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Season 1 as a Whole

How do you rate Season 1?

  • 10 - "Engage!"

    Votes: 15 7.4%
  • 9

    Votes: 39 19.2%
  • 8

    Votes: 60 29.6%
  • 7

    Votes: 27 13.3%
  • 6

    Votes: 17 8.4%
  • 5

    Votes: 13 6.4%
  • 4

    Votes: 8 3.9%
  • 3

    Votes: 11 5.4%
  • 2

    Votes: 5 2.5%
  • 1 - "Fucking Hubris!"

    Votes: 8 3.9%

  • Total voters
    203
I went on a hike on a mountain, now I'm back, just had a pizza, and I'm watching "Maps and Legends" (S1E2).

Some Observations (to be added to as I go along):
Laris is a really good detective. None of this is put to use in Seasons 2 and 3. Huge, huge, HUGE missed opportunity later on.

I haven't gotten to the end of the episode yet, but Raffi is upset that Picard hasn't contacted her in 14 years. You know what? She could've always contacted him!

I love how secretive Narek is, even in bed. It's a callback to how secretive the Romulans were in TOS, to the point of not knowing their names. Narek's like, "That's one of my names." It keeps him mysterious. And I'm sure Soji likes him because she thinks he's mysterious.

Picard meeting with his Doctor from the Stargazer works even better now than it did before.

I never had a problem with Clancy's "sheer fucking hubris" line. She can't believe what Picard waltzed in and asked for after badmouthing Starfleet on the news the other day. That line gets all the attention, and I was never bothered by it. The line that doesn't get as much attention (or any) is this one at the end, when Clancy tells Picard: "Do what you do best and go home." The "do what you do best" was harsher than necessary. She must've really pissed him off before, and this had to be the straw that broke the camel's back. That's the way it plays when Picard says that he and Clancy haven't always seen eye-to-eye. I'm guessing this stems from his days as an Admiral, arguing about how to handle the Romulan situation.

Soji says, "Romulans are into drama." Best line of the show.

Narek says Soji's one of those types who pin their hopes on resurrection. Picard as a series turns out to mainly be about resurrection. The resurrection of Picard and, later on in the series, the resurrection of Data and the resurrection of the Enterprise-D.

I like Oh, Rizzo, and Narek better as antagonists than Vadic. Nothing wrong with Vadic, and she's fun, but you know what's all about from the very first frame. And, as a Bounty Hunter, on a ship like the Shrike, there's no hiding anything. Oh operates in plain sight, as do Rizzo and Narek. They're two-faced and look above-board to most people. Kind of like Gus Fring on Breaking Bad and Better Call Saul, where he blends into both the civilian world and the criminal world with no one in the civilian world ever knowing. I like the sliding scale here as well. Rizzo is definitely worse than Narek.

"Maps and Legends" isn't the knockout that "Remembrance" was but it's still very good, has more layers than I remembered, and works even better knowing how the rest of the series unfolds. I'll give it a 9.

-----

Onto "The End is the Beginning". Post to be added to as I go along.

Most people are not going to pick up on this: but when Jurati is listening to opera before Oh appears, it's a parallel to when Picard was listening to opera before Riker tells him they've finished their first sensor sweep of the Neutral Zone in FC. There's a Romulan Threat. Picard doesn't see it in FC (maybe the Romulans actually would've liked to have taken advantage of the situation) and he doesn't see it here when he asks Raffi why the Romulans would sabotage a mission where they were being helped.

I like how everyone on La Sirena has their own motivation for being on there. Raffi wants to go to Freecloud for reasons she won't tell them (to see her son). Rios is getting paid (he's also in awe of being in the presence of Picard) and is friends with Raffi (so he's also doing her a favor getting her where she wants to go), and Jurati, a leading Cyberneticist, wants to see Soji, the result organic/synthetic AI.

The Romulan XB seeing Soji as the Destroyer of Worlds is predicting what almost happens in the Season Finale but doesn't.

They so should've found a way to keep Laris and Zhaban in the rest of the season. They looked like they were going to be ongoing supporting characters throughout.

I'm giving this one an 8.

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Onto "Absolute Candor". Post to be edited as I go along.

