Having a bowling team doesn't necessarily mean there's an alley. Could be VR.
Having a bowling team doesn't necessarily mean there's an alley. Could be VR.
Which one was that?I did manage to work the swimming pool into another Trek novel.![]()
Okay, I'll have to be more explicit the next time I mention the bowling alley in a book.
I did manage to work the swimming pool into another Trek novel.![]()
Well, no. It was there on the ISS Enterprise, which showed that the Empire didn't care about such trivialities. Mirror McCoy and the other sadists in Sickbay probably considered it a badge of honor. On the USS Enterprise, it had been cleaned up.
Which one was that?.
As to the acid, I never considered the idea it could have been cleaned up in only one universe. I wonder how fans would react to that being stated onscreen.
Acid: Someone go find me the Superman gif where "the joke" flies past him?
That is pretty much what I thought: we were supposed to believe both universes had tables with spills. Acid would have damaged the table even if it was cleaned up.I always took that to mean it was a point of consistency between the two universes, that both tables had an acid stain in the same spot.
Depends on the type of acid (and solution strength). Some may leave no trace if promptly cleaned up, others will immediately begin reacting with the material of the countertop surface.It's funny how interpretations differ - and here comes my standard observation about how much I love this board. I thought/think the dialogue is explicit on that point:
MCCOY: What is this? Everything's all messed up and changed around, out of place.
UHURA: Captain, what's happened?
MCCOY: No, not everything. That spot, I spilt acid there a year ago. Jim, What in blazes is this?
So isn't Bones saying that unlike everything else being all messed up, a spot remains that's consistent with his memory, but was cleaned up on our Enterprise? I always took it that way because otherwise, why mention it?
Depends on the type of acid (and solution strength). Some may leave no trace if promptly cleaned up, others will immediately begin reacting with the material of the countertop surface.
I always took it to mean that whatever had been spilled left a permanently-etched spot of damage on the tabletop, even after proper cleanup of the spill. That it also appeared in the mirror-universe counterpart of Sick Bay served as confirmation that--regardless of all the other things which differed--this particular mark was consistent between both versions of the Enterprise.
(ahem) WHAT?!?!?Acid as a 1960s drug reference? I never thought of that.
Also, it seems like there were other, more innocuous things to remark about if he wanted to establish similarity. "Everything's messed up - except this: that bottle of Miralax I picked up on Rigel VII, Jim! It's still right where I left it."
And then right after that interview, the introspective and enlightened GR went off to go sleep with his assistant Susan Sackett.When TNG premiered, Gene gave an interview where he talked about Kirk being the brash, impulsive man that he himself was in his 30s while Picard represented the more introspective man he eventually became.
^^ 100%. I'd give this comment a standing ovation if I could.What Roddenberry thought has little to do what is actually portrayed on screen. Yes, he's the creator and sometimes-Executive Producer of the show, but Kirk was a character created by many, many people, including William Shatner and the multitude of writers and producers who worked on Star Trek for those 3 years.
Roddenberry had a lot of interesting retroactive takes on Star Trek. I'm not sure many of them are particularly grounded or noteworthy, to be honest. The guy created a great show and had some massively creative ideas. But he did not have the stamina or longevity to influence the franchise as much as we all pretend. Much of S2 of TOS and nearly all of S3 was administered under other show runners. He created and "wrote" for TNG, but really only for 2 seasons (and even that was not as much involvement as you'd think). He created a clusterphuck on TMP, and basically was never really involved in the films after that.
I don't mean to derail the discussion around the Kirk character, I just mean to point out that I don't think Roddenberry's opinions on the character carry as much weight as the reality that we see portrayed on screen.
At least two of whom tracked the days since he last saw them.I think there is a misremembering because the camera would linger on the female guest of the week. Since Kirk was the leading man the association was he got the girl. He also had a couple of former loves show up.
Agreed. What TOS shows Kirk as is a serial monogamist. He's had a number of serious and deep relationships in his past that have usually ended for career reasons. He wishes he could have something like that in his life right now, but he knows that's not really possible as long as he's commanding the Enterprise. ("No beach to walk on.")To be a clear—a womanizer would be someone pursuing women for purely sexual conquests with little to no genuine emotional involvement. Thats not James T. Kirk.
Yes. A missed opportunity, to be sure. TOS was very good with representation for its day, but they certainly could've done better in places.All TOS would have had to do was just once cast a woman in the role of a Starfleet Admiral or even a starbase commander. Or they could have had a woman (in a non-speaking role) on Kirk’s board of court martial in “Court Martial.” Anything like that would have cemented Janice Lester’s ravings as nothing more than bitter self-delusion.
Well, it's come out since then that Vic Mignogna doesn't have the best track record when it comes to women, so in retrospect it's perhaps not too surprising.It was a blind spot in the reasoning of the show runners, and one easily corrected. Even so I was truly pissed when decades later Star Trek Continues (in their episode “Embrace The Winds”) rationalized the apparent sexism by claiming women couldn’t command ships in Starfleet because the Tellerites, as founding members of the Federation, objected to females in command. WTF! And even though they had Erin Gray depict a starbase Commodore.
The entire story was an exercise in frustration rather than just stand on the simple notion Janice Lester was fucking nuts.
Yep! Kirk and Janice Lester spent an entire year together when they were at Starfleet Academy. I assume she just got nuttier over time, as Kirk is usually a much better judge of character than that.Wow, a whole year?
"I'd still like a Vulcan there, if possible."Whatever situation you're used to, having a sudden change is jarring in light of traumatic loss. It just happens to be a woman on the bridge, but it could just as easily have been "a Vulcan on the bridge", or "a purple haired person on the bridge".
What he's really saying is, "I can't get used to someone other than the person I'm used to/keep expecting to find when I look".
When it comes down to a choice between "Starfleet is a sexist organization that doesn't allow women to be Captains in the 23rd Century" and "This character who appears for all of one episode and is never mentioned again is delusional," I know which option I'm picking.it's just a really stupid line best left on the cutting floor. Making Lester be dejected crazy delusional woman is just as bad.
Yeah, that's how I view it too. If it's a parallel universe, all of the continuity differences don't bother me as much.I give the producers of SNW credit because they are making a real effort to get back to a TOS feel, and I think they do a good job with that. It does feel like TOS to me when I watch. There is a lot of retconning going on such that I don't consider it in TOS continuity, but I am content to watch it as a parallel universe as I did the Abrams Trek.
A twist that happens in one of the most famous Sherlock Holmes stories!And often writers may try to deliberately mislead the audience, the better to pull a surprise reveal later on. "Guess what, she's not really his sister; she's his wife!"
It's a little-known fact that Kirk actually took Helen Noel bowling the night of the infamous Christmas party.![]()
Are you suggesting that Janice Lester was the blond lab technician that Gary Mitchell stirred his way? Now it makes more sense that she was a Mitchell selection rather than a Kirk selection addressing the judge of character issue.Yep! Kirk and Janice Lester spent an entire year together when they were at Starfleet Academy. I assume she just got nuttier over time, as Kirk is usually a much better judge of character than that.
Are you suggesting that Janice Lester was the blond lab technician that Gary Mitchell stirred his way? Now it makes more sense that she was a Mitchell selection rather than a Kirk selection addressing the judge of character issue.![]()
Memory Alpha said:In the short story "Empty" from the anthology book Strange New Worlds 10, Lester met Kirk during her second year at Starfleet Academy circa 2254 when Kirk's instructor for a class in advanced xenobiology assigned Lester as his tutor. She was entirely focused on becoming a command candidate.
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