I posted about this the other day, but I was on my phone, so I couldn't talk about it in detail: Does anyone get the idea that this episode was one of the two added to the show after the intial order of 13 episodes?
My reasoning is basically as follows. They would not add two episodes on to the end of the season, because that would result in a very anticlimactic ending. So they would have to find somewhere to sandwich two episodes in the middle of the already plotted arc. This episode does call back to earlier continuity, but judging by the trailer for next week, it's sort of awkwardly jammed in the middle of the "Cornwell mini-arc." It also wrapped up things very well, to the point of almost being a self-contained episode. The only possible exception is the burgeoning relationship between Burnham and Ash Tyler, but since they don't actually remember their conversation in the iteration where they kissed, and Burnham made it clear she wanted to "go slow" they could go right back to acting professional for several episodes.
I guess we'll see in the longer run if anything which took place in this episode is referenced anywhere else. If it happens in a single episode, it could always be chalked up to that episode being a mid-arc insertion as well. But if there are multiple references we could conclude that this may indeed have been a story inserted into the arc late in production.
Aside from what was already mentioned in regards to there being way too much character development in this episode for it to have been an afterthought, I also seriously doubt the writers decided to just throw a super-powerful time doohickey into the mix and then completely forget about it. We will probably see the time crystal again in the finale (or leading up to it), so this episode almost certainly was not an afterthought, imo.
I Enjoyed it a lot but wondered why Stamets just didn't tell Lorca not to beam the whale on board (yeah beside the fact that the episode would have ended very soon).
He probably did at some point, but that doesn't actually solve anything at all. Even if Stamets ran straight to engineering and activated black alert with no authorization and put the Discovery on the other side of the galaxy before the Gormagander was ever discovered, Mudd's time loop would STILL be in effect and everything would just reset in 30 minutes.
And I would think that Betazoid society doesn't practice invasive telepathy.
Meaning, they don't go around scanning people without warning. That would be obnoxious and rude. And particularly demeaning to offworlders like Harry. So if he's at least disciplined enough to put a lid on his emotions, I think he could have pulled off a bank robbery or two.
Also, there's no reason whatsoever why the 'Bank of Betazed' he robbed necessarily even needs to be on Betazed. He could just as easily have robbed the Rigelian branch or the Vulcan branch of the Bank of Betazed. Notice that the episode goes into extensive detail on all the amazing, unbeatable security protocols that Harry beat and EVERY SINGLE ONE is technological, with no mention of telepathic guards at all.
I'm starting to think that there may be something that happens to Harry somewhere down the line that shatters his ego and his worldview. Turns him from the cold, calculating murderer he is in DSC, into the charming rogue of TOS.
Except he was never just a charming rogue in TOS - he was willing to massively endanger the lives of the entire enterprise crew as a bargaining chip in his first appearance. In his second appearance he was assisting in a literal galaxy wide coup designed to eliminate freedom in general.
He is also not a cold, calculating murderer on this show. So far we've only seen him pass off beatings in a Klingon prison (which TOS Mudd absolutely would do, because he would never, ever choose to take a beating himself) and kill people he knew weren't going to stay dead anyway. As someone else already mentioned, it is very telling that despite his hatred of Lorca and how much he enjoyed killing him over and over again, in BOTH scenarios in which he thought he had already won, he left Lorca alive after all. Other than theft/piracy (which has always been Mudd's stock in trade), the only thing you can really point to as cold and calculating in this episode is that he didn't seem to mind that Tyler was dead during his first 'victory' and was ready to go ahead and end the loop anyway. But even there, he didn't actually kill Tyler with the intention of him staying dead, because he didn't realize he'd won until after the fact.
I can't help but wonder if Mudd was so effortlessly able to use his tech to get the upper hand against an elite starfleet crew on a war footing, killing them all again and again so casually, wouldn't he have been better off using it to kill his debtors?
Who says he wasn't planning to? He hated Lorca and could get a massive amount of money (which he loves) from selling Discovery. Two birds, one stone. Three birds, actually, since selling to the klingons is payback for starfleet 'starting' the war. Plenty of time later to deal with those other birds from his past. ETA: Not that he necessarily even need kill his debtors to deal with them.
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