I meant to mention this with the previous episode, but one thing I love about Picard Season 1 is that we finally get to see more diversity with the Romulans and more of their culture. As I said before, we never had a Romulan main character before, like we did with the Klingons (Worf and Torres), the Borg (Seven), the Vulcans (Spock, Tuvok, and T'Pol), and the Ferengi (Quark and his family). So the Romulans never had the same type of development as a species as the other major Star Trek species have. Picard Season 1 made up for this in spades. From the Zhat'Vash to the Quowat Milat, to the differences between Romulans with headbrows and without, to something as simple as different hairstyles, different skin colors, and brining back the Romulan theme music introduced in "Balance of Terror".

Picard also introduced the Romulan Free State as a successor to the Romulan Star Empire to show that the Romulans were still a power in the Quadrant, unlike what happened with the Cardassians. No JJ Abrams film was going to take down the Romulans. :p

Picard's line when he's talking to Zani, "I allowed the perfect to become the enemy of the good." That's quoted from somewhere else, and it can be applied to so many things. So many things. Including on this board. Some people are so obsessed with what something isn't that they can't see what it is. Or nine out of 10 things about something can be great, and they'll disproportionately focus on that tenth item and act as if the rest of it isn't even there. To drive it to PIC: There's more than one way to depict the 24th Century than just the Rick Berman style and I appreciate that Picard did that. The fact that it was different was the main draw for me. Absolute Candor.

I love how this episode takes a notorious trait of Picard's, not liking children, and brings it front and center in the Opening Teaser. Then Picard has to go out of his way to say that he likes Elnor, Elnor feels better, and then Picard spends time with him teaching him how to fence. To show how much things have changed in the last 14 years, Picard's wearing all white in the "past" and all black in the "present".

Some will say that by the fourth episode, it's become a cliché that whoever Picard needs help from is upset that he let them down and they let him know that, but I disagree. I think it shows how many people Picard let down and the gravity of what that meant rather than just having it happen once or waving it away with one line of dialogue. Rightly or wrongly, they depended on Picard to save the day, and he couldn't. He overestimated his pull with Starfleet Command when he told them, "Go with my plan or I resign." He didn't think they'd accept his resignation, and shows what the critical flaw in his thinking was: He didn't realize what makes for a successful Captain, where it all comes down to him, doesn't translate into what makes for a successful Admiral where everything is bigger than the immediate situation and he has to work with other people with equal authority and the CinC has to think of the entire fleet instead of just one ship. That's not even going into all the different governing bodies the CinC and the Admiralty in general have to consider. That's why Kirk told Picard, "Don't let them promote you." Being a Captain and being an Admiral are not the same thing at all.

Picard had a lot of courage sitting with the Romulans who he let down. When the Senator challenged Picard to a sword fight, it looked truly hopeless. Unlike in the TNG Movies, this isn't Rambo Picard. He didn't stand a chance against the Senator, then Elnor saved him from certain death. I'm glad that Picard pointed out to Elnor that the Senator didn't deserve to die. He had valid points, even though he wanted to kill Picard. Ultimately, Soji isn't the only character Picard wanted to save. He wanted to save Elnor too, from a society that would reject him and would have no place for him.

However brief it was, I loved the fight between La Sirena and the old Romulan Bird of Prey, then Seven coming to the rescue.

The only thing I have to point out is that before they knew it was Seven, they kept assuming she was a "he". It's 2399, shouldn't they say something gender neutral until they know if it's a man or a woman? This was filmed in 2019 and released in 2020, so we can't say "It was the '60s!", "It was the '80s!", or "It was the '90s!" But this is a minor, minor nitpick and I know they were going for a misdirect. Doesn't effect how I rate this episode...

... which is a 10!

Onto Icheb's eye getting ripped out next, before he's killed. Picard's giving Battlestar Galactica a serious run for its money with the next episode. :devil:
 
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"Stardust City Rag"

I won't lie. I closed my eyes as Icheb was being tortured. Pretty graphic. Not knocking it, just not the normal type of thing I watch.

Both this episode and the previous one take Gene Roddenberry and Herb Solow's 1964 "Star Trek is a Space Western" pitch to heart. The Romulan colony in "Absolute Candor" looked like something that could've been a Clint Eastwood movie, and "Stardust City Rag" obviously has a "rough 'n tumble" Western feel to it, complete with a revenge story, out on the frontier where -- with something like the Federation -- the Fenris Rangers have to have their own version of justice.

