Was there some kind of short after season one featuring Leland and Georgiou? I seem to remember it being mentioned but been unable to find it on All-Access.
It was a deleted scene. I wish they hadn't cut it.
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Was there some kind of short after season one featuring Leland and Georgiou? I seem to remember it being mentioned but been unable to find it on All-Access.
It was a deleted scene. I wish they hadn't cut it.
Do you know which episode? It might be on the Blu-ray I picked up.
Was there some kind of short after season one featuring Leland and Georgiou? I seem to remember it being mentioned but been unable to find it on All-Access.
It was released as an "exclusive bonus scene" on the official Star Trek YouTube channel, where it can still be found:It was a deleted scene. I wish they hadn't cut it.
I would have guessed Bjorn.
It turns out the Borg *are* Swedish (on Leland's mother's side) afterall.
Federation technology is what ever the latest episode says it is. (Just watch TOS)
More powerful than the Guardian of Forever or the slingshot manuever? More powerful than the transporter pattern memory?Obviously the Speed of Plot is a universal law, but one should keep some consistency, and they usually do. However the Red Angle suit has replaced the Genesis device as the most powerful device shown as being in the Federations arsenal, rivals the Annorax as one of the most powerful devices shown in Star Trek.
Just my 2 cents of course.
More powerful than the Guardian of Forever or the slingshot manuever? More powerful than the transporter pattern memory?
Was there some kind of short after season one featuring Leland and Georgiou? I seem to remember it being mentioned but been unable to find it on All-Access.
The GOF sends you where you want to go. You just need to know when and where.I'll give you the Guardian of Forever, with the caveat that it has a mind if it's own. It will not necessarily do what you want it to do.
The slingshot lets you travel in time you would still have to cross space on your own, plus there are risks associated with it. The Transporter is a one way trip.
The done it one McGuffin is great for episodic TV and the casual veiwer. But fanboys have long memoriesAs I said last year with the Spore Drive, ridiculous tech doesn't hold itself in memory as much if it's "one and done." It ceases being more plot device and transforms into just plot.
When it comes to magic-tech in Trek or other sci fi, I think treating it as a Mcguffin is best. Just establish it exists and move on.
But fanboys have long memories
Yeah, the transporter cured death. Where's the complains about that?The GOF sends you where you want to go. You just need to know when and where.
What are the risks with the Slingshot? Worked fine in A:E and TVH.
The transport can apparently cure any ills by resetting you to the last "save". Pretty powerful stuff.
I don't have any problems with her being awkward-adorkable per se. I've found the main issue is that she's been so out of focus recently that she literally has nothing else to do but appear in a single scene or at most two scenes built along the lines of 'Tilly says something funny', as if to signal she's still alive, whenever she's not simply reading something off a computer display. I didn't complain about her before because, well, I'm an unapologetic Tilly fan and I've found most of her scenes legitimately cute or funny, but the favorite law of physics scene in Perpetual Infinity was jarring even to me.I LOVE TILLY TO BITS.
But I wish the writers would lay off on the quirky scenes when she says something funny because there is just much more for her to do and as a character I'd like to see her not be the comedy relief but grow more.
I don't have any problems with her being awkward-adorkable per se. I've found the main issue is that she's been so out of focus recently that she literally has nothing else to do but appear in a single scene or at most two scenes built along the lines of 'Tilly says something funny', as if to signal she's still alive, whenever she's not simply reading something off a computer display. I didn't complain about her before because, well, I'm an unapologetic Tilly fan and I've found most of her scenes legitimately cute or funny, but the favorite law of physics scene in Perpetual Infinity was jarring even to me.
Now that I think of it, it's almost as if she's been set aside because she's been the usual go-to character for Burnham when she wanted personal advice; now that role has been taken over by Spock, and suddenly, with nothing spore-drive-related for her (and Stamets, for that matter) to do, she's being pushed back into Mandatory Line Mayweather territory.
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