Yeah it varies by workplace. Mine is one where the strongest of language and a very dark sense of humour is almost mandated. In others, they are unfailingly polite, and a spectrum in between. Occasional outbursts of bad language in Starfleet seem quite reasonable.My personal experience in the working world leads me to lean toward this line of thinking as well. But I have always worked in offices. These people don't. They are in the space navy. And "swearing like a sailor" is a very real phenomenon.
Kor
Honestly, even the more explicit gore on Discovery hasn't been as disturbing to me as the exploding head in "Conspiracy" or the woman cut in half in "In Theory."
Is your argument really that they shouldn't be cursing on the show, and to prove my point, they haven't been cursing enough?Well if the colourful metaphors (fucken cool, kind of a metaphor) have enriched Discovery so much how come they've only use one... once?
They've also used 'shit'. They put occasional swearwords where they fit naturally, which is the best way to use it.Well if the colourful metaphors (fucken cool, kind of a metaphor) have enriched Discovery so much how come they've only use one... once?
The Klingon boob scene was in a flashback of torture and sexual abuse. I thought it was creepy showing Tyler's attacker enjoying herself. Yuck.My bias against the Tilly F-bomb scene stems from my dislike for the character. On the whole, as an exuberant social misfit prone to blurting, I can see her saying that. Would I have written it that way? No. I never really see the need for it, to be honest.
I missed the Klingon boobs because I was too busy rolling my eyes at the unnecessary luridness of the scene. I guess the showrunners don't think their audience have much of an imagination, so they feel the need to splay it all out as a form of spoon feeding. No thanks. It could have been done so much more effectively had more been left to the imagination. Hitchcock was a master at it, and the technique still works.
Uh oh.You mean we're not supposed to be turned on by it??????
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Stupid sexy Klingons!You mean we're not supposed to be turned on by it??????
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Wait. Are people really assuming those were real memories? I figured the Voq (not so much a theory anymore) theory makes it pretty clear what was happening.The Klingon boob scene was in a flashback of torture and sexual abuse. I thought it was creepy showing Tyler's attacker enjoying herself. Yuck.
I'm not really convinced it's Voq. Could be just another Klingon. Was there a long time gap between the last time Voq was seen and the first appearance of Ash?
Star Trek is not Game of Thrones... never was.
Tyler was tortured for seven months, L'Rell (his apparent reason for surviving) was stranded for six of those months. So that one month gap is where Voq was lost and Tyler appears.
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