When they get to Freecloud: Seven's right, the feather in Rios' hat really helped. Picard's lost a step in his masquereding act. He was more convincing as Galen in "Gambit". :p

I know that every story has two sides, but when Raffi meets Gabe and his wife, Gabe comes across like an inflexible asshole. Reminds me of some things I won't talk about that aren't anyone's business here, so moving along...

Bjazel really looks like TNG Season 1 Troi! If they ever rebooted TNG in the 2020s, Necar Zadegan is who I think they should cast.

I'd be interested to know what Seven was doing between the time Voyager made it back home from the Delta Quadrant and when the Neutral Zone collapsed, leading to the founding of the Fenris Rangers. There's an almost 10-year gap there from 2378 to mid-2380s.

Seven is a total bad-ass. This is something we saw sometimes during VOY, but here it's brought out into full force. A team-up between Seven of Nine and Beatrix Kiddo from Kill Bill would've been killer. Literally!

When Seven asks Picard for two weapons while on La Sirena, even though he says yes, you can hear the hesitation in his voice. He wasn't born yesterday. I think he knew what Seven was going to do. The Seven asked him point-blank about if he ever felt he regained his humanity after he was assimilated. He says, "Yes." Then Seven asks, "All of it?" And then he tells the truth, "No." This is the type of character development that's also possible across multiple season and multiple series, and Picard says he's trying to regain all of it, he asks Seven, and she says she's trying to regain it, "Every damn day of my life." This is a hardened Seven, but not a callous Seven. She's hurting. And she gets her revenge. Unlike some other Star Trek series, I'm glad this one doesn't patronize us by spoon-feeding to us the difference between right and wrong. This is something I don't think they could've done if all the characters were in Federation Space and still in Starfleet and serving on a Starfleet ship.

The fight between Seven and Bjazel is one of my favorites in Star Trek, followed by the shoot-out.

Then, the top it all off, this episode has the stones to have Jurati kill Maddox. Even though I maintain that it was underneath Oh's influence after the mind-meld, it was still a gutsy move. Something they'd never do Phase 2 of New Trek. Phase 1 wasn't afraid to piss off the people Phase 2 is trying to bend over backwards for. (I consider Phase 1 to be 2017-2022, and Phase 2 to be 2022-Present).

I give this episode a 10.

That means, five episodes in, the average I give for Picard Season 1 is a 9.4 out of 10.
 
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In story terms and purity of vision it's easily the best of all three seasons. It ranks second out of three for me thanks to Season 3 which - while dumber than a bag of handheld Paris Hilton marital aids - was a ton of fun for me to sit through. Season 1 is the smartest and most daring of the three seasons of the series and the one that felt the most like it wanted to actually accomplish something.
 
The DVD/Blu-Ray release of PIC Season 3 snuck up on me. September 5th is pretty close.

Next day off from work (that isn't a Sunday), I'm going bang out my updated thoughts on Episodes 6-10. Get that out of the way, then it's on to Season 3, since I already did Season 2.

I have a projector at home, and two walls that I leave intentionally bare, for the image. It's something else to watch the new Star Trek shows up against an entire wall. And that's especially true of PIC Season 3. It's the closet I'll ever get to feeling like I'm watching this at the movies.

-- Adding in below on 8/22/23 in order to consolidate posts. --

"The Impossible Box"
Narissa is at her most ruthless and pragmatic up to this point trying to get results from Narek, who insists on taking things slowly with Soji. This episode highlights Narek's real cunning and patience. From showing Narissa and later Soji about that little box he works on, to when he finally gets Soji to begin to have an idea of who she is, what she is, and where she came from, unknowingly slipping the information Narek and Narissa need to know. Jeff Russo's eerie soundtrack adds to the feeling of something weird going on and that all isn't as it seems; which, from Soji's point of view, it isn't.

Picard has a realization of his own that the Borg are really victims. They've been assimilated just like he was. He always saw them as just Borg and compartmentalized that he no longer was, but more similar to the XBs than not. They're healing, just like he still is.

Elnor finally gets to show off more of his bad-ass fighting ability, saving Picard and Hugh from the Romulans and allowing Picard and Soji enough time to escape. It still had me on the edge of anticipation, even knowing what happens.

It's not a power-house of an episode, but it keeps things moving, and I love the writing and direction. I'll give this one an 8.

