• Welcome! The TrekBBS is the number one place to chat about Star Trek with like-minded fans.
    If you are not already a member then please register an account and join in the discussion!

Little things in Trek that just bug you...

Not to mention that it was usually a case of 14 were male and just 1 was female.


Oh? I didn't mind when he was quoting Shakespeare, since Stewart's earlier career included a lot of Shakespeare and it's something I enjoy.

But his pontificating about how evolved and enlightened 24th-century humans were - that nobody is interested in acquiring things and money isn't necessary... it's just pompous bullshit. Just once, it would have been nice if somebody had reminded him that Beverly BOUGHT that weird-looking cloth on Farpoint Station. It's not something she needed, and we never saw it again. She said, "Charge it to my account on the Enterprise" which implies that she had a way of paying for it. Somebody should have reminded him that everything may be free to him on a starship and even on Earth, but it's not like that everywhere. Not all humans have Starfleet privileges, and they do have to work and even struggle for what they get.

Some of this though I think is more early seasons Picard, back when Roddenberry still had a good amount of control over the show. In fact I don't recall the money thing coming up to much once season 3 comes around and even then I don't think it was to drastic. Stuff like Riker not having money to tip the 4 armed Piano player in "Unification." I think the only time I sort of felt annoyed was the over-top idea that some lone guy who thinks he saw God or "The Picard" in that season 3 ep with the proto-Vulcans would be enough to create Holly Wars seemed like a stretch. In fact I think my biggest issue with human religion in Trek was that they went with the idea that it will simply disapear instead of simply evolve like everything else. People still might be into religion but all the Fed Phelps and misguided racism that people sometimes get out of it is the stuff that disapeared. People have found away to still have faith without it also being something to use to hurt other people.

Jason
 
Some of this though I think is more early seasons Picard, back when Roddenberry still had a good amount of control over the show. In fact I don't recall the money thing coming up to much once season 3 comes around and even then I don't think it was to drastic. Stuff like Riker not having money to tip the 4 armed Piano player in "Unification."
Or Ro having to explain to Picard that when you pretend to hire a hooker, you also have to pay her.

Somehow I doubt Picard would have been able to handle DS9, with all those imperfect people on the station.

I honestly don't care which seasons you reference. Picard was a pompous, nose-in-the-air elitist in all of them, and carried that on into the movies.


In fact I think my biggest issue with human religion in Trek was that they went with the idea that it will simply disapear instead of simply evolve like everything else. People still might be into religion but all the Fed Phelps and misguided racism that people sometimes get out of it is the stuff that disapeared. People have found away to still have faith without it also being something to use to hurt other people.

Jason
I'm not quite sure what you're saying, since some of it is unclear.

Religion didn't disappear even in TOS. Both McCoy and Uhura were obviously Christian. The Enterprise had a space that was sometimes used as a chapel. Kirk told Apollo that "we find the one (god) sufficient."
 
I don't blame the creators for doin' this -- as cash doesn't grow on trees.

But the idea that you stick a piece of plastic on a human's forehead and viola it's a totally alien species......well, this does get met with a bit of eye rollin' from me, that's all I can say.
 
Speaking of phasers, mass inconsistency as to whether they vaporize you on any kill setting or just leave a charred hole in your flesh.
That seems reasonable. Obviously lower kill settings are enough to kill but leave a corpse, while the higher ones vaporize.
Does she? I never got a sense of the size her her Ready Room honestly.
Well, it sure seems a pretty decent walk from Georgiou's desk to the conference table. Also, the fact there is a conference table in the ready room speaks volumes about its size. At the very least it's definitely larger than I would have expected given how old the Shenzhou is supposed to be, and indeed larger than Lorca's ready room is.
In fact I think my biggest issue with human religion in Trek was that they went with the idea that it will simply disapear instead of simply evolve like everything else.
Contrary to popular belief, human religion has not disappeared in Trek. Hindu holidays are observed on board the Enterprise D, and in DS9 Kasidy Yates indicated her mother to be a practicing Christian.
 
Starfleet people magically know how to operate alien computers even when none of the buttons have labels!

Not only that, alien technology is jawdroppingly compatible with 24th century Starfleet technology. Find an unknown alien item on a never-before-visited planet? A hitherto unknown Borg component? An item from the 29th century? Chances are 90% that a tricorder and/or other computers/tech on board can interface with it directly, and in the other 10% of the cases, the chief engineer will find a way within a few hours. It only becomes a serious problem when the plot requires it.
 
Medical/security running through the corridors to critical situations when site-to-site transport would be faster.
 
Star Trek: Nemesis being the finale of Star Trek. I'm not knocking the movie, only the apparent idea by TPTB that Trek can't go any further into the future with a new series or movie. Hogwash.
 
"Little Things in Trek that Just Bug You". Hmmm.

"Power Play":
LAFORGE: You should be able to do that by flooding Ten Forward with ionogenic particles.

"The Next Phase::
DATA: In all likelihood, the explosion damaged the Romulan cloaking device, causing it to discharge chroniton particles. I am detecting a chroniton field in here.

DATA: Increase anyon emissions to six thousand particles per second and decontaminate this area.

"Schisms":

DATA: It appears to be composed of spatially inverted tetryon particles. We believe they are emanating from a tertiary subspace manifold.

