Where have you been?” and Miles says, “I don’t want to talk about it.”
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