"Nepenthe"
This is the episode that convinced Patrick Stewart he'd like to do more with the TNG cast. I love Riker asking Picard about his new crew and what they were like compared to them. It really is too bad we only got two seasons with most of original PIC cast.

The real story of this episode was Soji processing everything that happened last episode, coming to terms with everything she ever knew having been a fabrication, and learning how to even begin to trust people again.

And Narek shows his cunning again, with La Sirena not being able to shake him.

I love the frank exchanges between Picard & Riker and Picard & Troi, and them pretending the kitchen was the Enterprise's briefing room. And there's the whole constant undercurrent of, "What have you gotten yourself into, Jean-Luc?!"

Kestra was a great character too. Something I don't normally say about children in Star Trek (Prodigy excluded). Quirky and resourceful. I they find a way to work her into Legacy if it's greenlit.

The cinematography is incredible. Location shooting, especially out in and near a lush forest makes a huge difference.

After re-watching this episode, and everyone talking about Soji's connection to Data, I think they really should've had a scene in Season 3 between Data and Soji. Once again, I hope this is something they have in Legacy. Before someone screams, "Fanwank!" "Nostalgia!" Can it. Fucking can it. If that's the worst you can say, you've got nothing. There should've been and should be a scene where Soji, who was central to Picard (at least in Season 1), gets to meet her real "father". It brings Data step closer to being Human by seeing a continuation through "offspring", which he always wanted, going back to the aptly named "Offspring" from TNG, and Data is the only (now literally) flesh and blood family member she has. It's a character moment specific to Picard they should've had.

That previous paragraph went longer than I thought it would. But, anyway, I'm giving this one a 9.

Onto the next episode!

Wait not quite. EDITED TO ADD:
A lot of people are understandably upset that Hugh died, but this is actually something I'm not bothered by, given the way situation is set up. First of all, he's on a Borg Cube controlled by the Romulans. They may call it PIC, but it's still TNG under the hood. Romulans mean trouble. In retrospect, his life was at risk as soon as he was on that Cube, even if it was no longer part of the Borg Collective. And Hugh was helping Picard and Soji escape from the Romulans which, of course he'd do! If he's not going to Nepenthe, and La Sirena is obviously no match for the Cube and can't beam them out of there, Hugh's a dead man. He's no Elnor. He can't hold his own in a fight.

It really is too bad that Hugh died but, in terms of the story, no other outcome is possible. And it showed how dishonorable and deceptive Narissa is. Elnor should've have trusted that she wouldn't have a trick up her sleeve and kill Hugh while fighting him. Narissa can multi-task while fighting and wouldn't keep her focus solely on Elnor. It was also good to see that Narissa isn't all talk and yes, she really should be feared.

Elnor shouldn't have trusted Narissa to fight fairly. And Hugh should've have trusted the Romulans, period. Treaty or no treaty, they always find a way.

DOUBLE EDITED TO ADD: Points for using Thad's illness and the Synthetic Ban as an allegory for the limiting Stem Cell Research.

Okay, now on to the next episode!
 
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"Broken Pieces"

This is the most apt title to describe the situation with all the characters.
  • Rios is broken, we learn more about his past, how he thought of the Captain of his old ship as a father figure, and the sight of Soji -- who looked like another Synth he knew -- made him want to give up on the mission.
  • Soji's entire life is upside down. She didn't know who she was or what she was, and now she's slowly discovering that. She's putting her broken pieces back together.
  • Raffi is broken, and that needs know explanation, but she goes to see all five of Rios' shipboard holograms, fashioned in his image, that she takes. Each hologram represents a difference piece of the flesh-and-blood Rios and Raffi things that if she can put together what all five can them, she can find out what's bothering him.
  • Picard and Soji piece together what Data thought of Picard by bouncing off each other, and Soji says, "He loved you." Retrospectively, Picard realizes that he and Data had something in common by having difficulty with emotion.
  • Seven has to put the Borg Collective with the Artifact back together in order to stop Narissa. She fears that the XBs will want to stay in that Collective, meaning she would've broken their individuality after putting them back together as pieces for the Collective.
  • Narissa's friend, who was assimilated and is an XB herself, is someone who Narissa says was always broken. This is one of the VERY few people Narissa cares about.
  • Having had to kill so many Romulans inside the Artifact temporarily breaks Elnor. He hugs Seven as soon as he sees her because he's had to maintain a strong front right up until then.
  • Jurati was broken by Oh and driven insane by the mind-mind. It's too difficult to talk about the meld, certain things are blocked in Jarati's mind, and she's trying to piece herself back together again.
The only one who's not broken is Picard, who was broken, but has now pieced himself back together again. He also has Clancy listening to him and taking him seriously again. She says she's mobilizing a fleet and they're meeting at DS12.

