Here's hoping the Enterprise-D holodeck had been tweaked or misprogrammed by Reg Barclay. That's the only explanation that makes any real sense.
He did it while he was a spider.... I mean, that shit makes sense to spiders!![]()


Here's hoping the Enterprise-D holodeck had been tweaked or misprogrammed by Reg Barclay. That's the only explanation that makes any real sense.
He did it while he was a spider.... I mean, that shit makes sense to spiders!![]()
Time had passed,Ent was on it's way to the graveyard, Starfleet had grown and there were many more engineers who had defied the laws of physics by this point. We never saw much proof on screen that Trip grew as a character so I imagine he was still impulsive and loyal which is what we saw in his death.Some people are that way others grow and lose their lovable qualities.
Here's hoping the Enterprise-D holodeck had been tweaked or misprogrammed by Reg Barclay. That's the only explanation that makes any real sense.
He did it while he was a spider.... I mean, that shit makes sense to spiders!![]()
Thanks for making me laugh when thinking of this !$%^&* episode!
He did it while he was a spider.... I mean, that shit makes sense to spiders!![]()
Thanks for making me laugh when thinking of this !$%^&* episode!
Because everything he did was completely out of character, and the manner in which he died was completely contrived. Then, just to add insult to injury, none of his friends and crewmates for the last ten years really seemed to care all that much.
How was it out of character? That's the part I'm most confused about. And Archer and T'Pol definitely seemed to care during that scene in his quarters. I will agree that it was contrived, but it sent a message of honor, loyalty and nobility and I forgave it as a result. I mean, the deaths of Spock and Dax were contrived as well, but those are forgiven.
What always bothered me about Trip's death was how dramatically arbitrary it seemed. Enterprise had been boarded before; Trip had been captured before; there were MACOs and a security team that were almost certainly on their way. And yet, Trip is unable to think of any other way to thwart the bad guys than blowing himself up? It's not particularly intuitive, this notion that he's gotten out of worse scraps without resorting to kamazake techniques but must resort to self-sacrifice now.
But it seems to suggest that he did. And when that episode aired, no one planned on writing a book to say otherwise.Guys, lets get this right:....Trip DID NOT DIE in the final episode. This was a holodeck adventure, essentially a videogame. No one said that this was how it actually happened. Play the game again and it might have a different ending.
Here's hoping the Enterprise-D holodeck had been tweaked or misprogrammed by Reg Barclay. That's the only explanation that makes any real sense.
He did it while he was a spider.... I mean, that shit makes sense to spiders!![]()
Thanks for making me laugh when thinking of this !$%^&* episode!
He did it while he was a spider.... I mean, that shit makes sense to spiders!![]()
Thanks for making me laugh when thinking of this !$%^&* episode!
oh yeah i forgot spider barclay..
maybe he had a relapse..
![]()
Thanks for making me laugh when thinking of this !$%^&* episode!
oh yeah i forgot spider barclay..
maybe he had a relapse..
![]()
Might explain why he was an even BIGGER puss and spazz in those VOYAGER episodes.
Cooleddie: I guess between 2155 and 2161 the tragedy of Trip and T'Pol losing their daughter led to him becoming a total druggie and spazz and wigging out whenever the smallest crisis or incident reared its head.
And apparently the MACOs and ship's security did something awful that got them kicked off the ship.![]()
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