^I'd be surprised if they haven't, given how many years they've both been around.
I can't speak for Jen, but Murdock is indeed practicing law again. A Wikipedia summary refers to their work as "consulting counselors" now, coaching clients how to represent themselves in court, rather than Matt and Foggy representing directly. The public knowledge that Murdock is Daredevil is handled by himself and Foggy as "past allegations" that they strenuously deny. I don't know the exact specifics of how they handle that, though, because most of the recent Daredevil issues I've read have focused more on the crime-fighting than on Matt's civilian life.Although, are either of them currently practicing law? I know Matt's had to more or less stop trying cases because everyone thinks/knows he's Daredevil, but didn't Jen get disbarred or something?
I think he's referring to the Archon's design, which is odd for several reasons.^I haven't read the story yet, but is there anything about it that directly and irreconcilably contradicts the aired episode? I gather it establishes thatLandru was actually a crewmember of the Archon, but not having read the story, it sounds to me like that could be a case where the characters in the original episode simply misinterpreted the facts, believing Landru to be ancient when he actually wasn't. (It's hardly uncommon for historically recent cultural changes to be mistakenly believed to be ancient traditions. Look at the way conservatives today defend a "traditional, Biblical" definition of marriage that's actually only a few generations old.)
Also it’s one thing to read old comics that are sooo out there and that just cannot be taken on face value, given the time of their production, and more modern ones, where one would expect them to be more in line. But that is just me.![]()
The conclusion to the Tribble story was one of the best so far. It didn't feel rushed, it addressed some niggling plot points, and it made reasonable use of the supporting cast, although I would have liked to see Chapel, a research biologist, or Mulhall, Enterprise's resident astrobiologist, helping McCoy out instead of Spock - it always annoyed me that Spock was such a know-it-all that he muscled in on biological research despite being a physicist. With 400 crew they should use crew assigned to specific posts for the jobs that they're trained to do!
Even Rand got a decent shout in this one, possibly hinting that they might be gearing up for one of the Rand-heavy episodes like the Enemy Within. Not sure why Hendorff has transferred to science department though...
The conclusion to the Tribble story was one of the best so far. It didn't feel rushed, it addressed some niggling plot points, and it made reasonable use of the supporting cast, although I would have liked to see Chapel, a research biologist, or Mulhall, Enterprise's resident astrobiologist, helping McCoy out instead of Spock - it always annoyed me that Spock was such a know-it-all that he muscled in on biological research despite being a physicist. With 400 crew they should use crew assigned to specific posts for the jobs that they're trained to do!
Even Rand got a decent shout in this one, possibly hinting that they might be gearing up for one of the Rand-heavy episodes like the Enemy Within. Not sure why Hendorff has transferred to science department though...
spock is becoming a mart stu...
Scotty's long-distance beaming has consistently been proven to work well with no real issues. Every single thing transported (equipment, Kirk, Scott, Spock, the tribble, even the beagle) has been shown to survive with no real issues. This is a very helpful and powerful bit of technology. Too power from a story-telling perspective. So the writers want to sweep it under the rug. And all they come up with is the half-page of this comic saying that the technology is not going to be developed because Scotty transported a dangerous tribble. So what? That doesn't negate the innumerable positive (or weapon) uses the technology could have. You serious expect me to believe that Starfleet Intelligence want to "check out" the tribble, but not the long-range transportation? That's just wrong.
As I've said before on other threads, I would like to get back to storytelling without the issues brought up by easy long-distance transporters. Maybe if the writer just ignored it as a mistake of the 2009 film and just never mentioned it again. But you can't serious continue to use the technology (like in issues 11 and 12) and expect me to buy into this flimsy excuse for why you're not going to use it again. Ignore the issue completely, or come up with a better way out of it; don't make things worse by compounding one bit of bad writing with still more implausible and unbelievable bad writing.
It would be hilarious if in the next film there's a line like "We can't, we're out of transporter range."Scotty's long-distance beaming has consistently been proven to work well with no real issues. Every single thing transported (equipment, Kirk, Scott, Spock, the tribble, even the beagle) has been shown to survive with no real issues. This is a very helpful and powerful bit of technology. Too power from a story-telling perspective. So the writers want to sweep it under the rug. And all they come up with is the half-page of this comic saying that the technology is not going to be developed because Scotty transported a dangerous tribble. So what? That doesn't negate the innumerable positive (or weapon) uses the technology could have. You serious expect me to believe that Starfleet Intelligence want to "check out" the tribble, but not the long-range transportation? That's just wrong.
As I've said before on other threads, I would like to get back to storytelling without the issues brought up by easy long-distance transporters. Maybe if the writer just ignored it as a mistake of the 2009 film and just never mentioned it again. But you can't serious continue to use the technology (like in issues 11 and 12) and expect me to buy into this flimsy excuse for why you're not going to use it again. Ignore the issue completely, or come up with a better way out of it; don't make things worse by compounding one bit of bad writing with still more implausible and unbelievable bad writing.
Are they sweeping it under the rug? Or is this their way of making sure that only the bad guys in the next film have it and not our heroes? All the better to, say, pull an out-of-nowhere attack on the Enterprise from the inside out...
It would be hilarious if in the next film there's a line like "We can't, we're out of transporter range."
I would have liked to see Chapel, a research biologist...
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