BTW, now I feel like having watermelon icecream and french fries!

When Seven links up to the Borg Collective and becomes the "Queen" of the Artifact, all the black and green reminded me of The Matrix!

That breakdown I had basically breaks down the entire episode. So I'll stop there and say I'll go with a 9.

So far, my average for PIC Season 1 is a 9.125. Higher than what I've given any other season of Star Trek, across all the series. This season has aged very well. If anything, my opinion of it has actually gone up! Three years ago, I was rating it in the high-8s. Now it's the low-9s.
 
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The home stretch.

"Et In Arcadia Ego, Part I" lays down the groundwork for Part II and the end of the season, moving all the pieces into place. Alton Soong reveals the golem body he's been working on. Everyone is on Coppelius. Narek is a deceptive piece of shit. Everyone is sad that Picard is dying. Picard passes the torch to Seven, which is interesting in retrospect since the torch will eventually be passed to Seven as Captain of the Enterprise at the end of the series as well. Soji is conflicted. And we see how the Romulan prophecies of Soji being the "Destroyer Of Worlds" might come to fruition.

The cinematography is top-notch. The lighting is top-notch. Love the look of the "flower ship".

Yet it's all just half a story. So, instead of rating this episode individually, I'll pair it off with Part II.

Putting that on now...
 
Before and after reflection, the best season. It tried to be different, had several interesting themes (unlike season 3), expanded the Trek universe and had better writing than the fan service seasons. Chabon will forever be be near the top of the Trek writing pantheon.
 
I should type a long post. But it's 5:37 AM as I type this and I haven't been to bed yet.

What are your thoughts about the season in general? What did it do right? What did it do wrong? What were your favorite parts? What were your least favoirte parts? How did it compare to TNG? How did it compare to Discovery? Who are your favorite characters? And all that jazz.

I thought they pulled a rabbit out of the hat and I can't wait to see more. Bring on Season 2!

The worst thing about season 1:

Season 3 attempted to destroy some of its best moments.

Very disingenuous, drama shattering, stupid writing from a producer who thought he was still in his childhood bedroom playing with his refit Enterprise model.
 
It's funny how some people dislike season 1 so much that season 2 is better. And others dislike season 3 so much that season 2 is better. Those like somewhat like both seasons 1 and 3 say season 2 is the worst.

But does anyone think season 2 is the best season?
 
I gave PIC Season 2 an 8.05 in the Season 2 thread. Where does that stand with Old Trek?

Near the top.

TOS Films --> 8.50
DS9 Season 4 --> 8.46
TOS Season 1 --> 8.27
TNG Season 6 --> 8.08

TOS Season 2 --> 8.04
VOY Season 4 --> 8.04
DS9 Season 2 --> 8.00
DS9 Season 7 --> 8.00
DS9 Season 6 --> 7.96
DS9 Season 5 --> 7.92
TNG Season 4 --> 7.87
TNG Season 3 --> 7.85
DS9 Season 3 --> 7.85
VOY Season 3 --> 7.85
VOY Season 1 --> 7.60
ENT Season 4 --> 7.55
TNG Season 7 --> 7.50
TNG Season 5 --> 7.42
VOY Season 7 --> 7.42
DS9 Season 1 --> 7.15
VOY Season 6 --> 7.12
ENT Season 1 --> 7.08
ENT Season 3 --> 7.08
TOS Season 3 --> 7.04
VOY Season 2 --> 7.04
Kelvin Films --> 7.00
ENT Season 2 --> 6.73
TNG Season 2 --> 6.68
VOY Season 5 --> 6.58
TNG Films --> 6.50
TNG Season 1 --> 6.23

In my opinion: It only looks "bad" compared to the other two seasons of Picard. When I say PIC Season 2 is the worst season of Picard, I'm really saying I'm giving it an "Asian F". I still really enjoyed it.

Picard is in a similar situation to TOS, in my eyes. Both lasted three seasons, both had a season that was weaker than the other two, but the two better seasons in each series were strong enough so that TOS and Picard can afford to take the hit without being hurt too much overall.
 
