Similarly, while I was mildly annoyed that they killed off Hugh I was more miffed that he has the knife sticking in his neck in a shot before she throws it.
The writing in S3 was beyond sloppy, the fact that there is a percentage of fandom which has idolized and defied Matalas for this when they have vilified and slandered the writers of the previous seasons and other Trek shows for less proves for those, all they need is some flashy nostalgia and they're orgasmically satisfied.
I don't think so. I think it was a dramatic reduction of allies.Can that not be applied to Hugh?
Hugh’s death was pointless and stupid and only served to allow 7 of 9 to pilot the Borg cube instead of him, and was just another factor of how pointless and stupid season 1 was.
Tasha’s death happened because the actor didn’t want to continue playing the character anymore, and instead of writing her out of the show, they killed her off because they knew the audience would not have expected that.
Two completely different things.
Hugh’s death was pointless and stupid and only served to allow 7 of 9 to pilot the Borg cube instead of him, and was just another factor of how pointless and stupid season 1 was.
Tasha’s death happened because the actor didn’t want to continue playing the character anymore, and instead of writing her out of the show, they killed her off because they knew the audience would not have expected that.
Two completely different things.
I took it more like the allies death in Serenity. Reducing the assets available to Picard to oppose the Zhat Vash.Hugh’s death was pointless and stupid and only served to allow 7 of 9 to pilot the Borg cube instead of him, and was just another factor of how pointless and stupid season 1 was.
Tasha’s death happened because the actor didn’t want to continue playing the character anymore, and instead of writing her out of the show, they killed her off because they knew the audience would not have expected that.
Two completely different things.
We can only judge the story with what's on the screen.
Two similar things when done that way.
I'm almost positive that this was the original intention. But for some inexplicable (and probably stupid) reason, it was changed. And Frontier Day being the launch of the NX-01 'and the day we consider to be the founding of Starfleet' makes little sense. Because whether you account for Earth Starfleet which was in existence before the launch, or the Federation Starfleet which was incorporated in 2161, saying that we're celebrating it on a completely different date is dumb.
I still think that if the whole thing was supposed to be about the launch of the NX-01, they'd have brought it to Earth and ceremoniously shown it being launched to commemorate its 250th anniversary, instead of that whole nonsense with the Enterprise-F.
Yeah, that's the thing. Just the fact that the NX-01 was sitting around in the Starfleet Museum in some other part of the galaxy while the celebration surrounding it was going on in Earth orbit sounds suspiciously like something got changed halfway through production.
The one way it makes sense is if Starfleet prior to 2151 was purely for experimental projects and to allow real world experience for personnel training. And the launch of the NX-01 was the start of an actual fleet for Starfleet. And that specifically is what the celebration was really about.Technically the Earth Starfleet existed as early as 2132, so Starfleet's "real" 250th Anniversary should have been in 2382, but it is what it is. Sloppy chronology or not, at least it gave the NX-01 a huge name drop and made it the center of Frontier Day.
I have my issues with the writers choosing Frontier Day over Federation Day, but...no.
Geordi was clearly concerned about the fleet being in one place on Frontier Day. It's possible that he pulled rank and decided that the NX-01 was not going to make the journey. As anything bad happening to the NX-01 would deeply damage Starfleet morale. And Geordi was respected enough to not be overruled by Janeway, Shelby, and the other admirals. This then forced them to use the Ent-F for the ceremony as a substitute instead.
Having to do this much head canon to make sense of the situation still means it's bad writing.I have my issues with the writers choosing Frontier Day over Federation Day, but...no.
Geordi was clearly concerned about the fleet being in one place on Frontier Day. It's possible that he pulled rank and decided that the NX-01 was not going to make the journey. As anything bad happening to the NX-01 would deeply damage Starfleet morale. And Geordi was respected enough to not be overruled by Janeway, Shelby, and the other admirals. This then forced them to use the Ent-F for the ceremony as a substitute instead.
The one way it makes sense is if Starfleet prior to 2151 was purely for experimental projects and to allow real world experience for personnel training. And the launch of the NX-01 was the start of an actual fleet for Starfleet. And that specifically is what the celebration was really about.
Geordi was clearly concerned about the fleet being in one place on Frontier Day. It's possible that he pulled rank and decided that the NX-01 was not going to make the journey. As anything bad happening to the NX-01 would deeply damage Starfleet morale. And Geordi was respected enough to not be overruled by Janeway, Shelby, and the other admirals. This then forced them to use the Ent-F for the ceremony as a substitute instead.
Having to do this much head canon to make sense of the situation still means it's bad writing.
Geordi was just puling a reverse-Kirk.Yeah.... no. Geordi was a Commodore. If they're having a celebration about the launch of the NX-01, and the top brass expected her to be there, Geordi would be overruled pretty damn quick.
When Kirk stole a ship, it was to save his best friend, who also happened to be the son of the Vulcan Ambassador. Even with Sarak's connections, had his mission gone exactly as planned, Kirk would have at best ended up kicked outta Starfleet. More likely, he'd be serving time in New Zealand. It was only the events of Voyage Home that saved Kirk's ass.Or it's another example of sloppy writing that plagued the run of PIC.
Like adding a line that Geordi is reluctant to allow Archer's ship to be present for Frontier Day celebrations would have been so hard.
Geordi was just puling a reverse-Kirk.
Instead of disobeying admirals and stealing a ship, he was disobeying admirals to keep a ship safely put.
So wait, he's respected enough by Starfleet's top brass that they agree to his wish not to bring a museum ship to Earth for celebrations of the anniversary of its launch because if something happened it would damage morale, yet these same officers ignored his warnings about networking the entire fleet together and assembling the entire fleet in the Sol system due to his belief that it either could decimate Starfleet and both could ruin it? Yeah, no.And Geordi was respected enough to not be overruled by Janeway, Shelby, and the other admirals.
Yup. Kirk lucked out.When Kirk stole a ship, it was to save his best friend, who also happened to be the son of the Vulcan Ambassador. Even with Sarak's connections, had his mission gone exactly as planned, Kirk would have at best ended up kicked outta Starfleet. More likely, he'd be serving time in New Zealand. It was only the events of Voyage Home that saved Kirk's ass.
Geordi disobeying a direct order to hand over the NX-01, for no good reason beyond his own opinions, would have ended with him being Court-martialed.
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