• 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!

Moments on TNG that make you cringe.

And Brenna Odell certainly was very easy on the eyes.


Also, Pulaski came off great here, with her knowledge and understanding of Klingon culture. Plus, respecting Worf's privacy. Great scene, them and the tea ceremony. It's another reason why I grew to really love Pulaski after my first rewatch many, many years ago.
She gets a bad rap, but I really liked Pulaski too. Her relationship with Worf was great, and her relationship with Data softened as the season went on too.
 
Kyle Riker seemed at least Ok-looking, though I'm not really expert on dudes.

Based on "Insurrection" where allegedly all those various attraction issues aren't important anymore, in a scene almost as bizarre as the contextless-on-screen oath of celibacy from TMP, one has to wonder what the qualifications might be, or everyone's just humping everyone because nobody has a type anymore.

To view this content we will need your consent to set third party cookies.
For more detailed information, see our cookies page.
Or maybe this scene is worse?
 
And Brenna Odell certainly was very easy on the eyes.

There were two sets of triplets I was more into, but it's all good.

Also, Pulaski came off great here, with her knowledge and understanding of Klingon culture. Plus, respecting Worf's privacy. Great scene, them and the tea ceremony. It's another reason why I grew to really love Pulaski after my first rewatch many, many years ago.

^^this

Dr Pulaski's fortitude seems rather on point for a doctor in outer space dealing with multiple sentient species.

While it's a bit vague as "the Klingon tea ceremony", it's one of the best scenes in the episode or season or series. Naturally, it's only one ceremony based on thanking one for defending another's honor? Using spiked poison teas, no less? It's honestly just a minor nitpick because her addressing the situation was forward-thinking and pretty awesome and I've always adored the scene for its multifaceted complexity and underlying mystery that's hinted at, without demystifying it:

To view this content we will need your consent to set third party cookies.
For more detailed information, see our cookies page.

Dr Crusher had some terrific moments in the series, but nothing along these lines came up, unfortunately.
 
As an expert on older men (:p)... Kyle Riker looks great. Very attractive. But... his personality? No, thanks (in my opinion, anyway, others may think differently). I can see why Pulaski thought he was intriguing tho. They both have a snarky way of saying and doing things. (I like Pulaski MUCH better than Kyle Riker personality-wise tho.)
 
Large portions of the third through seventh seasons make me really cringe. A few moments and episodes in seasons one and two make me cringle slightly. Overall, there was a spirit and tone to those first two seasons that was lost in favor of a dull, pretentious, adventure-less tone that ultimately makes it difficult to watch a lot of episodes. I find the characters far more interesting in those first two seasons, especially Riker, who essentially died after BoBW.
 
I find the characters far more interesting in those first two seasons, especially Riker, who essentially died after BoBW.
All the more reason why he should have taken his own command. We saw a great captain spread his wings in BoBW... he should have taken flight.
 
Riker's best decision as captain in that episode?

He ordered them to get away from the Borg cube and let it blow up on its own instead of keeping it around for study.

Data made a valid point about what could be gained from studying it, but considering how quickly and easily the Borg adapt, Riker made the right call. There comes a point when a clear and present danger is better off eliminated instead of being studied. You might be able to get useful information to save people down the road, but risk the certainty of saving people right now is just too reckless a thing to do.
 
Large portions of the third through seventh seasons make me really cringe. A few moments and episodes in seasons one and two make me cringle slightly. Overall, there was a spirit and tone to those first two seasons that was lost in favor of a dull, pretentious, adventure-less tone that ultimately makes it difficult to watch a lot of episodes. I find the characters far more interesting in those first two seasons, especially Riker, who essentially died after BoBW.

Yes, this. I adore the tone of the first two seasons. It's why they're my favorites. Especially first and second season Jean-Luc. I soooo disagree with Sir Patrick's insistence to give him more affairs and fights from season 3 onwards. (Nothing new here, I disagree with him a LOT when it comes to Jean-Luc, it's the one subject we'd probably seriously fight about, lol).

And the whole Riker thing is so unfortunate, too. After the first two seasons they seem to have truly realized that Data was their most popular character, so, they slowly turned TNG into the Picard & Data Show, with Riker getting somewhat sidelined in the process, at least compared to the way he was in the spotlight earlier on the show.
 
The lack of orgasmatron in Riker's quarters. Gets me going every time.

To view this content we will need your consent to set third party cookies.
For more detailed information, see our cookies page.

Amazing how that prop looks like a metallic gray cylinder found in many an episode of "Futurama", hehehe...
 
If you are not already a member then please register an account and join in the discussion!

Sign up / Register


Back
Top