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Okay. Made it to the end. Again.

"Et In Arcadia Ego, Part II"

Way, way, way too often I see people ragging on the season finale. And, once again, like happens too often in this era, I have to ask, "Was I supposed to hate this?" I'm not on the same page with a lot of you people at all. I mean, not on the same page at all.

Where to begin? "Oh no! It's a galaxy-ending event!" No, it wasn't. Okay, it was, but it wasn't. Why? Because it's called Star Trek: Picard. Despite all the obstacles and setbacks, Picard would reason with Soji and get through to her to make her stop the summoning of those Tentacle Beings. That's what Picard does.

Also, in Discovery for instance, where I assume everyone is sick of the "galaxy ending events!", there are phaser fights and ship battles. "Such Sweet Sorrow" being the most notorious example. In Picard there are no such battles, unless you count the Romulan Fleet fighting all of those holograms of La Sirena, which I don't. Instead, in true TNG style, after Picard convinces Soji to call off the Tentacle Beings, Riker has a stand-off with Oh, and Oh stands down before the Starfleet and Romulan ships exchange a single shot. No battle to be had, no war to be had. The Romulans fall back and Riker's all too pleased to assist them. Things were handled in a distinctly TNG style.

Then there's the thing I disagree with people about THE MOST. Data's second "death". I understand Data wanting to be mortal. It's something he's wanted since at least as far back as "Time's Arrow". BUT. I'm a Videographer/Editor and overall A/V Technician. I have stuff I haven't thrown out going back to the '90s. Stuff that I should've thrown out. Why? Because it doesn't work anymore! Technological, equipment, computers, machinery, it all breaks down over time. And, as we know from Picard, Planned Obsolesced is much of a thing in the 24th/25th Century as it is in the 20th/21st. So, Data would eventually "die" because where he's stored would eventually break down. So, in my mind, assisting Data to "die" again comes across as Picard assisting Data to commit suicide. I can't get behind that. Sorry, but I can't. He's also a copy from a neuron of the original Data. Meaning there can be more copies made from the same neuron. Which I is why I don't have a problem with having Data in the third season.

What I did like about the scene with Picard and Data was Picard being able to hear from Data that he has no regrets about saving Picard, just like Picard has no regrets about sacrificing himself to save Coppelius.

Other Notes:

I liked Seven's fight with Narissa a lot better than Riker's fight with the Viceroy in Nemesis.

I liked the nuance of Narek working with La Sirena's crew not because he's "seen the light" or anything, but because they have to stop the Tentacle Beings from being summoned. Yes, I'm going to keep calling them that.

Calling back to the Picard Maneuver was a Deep Cut, calling back to the when he was Captain of the Stargazer. Reminding us once again that, yes, he did have a life before "Encounter at Farpoint". ;)

We see the hints of Seven/Raffi. On the other hand, we also see Rios/Jurati, which was oddly dropped by the second season. Obviously Terry Matalas wanted to go in a different direction, but it would've been nice to see why they weren't a thing anymore by S2. Aside from they wanted Rios unattached so he could fall in love with Teresa.

A Borg Cube washed up along a shore line is something I love seeing. No idea why, besides, "Who'd ever think to do that?!" I love out-the-box stuff like that. Or should I say outside-the-cube?

Then, Finally:

Picard's Death & Resurrection. Mind Transfers are something that's interested me since I was a kid. I'm going to cut-and-paste a post of mine from May...

Here's an article on transferring consciousness. Masataka Watanabe, a Scientist from the University of Tokyo, is working on a theory for how to do this, and it and it's interesting:
Rethinking our consciousness: An approach to a scientifically feasible seamless mind-uploading (researchfeatures.com)

Cutting-and-pasting because I'm not going to butcher what they're saying by putting it into my own words:​

