So what is standing in the way now?Discovery is finally not letting technology or technobabble get in the way of good storytelling,
So what is standing in the way now?Discovery is finally not letting technology or technobabble get in the way of good storytelling,
Viewer hesitancy.So what is standing in the way now?
They're saving Sybok for Strange New Worlds. And as for Burnham, for all we know God sent the anomaly after her for that business of her foster brothers not giving him a starship.DSC won't even have Michael mention Sybok her adoptive half-brother so I doubt they'll recycle anything else from that film.![]()
It’s best to think of TFF as a Romulan ale-triggered hallucinogenic dream.I thought of El Capitan in Star Trek 5 and wondered why the flying boots Spock had are not basic equipment by the 32nd century. They could all have flown to that ridge.
Thanks for reminding me that both Picard and Discovery did their evil AI storylines at the same time. I'm now fully expecting corrupt, megacorp controlled cyberpunk Earth in Disco next season.
Ah, you're the ghostwriter of the Autobiography of James T. Kirk I take it?It’s best to think of TFF as a Romulan ale-triggered hallucinogenic dream.![]()
Chapter V: Tiberius in WonderlandAh, you're the ghostwriter of the Autobiography of James T. Kirk I take it?![]()
The best plot point this year might be Culber counselling others as a means to escape his own emotional trauma.10 from me, my favorite episode of the season. This episode juggled an A/B/C story perfectly, and involved great character interactions across the board. I 100% accept and love Discovery as the Star Trek that does feelings right. Picard speeches about morality and justice, of course those are great. Sisko and company existing in grey areas? Also very much good. Janeway blowing shit up and doing the murder sometimes? Can't get enough! Those things will always be perfect from their respective shows, but Discovery absolutely shines in episodes like today's where we get political theater and suspenseful action not as the main features, but as framing devices for scenes about people just talking about how they can be better, and just about how they freaking feel. Followed by people who are actually listening, and together they grow. My favorite thing about modern Star Trek is how wonderfully it's learned to add emotional humanity into it's stories.
And now that this particular arc for Tilly has ended it looks like we've got Culber to figure out for the next therapy mini-arc, which I think is a great choice. I wasn't happy with him just *getting better* because the plot could no longer support his depression as a story thread. It appears they are bringing it back as him never truly dealing with it? This is the type of emotional character continuity I have always wanted in Trek. Devastating shit happening and it changing a character. Or at least enough so that we can make a story thread out of it. Bringing back Culber's PTSD and properly dealing with it is a must in a series about addressing with your past and discovery-ing your future. He had Miles O'brien level suffering, and as the guy who's helping everyone deal with their problems, he's got to deal with his eventually.
I've been shipping T'rina and Saru since last season and I am stoked for both of them right now. Absolutely too cute. Can't get enough of T'rina.
I would not be surprised if they're saving Culber and his issues for when the 32nd century Klingons finally show up.Bringing back Culber's PTSD and properly dealing with it is a must in a series about addressing with your past and discovery-ing your future. He had Miles O'brien level suffering, and as the guy who's helping everyone deal with their problems, he's got to deal with his eventually.
I've been shipping T'rina and Saru since last season and I am stoked for both of them right now. Absolutely too cute. Can't get enough of T'rina.
Pretty standard helping professional stuff.The best plot point this year might be Culber counselling others as a means to escape his own emotional trauma.
“Somewhere along the line I thought that I could help myself by helping everyone else…”
It’s good that Trek is finally exploring this stuff meaningfully though. Hopefully they don’t throw it in the backseat like they did last season with Detmer.Pretty standard helping professional stuff.
I mean, yes and no. I love that they are but at the same time the slow thoughtful unpacking of trauma isn't always going to make the best drama in an ongoing series. I really appreciated what they did with Detmer last season, but it's never going to be a full unpack like I would expect.It’s good that Trek is finally exploring this stuff meaningfully though. Hopefully they don’t throw it in the backseat like they did last season with Detmer.
I would expect a more thorough unwrapping this time around simply because Culber is a main character.I mean, yes and no. I love that they are but at the same time the slow thoughtful unpacking of trauma isn't always going to make the best drama in an ongoing series. I really appreciated what they did with Detmer last season, but it's never going to be a full unpack like I would expect.
There's a running theme of found families on Discovery, something increasingly common now. Some people have awful biological families and find new ones with friends. It's something the original series movies explored too with the crew's relationship and especially the one between Kirk and Spock.Eh. Book's dead "brother" wasn't related to him by blood or even through adoption, so it could be explained away as his actual birth family being the shitheads.
More like:Burnham walks into holodeck 2 to find Culber standing in a simulation of Qo'noS with dead Klingon bodies all around him.
Burnham: What kind of holoprogram is this???
Culber: Oh, uh, just some holographic self-therapy. Computer, end program!
Burnham: ...
Oh, Culber read up on B'Elanna's and Worf's holoprograms.Burnham walks into holodeck 2 to find Culber standing in a simulation of Qo'noS with dead Klingon bodies all around him.
Burnham: What kind of holoprogram is this???
Culber: Oh, uh, just some holographic self-therapy. Computer, end program!
Burnham: ...
There's a running theme of found families on Discovery, something increasingly common now. Some people have awful biological families and find new ones with friends. It's something the original series movies explored too with the crew's relationship and especially the one between Kirk and Spock.
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