I sometimes used fake communicators made from thin air. As a youngster I could be very creative if I lacked a toy that looked right.
The way it’s worded makes me think it’s not necessarily a recurring character from TNG (or at least exclusively TNG) that is appearing.
I still do. My wife just accepts it now. It ain't changing.I still wave my hand in front of me like a Jedi before going through an automatic door. When we were first dating, after observing this a few times, she called me on it. "Are you actually doing the Jedi thing, pretending you're opening the door??" And then laughed as I shrugged and nodded. It's almost an involuntary body movement now.
Eddington? I assume you're talking strictly about through flashback or reference to past events, because Eddington is dead.I get that. If the arc really is about the Maquis as some conjecture, Michael Eddington would be a nice choice, though the lack of any personal relationship with Picard would make it far inferior.
It's also already been confirmed by Jesse Gender that there's a big DS9 callback (or maybe even cameo) in the fourth episode though, so we might see Eddington there separately.
Eddington? I assume you're talking strictly about through flashback or reference to past events, because Eddington is dead.
It's probably more in line with where people should have their expectations though instead of the effusive second coming of Star Trek reviews.Not a completely positive review, but at least far more positive than negative!
Nope. Kurtzman isn't allowed to be successful. Only Terry must be successful. All hail, Terry, all hail, Terry.I truly hope that Alex Kurtzman, his team at Secret Hideout, and the decision makers at Paramount+ actually recognize this, and take the right message from it."
What does that mean though? What makes it authentic? it's an interesting debate around makes Trek, Trek, and this past week has probably been the biggest and most interesting exercise in discovering what Star Trek means to people. Apparently, authenticity means different things to different people because to me Star Trek is about exploration-human first, emotional second, outer space third. To me, that's the authenticity, is exploring human facets, even in the extreme discomfort of those experiences, i.e. death, transhumanism, acceptance of new life, or even managing trauma. To me, that's just as important as the uniforms and ships.authenticity
Maybe they're part of the "but".In general, weren’t the Maquis all but wiped out? Makes appearances by Ro or Tom Riker not impossible but certainly questionable.
On top of that, what decision regarding the Maquis would Picard second guess? There were decisions he was forced into because of the situation and his duty but I’m not sure how that would play.
Found it. And that seems like a good compromise.I listened to the latest Mission Log Live last night, where Doug Drexler was interviewed. He made a pretty big deal about how he believed that Discovery was a alternate universe because designs were different than were used to and that Picard was the first show to take place in the Trek timeline we know and love since Enterprise.
A critical mass of the fanbase applying the same standards that everything pre-2005 held to the Bad Robot / Secret Hideout stuff. And as someone who has worked on the franchise for decades, Drexler can offer a more than informed opinion on this.I get that that people don’t like Discovery. I get that people don’t like what the current regime has done. And if it helps people sleep at night to make them think that the timeline is fractured, so be it. But, bringing it back to the concept of authenticity, who honestly gets to make the decision on what authentic Trek is? It’s not me. It ain’t Bill Hunt. And as much as I appreciate the work Drexler has done on Trek, it sure isn’t him either.
That's laughable. Star Trek in the Bad Robot/Secret Hideout era did the same things as pre-2005 Trek, just in a different way. The same themes, the same ideas, but different execution. It's not 2005 anymore. Pretending it is is just leading to more pain.A critical mass of the fanbase applying the same standards that everything pre-2005 held to the Bad Robot / Secret Hideout stuff.
A critical mass of the fanbase applying the same standards that everything pre-2005 held to the Bad Robot / Secret Hideout stuff.
And as someone who has worked on the franchise for decades, Drexler can offer a more than informed opinion on this.
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