I don't get this episode, TNG, like TOS before it, masked the episodes as being an entertaining way to "preach" to the audience some moral ground or whatever. TNG was a little more heavy-handed than most, some of the episodes the message is muddy, some of the episodes the message is weighed down with Berman's ultra-clean, don't piss anyone off, bullshit. And sometimes the message is a bit... Huh?
Which brings me to the episode "Imaginary Friend." Which pretty much seems to be that, "Kids, sometimes parents make rules to protect you so don't get all pissed off and destroy starships when your mommy and daddy don't let you roam around engine rooms or bars."
Huh? Who in the audience was this "message" for? Were adults watching this episode like, "Gee! You're right Star Trek! Rules ARE good to protect kids with!"
I don't get it, but whatever. It's an episode I've always found fairly decent for an episode where a lot of focus is put on a kid's POV, something many movies and shows do not do very well at all. Though I think Troi's counseling of Clara by encouraging her behavior is... odd. I'm not a counselor, and certainly not a 24th century counselor, but it seems to me that enocuring Clara so much to presist in having an "imaginary friend" isn't exactly healthy for the little girl. Oh, that's the other "message" of this episode. Psychotic behavior is acceptable as Guinan says she has imaginary friends. So dimentia in the 24th century? Acceptable for people to have.
And Data says he sees a "bunny rabbit" in the nebula's clouds?
When has Data ever talked like that?! Shouldn't he have said, "clearly the cloud formation is that of a oryctolagus cuniculus." But no, saying "bunny rabbit" is so much more of a Data thing to say.
And Picard's speech to Clara's "imaginary friend" -really an alien living in the nebula- at the end made me think that we should've had an episode where Picard has to talk a computer into destroying itself by mind-fucking it with logic.
Which brings me to the episode "Imaginary Friend." Which pretty much seems to be that, "Kids, sometimes parents make rules to protect you so don't get all pissed off and destroy starships when your mommy and daddy don't let you roam around engine rooms or bars."
Huh? Who in the audience was this "message" for? Were adults watching this episode like, "Gee! You're right Star Trek! Rules ARE good to protect kids with!"
I don't get it, but whatever. It's an episode I've always found fairly decent for an episode where a lot of focus is put on a kid's POV, something many movies and shows do not do very well at all. Though I think Troi's counseling of Clara by encouraging her behavior is... odd. I'm not a counselor, and certainly not a 24th century counselor, but it seems to me that enocuring Clara so much to presist in having an "imaginary friend" isn't exactly healthy for the little girl. Oh, that's the other "message" of this episode. Psychotic behavior is acceptable as Guinan says she has imaginary friends. So dimentia in the 24th century? Acceptable for people to have.
And Data says he sees a "bunny rabbit" in the nebula's clouds?

And Picard's speech to Clara's "imaginary friend" -really an alien living in the nebula- at the end made me think that we should've had an episode where Picard has to talk a computer into destroying itself by mind-fucking it with logic.
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