Yeah, and it was glorious.I can't really speak to Prodigy, but I feel sure that this was done in Lower Decks simply because they were consciously echoing the conventions of 90s Trek, most particularly TNG.
Yeah, and it was glorious.I can't really speak to Prodigy, but I feel sure that this was done in Lower Decks simply because they were consciously echoing the conventions of 90s Trek, most particularly TNG.
^ If it ain't broke, why fix it?
Well, that's not how DISCO did it at all. They had an elaborate opening credits sequence with music, animation, and... credits. And for some reason, they thought that even doing all that, not showing the episode titles was the way to roll, despite the fact that there was plenty of time and space to show a title within that opening credit sequence.Because you don't need to wait 20 seconds for people to come back from whatever they were doing during the commercial break, because a modern audience wants their 42 minutes of show to be 41 minutes of story so you've got to cut all the credits to the bare minimum, and because in long form storytelling the episodes aren't individual stories anyway, making episode titles less important (and many shows don't even have episode titles any more) which is why it faded from use. I do prefer it myself and I also wish modern shows did a better job of telling me who plays which character so I didn't have to Google that every time, but I also understand why it changed.
Fair enough. The visual discontinuity was too much for me, and I've never watched Discovery.Well, that's not how DISCO did it at all. They had an elaborate opening credits sequence with music, animation, and... credits. And for some reason, they thought that even doing all that, not showing the episode titles was the way to roll, despite the fact that there was plenty of time and space to show a title within that opening credit sequence.
TL;DR - Nope!
Both "Dead Stop" and "Lift Us Where Suffering Cannot Reach" seem to be about the ones who don't walk away from Omelas, but seek to bring the whole accursed place crashing down. In one, they were successful. In the other, Omelas remained standing.Just occurred to me that Ent's Dead Stop is a clever take on that Ursula K. Le Guin story, 'The Ones Who Walk Away from Omelas".
Doesn't the station start to repair itself at the end of 'Dead Stop'?Both "Dead Stop" and "Lift Us Where Suffering Cannot Reach" seem to be about the ones who don't walk away from Omelas, but seek to bring the whole accursed place crashing down. In one, they were successful. In the other, Omelas remained standing.
Good point.Doesn't the station start to repair itself at the end of 'Dead Stop'?
But at least they tried. Though even Pike tried to stop the guards when he was down on the planet in the SNW episode.Good point.
The horrible irony of that episode was that Pike and his crew had chosen the wrong side, and they didn't realize it.But at least they tried. Though even Pike tried to stop the guards when he was down on the planet in the SNW episode.
Ensign Droopy.![]()
Bobby
Bobby was a male Human who served as a Starfleet officer during the mid-23rd century. Bobby served aboard the USS Enterprise during Captain James T. Kirk's five-year mission in the second half of the 2260s. During Kirk's second year of command, in 2266, Bobby was assigned for a time to the...memory-alpha.fandom.com
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