Jet picks the mushrooms off her pizza too. At last, a Star Trek character I can identify with.
Mushrooms are awesome! I just can’t relate to picking them off my pizza. But still like Reno quite a bit.
Jet picks the mushrooms off her pizza too. At last, a Star Trek character I can identify with.
they could have fun with it, now he could spend some time in an awkward hero-mode adolescenceI'm not sure I like the idea of Saru losing his fear instincts. It's been a defining element of the character. It's like if, after 19 episodes, Spock decided he was going to let emotions through indefinitely, or Data turned into a human, or Troi lost her empathic powers, Etc.
I don't know, man.
I'm totally fine with it. If anything, I'm happy about it. Change/growth is good.
Maybe this overall messy execution of the stories is part of what led the showrunners Berg and Harberts being let go...Maybe? Hopefully they get back on track later in the season in the story execution department, which would be a good thing since I think the stories themselves have been classic Trek stuff.
It's actually fine either way. Because you can have degrees using different scales, it's quite acceptable to clarify which scale. It's also fine to just say Kelvin too.And it's not degrees Kelvin ... it's just Kelvin. For some incomprehensible reason.
Is this their last episode? I know they weren't that far into the season when they were let go.
I am curious if there is going to be any noticeable difference. Each episode so far has been different which is a good thing I feel. If they started being one way that could easily be because of how the story is unfolding. The writers stayed the same. The overall story and plot was mapped out before they left. That had to be the case before production even started. Most of the scripts were likely written or almost all done by the time they left. It's 14 episodes. No way they weren't largely done with scripts by the time they were filming episode 4 and 5. Rewrites could still happen but the bulk had to be finished. The pool of directors stayed the same. The lead director and ex producer stayed the same. Kurtzman was always there and helped shape things even if he wasn't there daily.Is this their last episode? I know they weren't that far into the season when they were let go.
Edit: Apparently next week is their last episode.
I'm a bit torn on that myself. Having an intelligent species be the prey rather than the predator was a great twist on the norm. Although, they didn't do much with it. Losing that uniqueness . . . agreed, I'm not too sure about. Although, it can open more doors in evolving the character, which can be a great thing. Hopefully they make the most out of it.I'm not sure I like the idea of Saru losing his fear instincts. It's been a defining element of the character. It's like if, after 19 episodes, Spock decided he was going to let emotions through indefinitely, or Data turned into a human, or Troi lost her empathic powers, Etc.
I don't know, man.
I doubt it was really about some stuck-up sense of "enlightenment." Besides royalty issues, I think they were hesitant to try to predict which popular music would still be listened to hundreds of years in the future, for fear of whatever they might have picked becoming outdated quickly, as the 1980s and '90s were a period during which contemporary tastes were rapidly expanding and diversifying. Classical music was considered a "safe" choice because it had already lasted for hundreds of years, and thus was already considered timeless. (Plus, it was cheap, too.)That’s true. You don’t.
Perhaps the idea the producers had back in the TNG days was listening to classical music makes you more “enlightened?” I don’t know.
Seriously though, I like that they’re giving more credence to more modern music. I think with as much music as there will be in the 2250s it makes sense that much more than what we consider classical will BE timeless.
To pick a nit, I think he said he "considered" that they might or could be, not that he intended them to be, per se. (Sorry, I know that's probably what you meant.)Ron Moore has said that he intended, but intentionally did not specify, that the ancient aliens we saw in The Next Generation's The Chase were the Preservers.
I didn't get that impression, exactly. He thought the inflammation of the ganglia was signaling that he was dying. He believed that in the absence of being culled, his "inevitable" death would be preceded by madness and torment unless the ganglia were severed. He wanted her to cut them as a palliative measure, so that he could instead die peacefully. It wasn't the cutting itself that would cause his death. He wasn't asking her to outright euthanize him right then and there (although that might have come next, for all we know, if things hadn't turned out differently), but to accept that the end was near at hand, and that there was no other recourse to be pursued. To "submit." (At least, that's how I read it.)Was Burnham cutting the ganglia going to kill him? Also odd.
Possibly, but I have my doubts. Pike suggests them as the culprit, yet it rather seems he's just using that as a convenient excuse to get rid of them, because he doesn't like them anyway, which Number One seems to realize and have predicted. She says no other ship is having similar problems.The Enterprise malfunctioned because of holo-communicators?
Probably a standard capability of all windows, like polarizing the viewscreen. The window in Pike's cabin glows green in "The Cage"/"The Menagerie" (TOS):Also, what's up with the random orange light shining through the windows the last two weeks? Or is that some kind of weird wall light fixture?
How do we know they didn't, exactly?Doesn’t explain why all other TOS ships don’t have them, or future ships as well.
That's what all that brandy they make is for! Also, good for colds.It took more than 52 years to learn that Saurians can think that things suck.
This group would be neither the first nor the last to be thusly "preserved" though. The Preservers could have been making their rounds for eons before plucking up Miramanee's forebears. And if the Red Angels be one and the same, then it would seem they visited Earth again during WWIII as well."Ancient" might be overstating things. Amerind seems to have only been settled by Preserver transplantees sometime after the year 1500 C.E., when indigenous Native Americans started being in danger of extinction from European colonization.
I so agree, treat it like TMP, the tech was always part of the 23rd century.Worst moment of the episode when they brought that up. It's franchise management, not storytelling. I'd rather they just say "this is what TOS looks like now, deal with it."
Oh and "I can fix that analogy with duct tape too."
I love Tig so much.
Next weeks episode looks like the upside down... Star Trek goes Stranger Things...
I always had the thought that the classical music was a shorthand way of indicating the crew was cultured and well educated, since that's the popular perception today.I doubt it was really about some stuck-up sense of "enlightenment."
"Skip your ranks. They don't matter."Why was Michael at the head of the conference table? She isn’t the leading rank there.
It's Federation Standard English, no?Also, is it English or Federation standard? They’ve said both.
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