"Starship MIne":

Captain's log, stardate 46682.4. The Enterprise is docked at the Remmler Array, where it will undergo a routine procedure to eliminate accumulated baryon particles. In preparation for the sweep, we are evacuating the ship.

"Gambit Part 1":

COMPUTER: Scan complete. Terikon particle decay profile does not fall within specified reference range. Probability of match zero point zero four percent.

"Attached":

WORF: Commander. The Transporter sensor log shows an unusual concentration of antigraviton particles in the emitter coil.

"The Pegasus":

PICARD: Mister Data, would it possible to saturate the asteroid with verteron particles that could mask the resonance signature and prevent the Romulans from detecting it?

"Emergence":

RIKER: The ship is using a modified tractor beam to collect vertion particles from the star.

First Contact:

DATA: Sensors show chronometric particles emanating from the sphere.

Insurrection:

DOUGHERTY: Jean-Luc, there are six hundred people down there. We'll be able to use the regenerative properties of this radiation to help billions. ...The Son'a have developed a procedure to collect the metaphasic particles from the planets rings.

These are some of the "little things" in Star Trek that bug me.
 
"Little Things in Trek that Just Bug You". Hmmm.

"Power Play":


"The Next Phase::




"Schisms":



"Starship MIne":



"Gambit Part 1":



"Attached":



"The Pegasus":



"Emergence":



First Contact:



Insurrection:



These are some of the "little things" in Star Trek that bug me.


Of course you got this counter non-technobabble line that is just as bad.

Geordi: We got a Bogey at 12 o'clock or however he said it.

Jason
 
Ro can't wear an earring, but Troi got away with earing all those skin-tight thingamajigs.
Earrings = no.
Cleavage = yes.
Well, Trek is supposed to be a positive future... ;)
But his pontificating about how evolved and enlightened 24th-century humans were - that nobody is interested in acquiring things and money isn't necessary... it's just pompous bullshit.
This x1000. I hated hearing pretentious speeches about how much better the TNG crew was than all those poor dumb ignorant 20th century humans who made up the entirety of their viewing audience.

Another thing that TNG constantly did that annoyed me: An emergency where the ship is mere minutes away from blowing up and the crew is seen walking briskly to the source of the problem. Hey, guys...? The ship's blowing up any second now. Maybe running is warranted?
 
- Alien "civilizations" all being just a few adobe buildings without even windows. A town square thats the size of a backyard with 2 carts selling fabrics or fruit. Oh and they use fire torches for light. Space faring civilization. Even when we see Romulus, it's a few adobe buildings, dirt and fire torches.

- The god awful "fashion" of the Federation humans. Everyone wearing bus seat material clothes, terrible spandex leotards and stuff being shiny or metalic/sequenced looking because it's the FUTURE.
38c0b9117069a52e244ee2c5702e3353.jpg


- Aliens all wearing brown and beige, earth tones people!

- Everything about the redesign of the Romulans in TNG onwards. They go from honourable, fashionable, seductive in TOS to like psychopathic Machiavellian schemers in TNG, DS9, ENT. Also why do they wear that utilitarian Vulcan haircut if they don't follow utilitarianism and logical positivism like Vulcans? Also if Romulans are supposed to be so artistic and love gardens and art so much with Romulus being the galaxies most beautiful "Garden planet", why do they all just wear grey and look the same, and why is Romulus so crappy when we actually see it?

- Lack of security cameras on the starships and space stations.

- When you approach a planet, the leader of the planet literally just talks to you for no reason. He also represents the whole planet but you must give him time to address "The council".

- In general lack of scale of everything. Starfleet being something like 50 ships in TNG and a few thousand in DS9 when the Federation likely has a population in the trillions according to numbers given in DS9. Yorktown is one of the few times I think Star Trek gets scale of the Federation right (too bad everything else about scale in those films is wrong)

But his pontificating about how evolved and enlightened 24th-century humans were - that nobody is interested in acquiring things and money isn't necessary... it's just pompous bullshit. Just once, it would have been nice if somebody had reminded him that Beverly BOUGHT that weird-looking cloth on Farpoint Station.

This is actually one of my favourite things about Star Trek. It's a post-capitalist socialist society. I hate the idea that in 300 years, we will still be living in Capitalism which makes no sense as even these days people are wondering if modern Capitalism will even survive mass automation and AI in the coming century which it basically can't (unless mass genocide happens against the worlds poor and working people).

Also it's very easy to explain the money thing. Federation doesn't have money but it does have currency. Money = / = Currency as Money is capital where currency is simply a token to facilitate exchange. Federation Credits are Socialist personal credits. It's currency, but it's not capital like money is.

"The means of production are no longer the private property of individuals. The means of production belong to the whole of society. Every member of society, performing a certain part of the socially-necessary work, receives a certificate from society to the effect that he has done a certain amount of work. And with this certificate he receives from the public store of consumer goods a corresponding quantity of products. After a deduction is made of the amount of labor which goes to the public fund, every worker, therefore, receives from society as much as he has given to it."
 
Not giving Riker or Worf a office. I mean you think with those jobs they would come with additional work beyond just manning their stations.

Jason
 
If you are not already a member then please register an account and join in the discussion!

Sign up / Register


Back
Top