Tilly is a cadet. and Stamets were probably just humoring here.It's just not very professional and the Starfleet crews are suppose to be consummate professionals according to GR.
Tilly is a cadet. and Stamets were probably just humoring here.It's just not very professional and the Starfleet crews are suppose to be consummate professionals according to GR.
But the thing is: "fucking cool" is so absolutely NOT "edgy" or "adult". Especially not in the dorky way it was presented. It was whimsical - at best. Like, waaay more tame than the one f-bomb every PG-13 movie is allowed to have.
But the thing is: "fucking cool" is so absolutely NOT "edgy" or "adult". Especially not in the dorky way it was presented. It was whimsical - at best. Like, waaay more tame than the one f-bomb every PG-13 movie is allowed to have.
Heh.For Gene's sake, they're supposed to be human beings, too, not flawless paragons of perfect behavior.
Reagarding ST: D viewership numvbers, there's also this:I agree 100%, this much is really obvious just by looking at the changes for season 2.
This part though, I'd be sceptical, that sounds more like unsubstantiated rumor by people with an agenda. We simply don't know the viewing numbers of DIS, they are not public.
What we DO know, is that CBS All Access has around ~2.5 mio. subscribers currently (source: https://www.broadcastingcable.com/news/tca-2018-cbs-all-access-has-2-5-million-subscribers). Which is not significantly more than before they had Discovery (like, +0.5 mio.), and a faaaar cry away from their goal to reach 8 mio. subscribers in the next four years. And it looks as if they will miss this goal by a mile - especially since the competition is not going to be easier as soon as Disney+ starts their streaming service.
Also, it's way, way less viewers than any other Trek show had ever before (ENT started with ~ 6 mio. viewers on average, and got cancelled at ~2.9 mio. average) - and I highly doubt everyone of the 2.5 mio. All Access subscribers is there for Discovery.
What we DO know, is that they think Trekkies are a valuable audience: No way they would otherwise start to commision 5 new Trek series! That suggests the subscribers numbers climbed significantly because of DIS, and hell, since these people pay directly and not through advertisement, the show (or at least their projected viewers once they have Trek on all around the year) might actually be enough to make the whole streaming endeavour profitable.
We will see what the future brings - but DIS is not going to be cancelled alone at this point: Either CBS All Access goes down entiretly (and that can happen even if DIS was highly successfull), or it stays as long as they try to hold their foot in the streaming market. We'll see.
Star Trek: Discovery has been recognized as one of the five most in-demand digital original series in the world.
Discovery has been nominated for a Global TV Demand Award. The awards were founded by Parrot Analytics, a television analytics firm specializing in measuring content demand. The awards are data-driven, determined by Parrot Analytics’ own metrics. The winners will be announced at the NATPE international content market in Miami on January 22, 2019.
Absolutely. As you pointed out earlier, it was just "a cute fucking moment," coming from what is probably the sunniest, least edgy character on the show.
As for the "professionalism" thing . .. the scene acknowledged that it was a bit of an "oops" moment for Tilly, who is a green young cadet, known to lack a filter, and who looked suitably embarrassed afterwards. And Stamets echoes her just to let her off the hook for a moment of youthful enthusiasm. At no point did the scene imply that f-words are commonly thrown about while on duty.
Having sworn in front of someone who I never thought I would, it made me extremely self-conscious for a long time to come. I can see where Tilly is coming from.It would have made a lot more sense to me had she been shown using that sort of profanity regularly in off-duty settings. But she didn’t, before or after, so it doesn’t seem genuine or true to her character. Why would she blurt that out in a workplace setting if she doesn’t talk that way normally? It just makes her seem dim.
Reagarding ST: D viewership numvbers, there's also this:
https://comicbook.com/startrek/2018/12/01/star-trek-discovery-global-tv-demand-award/
Now, it may not win, but the fact it was nominated does seem to indicate people are watching.
I loved that they used the f-bomb as a positive. It wasn't "Fuck you, asshole!", it was an excited, "this is fucking cool!"Sorry, but f-bombs are on a different level than what’s been heard before, and it’s a level that really pulls Trek into the mud.
With TNG, it’s like Shakespeare, whereas Discovery is like a cheap horror movie.
I loved that they used the f-bomb as a positive. It wasn't "Fuck you, asshole!", it was an excited, "this is fucking cool!"
No, they didn't need to do it. But they did it right.
It's not fucking edgy that Captain Killy said "fucking cool" but, to be honest, they were testing the waters with the new format and it was pretty fucking cool.
And they were excited about SCIENCE.
Isn't STAR TREK supposed to preach that science is fucking cool?
Just to avoid confusion, since not everyone has watched DISCO, it wasn't Captain Killy (or even Tilly pretending to be Killy) that said "fucking cool." It was regular Tilly who enthused about a new discovery being "fucking cool."
It wasn't a Mirror Universe thing.
Excited is one thing, the writers throwing in swearing like a teenage first discovering it with all the cringe factor of that, yeeeeah no.
I believe the term you're looking for is "great places," or "amazing places."The power of typos... and my mind going in different places at once while typing. :/
Except that isn't what they did.Excited is one thing, the writers throwing in swearing like a teenage first discovering it with all the cringe factor of that, yeeeeah no.
If it had just felt like it had been thrown in there to see the response it would have felt out of character.I thought it was delightful--and totally in character for Tilly.
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