Brannon, I found this old 2005 email the other day and wanted to offer you tips on how to improve your game in future writing projects. I'll offer constructive criticism as best I can.
Your friend,
Ira
Star Trek: Enterprise
5x13 "The Messenger"
When the crew of Enterprise discovers a mysterious alien device emitting a subspace signal in whale-song, they find themselves trapped inside a volcano set to blow.
Alright, first things first, Brannon. What does a volcano have anything to do with a damn whale? You realize, of course, that whales live in the ocean and would probably not have anything to do with volcanoes, right? I'd go so far as to say lava is the polar elemental opposite of the location in which whales exist.
This also sounds eerily familiar. But we'll get to that.
The whale-song device turns out to be a thing from the future -- it is in fact the very same device that attempted to make contact with Earth's whales in the fourth feature film. It has been slingshot back into the 22nd Century due to timeline-tampering by an unknown force.
...so it literally is the plot device from the fourth movie. How... uninspiring. Not to mention, I hope you aren't going for 'fourth-act stunning revelation' or anything here because the foreshadowing is so thick I could very probably get lost in it.
To speak nothing of this timeline crap. I thought your team opted to steer clear of this going forward? Do you not remember the rampant cheers across fandom for your fourth season's success? Remember how it had nothing to do with the Temporal Cold War apart from that opening gig? What did Manny have to say about this, anyway? Did you even tell him? Should I?
Once trapped inside the volcano, Phlox must make the ultimate sacrifice in order to save the rest of the crew. He stays behind to absorb the lava, causing a chain reaction that sends everyone back several days -- before the device is found. This enables the crew to knowingly veer off-course, avoiding the volcano, but at a price... Phlox's death.
Wait a minute. Wait a flipping minute. I do not in any way, shape or form exaggerate when I posit the following question, Brannon: what?
This doesn't even begin to make sense. Firstly, allow me to touch upon something I didn't bother going near before because this has crossed the threshold (remember that one?) into shear lunacy. How is anyone alive after being trapped inside a volcano? This is a pretty big question, Brannon, one you may have wished to fact-check somewhere between 'outside volcano' and 'inside volcano' for fear of scorching your entire cast of characters. I can only hope this wasn't on-location.
Furthermore, what exactly can a doctor do to save anyone in such a situation? What did he even do? He absorbed the lava? Shouldn't everyone be absorbed into the lava instantaneously? If not, how does lava absorption fix anything? How does Phlox even do it? I remember watching an episode of your show a few years back (something about Bakula stuck in sickbay all night; I apologize but I simply could not get through it) and he did something with his cheeks -- puffed them up like a hamster or something -- is this what he did? Did he puff up his cheeks and absorb the lava? Does this not sound bad to you at all?
How does the crew know to avoid anything? It doesn't sound like there's any answer to this one whatsoever. To say nothing of Phlox dying... again. In the past. Or... something. I have to be upfront with you here, Brannon, I have no idea what the hell is going on. I mean, I'm Ira Steven Behr. I dye my goddamned beard. I am not just some 'normal' person who 'doesn't get' things because they're too 'weird'. But this is unspeakably nonsensical. This reminds me that "Profit and Lace" was a good episode no matter what the fans tell me. This is pure garbage.
Guest Star Vaughn Armstrong as 'Whale #1'
You've got to be kidding me.
Your acquaintance,
Ira