Ooh! Good catch!This is pretty close to Starbase 11. Even has the construction things on the left side.
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Ooh! Good catch!This is pretty close to Starbase 11. Even has the construction things on the left side.
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Agreed. I was bummed out when he went down during the war.I've always rather felt we got this via Admiral Ross in DS9. He was written a bit blandly overall, but he was a decent dude.
Excellent catch! Always glad when TAS gets some respect.I was happy to see a call back to the animated series! In "Once Upon a Planet". When Kirk was surprised that Spock had read "Alice In Wonderland" Spock says his mother was particularly fond of Lewis Carroll's work. Now I just imagine her reading to both of them with Michael excited by the adventure and Spock's complaints of "None of this is Logical, Mother!"
Thanks! No, Jorne is his name, but he does share the OR sound with Lorca!That's awesome. Congrats!
Are you going to name your son after one of the characters (e.g. Lorca)?
Captain: "Ahead, Shroomfactor 7, Engage!"Shroomdrive. I have spoken!!!!!
Ah! I wasn't the only one
Guardian of Forever planet?A few quick caps of when Princess Toadstool was in 'Quantum Sporestream':
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^ Unidentified planet with cool ruins
Planet from "The Paradise Syndrome"![]()
^ Unidentified planet with Preserver monolith
Yep.![]()
^ Possibly Janus VI mining colony
I was happy to see a call back to the animated series! In "Once Upon a Planet". When Kirk was surprised that Spock had read "Alice In Wonderland" Spock says his mother was particularly fond of Lewis Carroll's work. Now I just imagine her reading to both of them with Michael excited by the adventure and Spock's complaints of "None of this is Logical, Mother!"
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https://twitter.com/GeekFilter/status/914669841595936768
Maybe it's space art.The heck are they building that that crane has been there for 10 years and not done any work?
That was an exceptionally well-written and executed scene. I think that was one of my own personal turning points for my opinion on the show. I was a bit on the fence for the two-parter, but this one nailed it.Saru: She is the smartest person I know
Lorca (to Stamets): and he knows you
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Go ask Alice...I very much doubt Lorca is seeing what Burnham is seeing. Or even knowing what Burnham is seeing. His words and the visuals - two different things.
Did Burnham really go places? Or did she just get a cheap holoshow?
Timo Saloniemi
The heck are they building that that crane has been there for 10 years and not done any work?
Interesting how divergent people's reactions are to the sets, props, and visuals. Personally I winced at the holo-communicators, but practically did a fist-pump when I saw Jefferies Tubes this week. I like the stuff that actually evokes the original series, and doesn't give that vibe of "reboot" that so many people are picking up on.Michael's prison jumpsuit looked like a better Starfleet uniform than the actual Starfleet uniforms.
Any time DSC brings us some new bit of tech like the holographic video phones I love it. Any time they do a hoary old Trek cliche like Jeffries tubes I roll my eyes. More new, less old please.
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I liked the bridge set better in its Shenzhou configuration than its Discovery configuration. Wish they'd swapped the designs.
I think that anyone who didn't find Tilly instantly endearing is somehow who has never experienced social anxiety of their own. (People like that worry me a bit.)Am I the only one who liked Tilly? Sort of reminded me of Barclay. And I like that she's not a sexy, slim, "eye candy" actress there to attract teen boys. I like that the cast feels, generally, like real people i'd encounter out in the world.
I enjoyed BSG (until the final season), but I always viewed it as more of an allegory than the sort of SF meant to be taken straight. I can see a few thematic similarities here, but I think you may be exaggerating the contrast between STD and past versions of Trek. I don't think of even TOS as being all that "lighthearted" (notwithstanding the then-standard convention of the forced joke in most episodes' closing scene)... in fact, while it did depict an optimistic future overall, from the very beginning I'd say some of its best and most memorable episodes explored the darker side of that future, the kind of internal conflicts humanity was still struggling to overcome. I'm thinking about things like "The Man Trap," "Balance of Terror," "Conscience of the King," "Devil in the Dark," "COTEOF"... and that's just in the first season.Just for the record, I like Discovery so far and will keep watching. But I am also not a fan of how EVERY SHOW these days has to be grim and dark. Especially Star Trek. It shouldn't be, but that's the road Discovery has chosen so far. The tone is more Battlestar Galactica than Star Trek. I mean, what the hell is with that?...
It puzzles me when I see comments like this. I don't doubt you're sincere, I just honestly don't see the cause for complaint. Maybe I'm not a connoisseur of such things, but what I watched seemed to me the equal of any CGI effects work I've seen on TV, and far better than some. You want "cheap"-looking effects, go watch some BTVS reruns from 20 years ago!... ;-)I don't mind the design of the Discovery that much, but the CGI work in the third episode left a lot to be desired in my opinion. The ships CGI model looks just like that: a cheap CGI model, not to mention that short shot of the shuttle bay...
Hear, hear. The moment she walked into her quarters, turned up the lights, and started talking, the whole tone of the episode (and possibly the entire series) changed for the better. She immediately became the most relatable character on the show.I’m really liking Cadet Tilly. She seems to have some form of anxiety, so I can actually relate to her.
You must have seen something I missed. What did Stamets do or say that would qualify as "gross insubordination"? He did share a difference of opinion with his captain, but there's nothing unusual about that....Stamet's opposition to Lorca is interesting. That Lorca needs him provides a reasonable rationale for how he can get away with gross insubordination.
I'm baffled why so many people seem to be reading this subtext into Stamets. Nothing he said or did in this episode evoked that stereotype to me; he seemed like a perfectly reasonable, plausible, interesting character with his own sincerely held motivations. I've mostly avoided spoilers; is there information that the character is later revealed to be gay? Are people just reading it in because of the actor, and his history playing such characters (e.g., in Rent)?[Stamets] comes across as a blatant stereotype of a bitchy, whining, queen. If I was a non militant homosexual and wasn't bothered about representation for the sake of it, I'd probably find him offensive.
On the other hand, one could take the view that Stamets, along with everyone else in STD, is so woefully underwritten as a character, that Rapp's just playing himself purely because he's not been given any character to play.
I'm inclined to agree, based on first impressions, and I hope you're right in the long term. A lot of people seem to be trying to shoehorn Lorca into a set of expectations based on familiar TV tropes (in and out of Trek), but it seems to me like the show is trying to do something a little more complicated and nuanced with the character. Certainly Isaacs isn't playing him as one-note; he's bringing a lot of depth to the character, and easily owns most of the scenes he's in.My guess is that while Lorca is darker than most captains we have seen, I think he will turn out to be a good captain, if a little flexible with his morals at times. But nothing worse than that. But i could be wrong. I just don't get the same "evil" vibe from him that many other viewers are apparently getting.
Go on my son flog that dead horse raw!Welcome to TrekBBS!
I've been here since (IIRC) 1999, maybe 98. Certainly close to the beginning (prior to the infamous database crash of 2000). This is my visual interpretation of how things tend to roll when it comes to differing opinions within the denizens of the BBS:
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It is as diverse as the world in which we live!![]()
Just like the a-hole Starfleet guard in Star Trek III, would made a point to mock Sulu by calling him "tiny"?
Yep. They're both assholes.
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