Seamless uploading of human consciousness
Previous ideas on mind uploading rely on scanning postmortem brains for a digital reconstruction of the brain’s circuitry. However, Watanabe argues that in these cases, ‘you’ are unfortunately not the one that lives on. In contrast, he presents a process where our own consciousness seamlessly continues in a digital arena. This process mimics that of a patient undergoing corpus callosotomy, where the neural fibres connecting the two cortical hemispheres are severed, resulting in the generation of two independent streams of consciousness. The point is, both streams of consciousness stem seamlessly from the original, and there is no point of death upon severance.
To recreate this procedure for seamless mind uploading, Watanabe suggests that a transition state must be provided where the left biological hemisphere is connected and consciously integrated to a device that plays the role of the right hemisphere, and vice versa. He puts forward a three-step procedure to realise this transition state. Firstly, a device with neutral consciousness is prepared, then this is connected to our own brain while we are alive, and gradually our memory is transferred over.
In the first step, a neutrally conscious device is constructed. Watanabe explains, ‘The idea is to prepare a spiking neural network (SNN) that replicates the full connectivity of the human brain.’ To do this, he suggests that we look to scanning electron microscopy – producing detailed images of thin brain slices with a focused beam of electrons. The obtained image slices are stacked together and used to reconstruct the 3D neuronal connectivity within the brain. In this way, the neuronal brain fibres (called axons and dendrites) are reconstructed to yield full neural connectivity. Watanabe continues, ‘From there, to determine the fine quantitative values of neuronal connectivity and develop the device into a visual system for instance, we can show it a life’s worth of video material. If we find that the network needs a body that interacts with its environment, we can supply it with a virtual body.’ This procedure of ‘training’ the device would be very much like training a modern deep learning neural network. By using advanced methods for training SNNs, the final result should mimic a human brain. Once this is achieved, neutral consciousness, or a ‘one-size-fits-all’ type of consciousness, would likely kick in.
Second, this neutrally conscious device must be linked with our brain hemisphere to allow the integration of consciousness. For this, Watanabe proposes a radical new type of brain–machine interface, explained in more detail below. In the final stage, memory is transferred to the device. This step includes natural and forced (microstimulation) memory retrieval in the biological hemisphere, leading to synchronised retrieval in the artificial hemisphere due to integrated consciousness between the two. Finally, memory consolidation is achieved in the device side with brain-like mechanisms.
Once the consciousness is fully integrated and a sufficient number of memories have been transferred, we would be ready to face the inevitable closure of the two biological hemispheres. This closure would be similar to the surgical procedure of corpus callosotomy, but in this case, the consciousness will seamlessly continue in the two mechanical hemispheres, to be integrated later.

The article continues but that's the gist of it. It ends with saying all of this is still theoretical.
This stuff fascinates me in general.

While I think they let the grief linger a bit too much considering that they bringing back Picard in the same episode, I do like what they've done with this genuinely science-fiction concept.

How Do I Rate It?

Overall, I'll give both parts a 9.

So how do those numbers work out for Picard Season 1 as a whole? Let me pull out the calculator... Looks like my average for the first season of Picard is a 9.1!

Picard Season 1 is the only season of Star Trek I've ever properly rated that's broken a 9.

We'll see how PIC Season 3 compares. I think I rated those episodes too high. "12 out of 10" for episodes? No. 10 is the highest. I'll rate them properly this time, and we'll see how it compares. Especially now that I can also be more analytical about it instead of just swept up by the experience.

But back to Picard Season 1. It's over three years later, and this season not only held up, but my opinion of it actually went up.
 
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Out of the three Picard seasons?
Season 1 is the best.
Season 2 is the worst.
Season 3 is meh.
Where they would sit in the overall Star Trek season? Yeah, that requires a lot more time and energy than I care to give on this topic. Probably somewhere in the middle.
All my opinion of course.
 
Just did a rewatch of season 1 this evening, and I think it’s faring worse for me than the last time I saw it. There’s so many script choices that make little sense to me: Avoiding tooth and nail to say Picard has Irumodic Syndrome. The sudden shift away from the term android to synth with no explanation. Going on and on about Rupert Crandall, who never appears or really has much significance to the story. Expository dialogue to infodump Seven and Picard’s Borg backstory that’s some of the worst writing I’ve ever seen. Commodore Oh is little more than a stock, mustache-twirling villain that isn’t allowed to emote. The forced “family” dynamic of Picard and the new characters that just doesn’t land, including the Rios/Jurati pairing. Even some choices with Picard are not really Picard, they’re Patrick Stewart.

Such an uneven and undercooked mess that should have been better because it had some great ideas behind it.
 
The Irumodic Syndrome was confusing to me. It was implied in All Good Things to be a degenerative disease but here it just seemed like something that would just kill you at any time.
 
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