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Should there be more every day life on Discovery?

These days I'm just more interested in seeing how the utopia operates ...
Lot's of CCTV, computer monitoring, Betazed thought police, physiological penal colonies, stuff like that.

You know ... "paradise."
Awkward small talk in the Turbolift?
Tech One: "So, third date with T'wje'jenj, how did it go?"
Tech Two: "Well, turns out she has four sets of sex organs."
Tech One: "How was the sex?"
Tech Two: "Surprisingly good."
LaForge: "Oh how I hate you."
 
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All of the Star Trek shows up to this point have skirted around the everyday issues that most human beings experience at some point. I think Discovery should buck this trend
I agree, as long as the show doesn't become about those issue, becoming like a soap opera set in the future. It's esp good if some everyday issue has a payoff in the sci-fi story. Even if it doesn't, I remember in The Naked Time Uhura mentioned the door to her quarters was squeaky. I liked that. It makes it seem more real and relatable.
 
Awkward small talk in the Turbolift?

"So... how is it going in Astrophysics Department..?" "It's good it's good it's good... And... ehm... Transporter Room?" "uh-uh... you know you know... People beam up... people beam down..."

*uncomfortable silence*
This is my biggest problem with Star Trek. They say the ship has hundreds of people on it, but they're often in the way of the story. The story is about a small handful of people on a space ship, and the need to explain what hundreds of people do feels like an annoyance. I wish they made it feel like these people were delegating important things to managers who were managing teams of their own.
 
As someone who is frankly sick of Starfleet, I've wanted a civilian Star Trek show for years. The closest I've seen is the fan film series Star Trek: Aurora. But I love it when the shows have had slices of every day life. There's a reason writers loved writing for O'Brien, McCoy, Quark, and others who took a more regular-person look at the experiences they go through.

Ultimately, any show is about characters, first and foremost. The story is simply there so we can see how they react. So, the more we see of the characters, and their reactions to the everyday, the more fun it would be to see them placed in various situations.
 
One would think individual crew members would be trained to handle simple problems like that on their own. A simple repair kit would suffice. It's not as if some hapless ensign would breach the core by trying to tighten the flap on his air vent. (But then this is TOS we're talking about. :guffaw:)

(I couldn't find that reference @cgervasi I tried searching that episode's transcript with "quarters", "door" and "squeak")

Engineers are too busy calibrating life support and monitoring the warp core to go on squeak duty, aren't they? (At least on Kirk's Enterprise)
 
One of the very first scenes in the first Star Trek pilot was of Captain Pike flopping on his bed and complaining about his job.

And drinking hard liquor.

I'm in need of new sig material, and I like these two comments as a general statement on the totality of Trek, may I use them?


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But to answer the question, I agree with those have said that little bits of non-work related character development are what makes the characters likable. It doesn't have to be 45 minutes of the chief engineer biting his toenails, but little comments and moments that help sell them as more than just things that say dialog.
 
I'm in need of new sig material, and I like these two comments as a general statement on the totality of Trek, may I use them?


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But to answer the question, I agree with those have said that little bits of non-work related character development are what makes the characters likable. It doesn't have to be 45 minutes of the chief engineer biting his toenails, but little comments and moments that help sell them as more than just things that say dialog.

Please feel free to use mine, I'm flattered!
 
The writers ignore Earth cos they don't want to admit in the future France becomes the new superpower of the Federation , why else are its HQ in Paris? ;)

Because the Germans (aka The Federation) invaded France and put the Federation flag (German flag) in the middle of the French capital as a statement to its enemies. Of course the French put their hands in the air and surrendered when the Federation came to invade, and let all of the above happen, just as they always do.

Plus ca change, you could say.
 
The ship runs out of contraceptive boosters and condoms. Everyone is on a no shagging lockdown until they reach Starbase 30 almost 12 weeks away.

I don't see "no shagging" going down well on a ship that's supposed to be full of homosexuals.
 
It's pretty clear so far that Discovery is aiming at a propulsive, plot-driven adventure format - so, no. There's no indication that this version will incorporate the "workplace drama" aspects of TNG/DS9/Voyager/Enterprise, which are absent from TOS and all of the Trek movies.
 
All of the Star Trek shows up to this point have skirted around the everyday issues that most human beings experience at some point. I think Discovery should buck this trend and sprinkle the little things that make daily life what it is and help build suspension of disbelief.

I couldn't agree with you more. They made the effort with the Enterprise D to some extent and it all helped add to the totality of that universe. It's a well known fact quite a few of Trekkies would love to be in Starfleet and living in the world of the Federation if they could. Therefore making it seem as real as possible on the screen allows those fans to do the next best thing.
 
An entire episode, an one long take of a transport room officer that is waiting someone to use the transporter. And waiting. And waiting. And waiting.

tumblr_mlo3pw2GzK1rroiseo1_1280.jpg
According to TNG Technical Manual, at least one trasporter room must be always manned. So, eight hours. Standing. In an empty room. Waiting. Waiting. Waiting.
 
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