Maybe she's usually a theoretical engineer, and is doing a practical engineering rotation.
Fascinating.
Maybe she's usually a theoretical engineer, and is doing a practical engineering rotation.
Bleuch . One of the few occasions where they feature a woman (other than Uhura) who isn't a love interest for a male character. I'm so glad they dropped that aspect!They were originally going to have her and Lazarus have a tryst, which meant we might have possibly had a kiss scene that pre-dated Kirk and Uhura's famous kiss, and would have been mutually consensual, not the result of telekinetic manipulation by a third party.
Bleuch . One of the few occasions where they feature a woman (other than Uhura) who isn't a love interest for a male character. I'm so glad they dropped that aspect!
UHURA: Red Two message in one minute, Captain. Starfleet Command. Code Factor one, sir.
KIRK: Repeat.
UHURA: Code Factor one.
KIRK: Invasion status. All hands, this is the Captain. Battle stations. I repeat, battle stations. This is no drill.
KIRK: Thank you, sir. I have considered all the alternatives. My best guess is it could be a prelude to invasion.
BARSTOW [on viewscreen]: Exactly our consensus. I'm giving you the job of finding out specifically.
KIRK; Aye, aye, sir. Can you assign me other starships as a reserve?
BARSTOW [on viewscreen]: Negative. I'm evacuating all Starfleet units and personnel within a hundred parsecs of your position. It's going to be tough on you and the Enterprise, but that's the job you've drawn. You're on your own.
KIRK: I see. You mean, we're the bait.
BARSTOW [on viewscreen]: Good luck.
Yeah Trek can be sloppy with rank braids. How often do guest lieutenants miss their braids?
Not often, but they had no problem with Uhura's stripes. And Miss Piper didn't get any in The Menagerie. Helen Noel didn't get stripes, and she was a psychiatrist! That's at least as big an error as Lt. Masters. So I'm having second thoughts about the idea that there was anything racial in Masters' lack of stripes. It was just an oversight, and probably just that available blue dress that didn't have them.
That's so hot.Could it be that Lt. Masters has the same outfit on as Helen Noel?
Since this episode is such an odd duck, I went back and gave it a rewatch to try and make some sense of it all.
Basically, Kirk & co stumble into someone else's problem. Who's problem? Alt-Lazarus. It is his people who discovered how to bridge universes, which in turn drove his counterpart mad. Since then Alt-Laz has been trying to trap Lazarus in the magnetic corridor, in order to prevent the two of them ending up in the same universe as this would be bad for some reason (probably quantum). However, Lazarus keeps escaping and each time he does so it is accompanied by a "winking out" effect. Eventually Alt-Laz works out a way to exchange himself with Lazarus without the colossal side effects, but only for short periods of time. It happens twice:
It seems that the dilithium crystals will allow Alt-Laz greater control on drawing Lazarus into the magnetic corridor. Dilithium may indeed have been a vital component in the original technology required to connect other universes.
- In Sickbay. McCoy notices the difference but then Alt-Laz escapes and learns about the presence of dilithium crystals on board this strange ship he finds himself in, but slips back to the magnetic corridor before he can take action.
- Near Engineering. Alt-Laz sneaks in and steals 2 crystals, with the help of his pocket sleep-needle. It is not known when he slips back, but it seems he took the time to hack into the ship's computer and familiarise himself with the ship's captain at least
- In Sickbay, a third attempt is made but Lazarus is able to fight it off (just after his second fall off the mountain)
Of course, we only have Alt-Lazarus' word for much of this; he may well be a lying sociopath for all we know.
Hell, we've seen how the Transporter can split a man into 2 beings that cannot survive without each other; maybe this is a similar set of circumstances?
That's an interesting read. I do find it curious that so many writers go with the notion of the female officers as the weak link. If this outline had not been so close to Space Seed, Masters might never have been a casually efficient crew member doing her job. We get a very similar situation with Palamis.From Michael Kmet (TBBS’ own @Harvey) and Kevin Koster:
“The Alternative Factor”— What The Hell Happened?
It is a tour de force charting the tortured history of this terrible, horrible, no good, very bad episode.
I agree it would have been dreadful to have another female officer betray Kirk.That's an interesting read. I do find it curious that so many writers go with the notion of the female officers as the weak link. If this outline had not been so close to Space Seed, Masters might never have been a casually efficient crew member doing her job. We get a very similar situation with Palamis.
What does it say about the writers' views about liberal Federation males that so many women turn to magnetic, charismatic, dominant males. This subconscious bias culminated in Star Trek 2009 in NuKirk's misogynistic, rule-breaking, hair-triggered, leap before you look Kirk (instead of a stack of books on legs), personified as something Starfleet has lost and worthy of immediate promotion despite the fact that it was only Spock who saved the day (Kirk's original plan would have failed).
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