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I officially began my journey through all Star Trek on October 9th...

It might have been timed/balanced a bit better if done more by design than because of contract issues, but given the concept of the character, it would have been a waste not to kill Jadzia and recast as a new host.
 
While never specified directly (Insurrection never gives a Stardate to reference), it's generally viewed that Insurrection takes place just after the beginning of "It's Only a Paper Moon". How to have Worf in two places at once is generally the issue.
Simple explanation: the TNG movies take place in the Kelvin-verse.
 
I agree with the above poster, Nicole Debeer did her best and seems quite talented - Ezra Dax, however, is pretty annoying.

I think they'd have been better to bring her in for maybe an episode or two before the big arc just to close off the Dax story and show the symbiote (and Jadzia's memory) lived on instead of trying to jam in a new main character in the final season.
 
I thought the actress who played the "pregnant teenager" in The Outrageous Okona was the same actress who played a medical doctor who was also a telepath on Seaquest (if anyone remembers). Now I'm not sure if they were the same actress.

I remember Nicole DeBoer being on a sci-fi show with the actor who was also played a secondary character on Kevin Sorbo's sci-fi show Andromeda. Another thing she was in was a TV series based on Stephan KIngs The Dead Zone.
 
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Take Me Out to the Holosuite may be completely out-of-place considering the setting and the current war with the Dominion, but I really enjoyed it.

The cast is hilarious. Odo practicing "his moves" cracked me up.

It is funny. But they did manufacture victory as the Vulcan said in the end. I mean if they were going into denial in the end then it makes you wonder about the point of this game. Couldn't have Sisko pretended that he won the wrestling mach against the Vulcan many years before and saved himself decades of aggravation? Or he could have pretended that he was the one who got two medals of whatchamacallit and the Vulcan only got one. Once we resort to denial and dishonesty we can do anything.
 
It is funny. But they did manufacture victory as the Vulcan said in the end. I mean if they were going into denial in the end then it makes you wonder about the point of this game. Couldn't have Sisko pretended that he won the wrestling mach against the Vulcan many years before and saved himself decades of aggravation? Or he could have pretended that he was the one who got two medals of whatchamacallit and the Vulcan only got one. Once we resort to denial and dishonesty we can do anything.

Sisko, resorting to dishonesty to manufacture a victory? No. Never. I refuse to believe that. :angel:
 
Sisko, resorting to dishonesty to manufacture a victory? No. Never. I refuse to believe that. :angel:

Yes, what was the point of it all? Humiliating Rom for example or getting angry at Odo for doing his job. If in the end he was going to say. "Hey, I lost but I don't care. I am going to pretend that I won."? Why did he even accept the challenge to begin with?
 
I think they weren't really manufacturing victory as much as they were just trying to get a rise out of the Vulcans in the end, which they achieved. So in that sense, it was (kind of) a victory!

Also, it's a good message for the keeeds. No need to be all pouty and depressed about losing a baseball game.

Or better yet, don't be a fool like Sisko and let the words of someone you don't like get to you for decades. Or don't get drunk and try to wrestle with someone many times stronger than you. Or don't argue with people when they are right. Or don't hate someone for being right on the money about what you are. I think the thing we kept losing sight of is that Sisko was exactly was solok(?) said he was.
 
My interpretation is that it was a victory for Rom (and it made Rom feel good about himself) when his bunt allowed them to score (I know it was kind of bumbling and all) and the rest of them shared in Rom's victory. And they refused to be upset about Solok "proving" he was right. One thing that irks me in all incarnations of Trek is sometimes you've got these characters like Solok that are like, "We are so superior to the rest of you". And he needed taken down a peg or two. That's my take on it, other's might disagree.
 
My interpretation is that it was a victory for Rom (and it made Rom feel good about himself) when his bunt allowed them to score (I know it was kind of bumbling and all) and the rest of them shared in Rom's victory. And they refused to be upset about Solok "proving" he was right. One thing that irks me in all incarnations of Trek is sometimes you've got these characters like Solok that are like, "We are so superior to the rest of you". And he needed taken down a peg or two. That's my take on it, other's might disagree.

I think the problem is not Solok it's Sisko. Once you let someone get to you, you are the one responsible for the consequences not him.
 
Yeah I really like the baseball one. YOU'RE OUT!

There are a couple of lighter episodes that at first seemed oddly placed in the season, but by the time I finished it was all good. Season six on the other hand, I find has too many in the same area of the season.
 
I think so though too, yet it's certainly debatable. I'll wait until Shalashaska watches the episode.
 
Yes, what was the point of it all? Humiliating Rom for example or getting angry at Odo for doing his job. If in the end he was going to say. "Hey, I lost but I don't care. I am going to pretend that I won."? Why did he even accept the challenge to begin with?

Humiliating Rom gets even funnier when you read some of the background. apparently Max Grodenchik is actually a really really good baseball player. Like he had the option to go pro type really good. He ended up having to throw and play lefty for this episode in order to be able to play as badly as Rom was supposed to. He was having a lot of trouble faking being a bad player.
 
Humiliating Rom gets even funnier when you read some of the background. apparently Max Grodenchik is actually a really really good baseball player. Like he had the option to go pro type really good. He ended up having to throw and play lefty for this episode in order to be able to play as badly as Rom was supposed to. He was having a lot of trouble faking being a bad player.

Yes, I remember reading that in an article.
 
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