AAUGH the spoiler tags next time pleeeze!!1! I haven’t seen the episode where they reveal that!Some fans really can't take that Nixon going to China isn't a real Vulcan proverb.

That’s a litrrally insane twist!AAUGH the spoiler tags next time pleeeze!!1! I haven’t seen the episode where they reveal that!Some fans really can't take that Nixon going to China isn't a real Vulcan proverb.

That’s a litrrally insane twist!I spotted that, but I think we're at the point where Trek is so insanely, ridiculously big now that not every director or actor is going to know the pronunciation of every weird alien name.Speaking of pronunciation, SAM's pronunciation of Khitomer was weird, if I recall correctly.

Why should there be any explanation for this at all? Looks like styles or personal choice.I'm interested in the in-universe explanation for why Klingons have acquired dreads in SNW and now SFA. Stylistically it makes sense but it does tie into whether the dreads get applied to "black" Klingons only - it looks that way. Otherwise we could end up with a Trustafarian Klingon.
Either that or the Krios from The Perfect Mate, also revisited in Precious Cargo. Given the Krios from The Mind's Eye was a Klingon occupied world, I'd say that's the safer bet.That the planet Krios from THE MINDS EYE?
as mentioned upthread, they're using the Marc Okrand's intended pronunciations for Klingon words, which most productions before Discovery ignored. This is a positive for me.The pronunciations of Kronos, Kahless, etc… was distracting but I guess different dialects make sense.
And they still put Brian Bonsall, Alexander's actor on TNG, in makeup that made his skin darker.Michael Dorn was playing the first black Klingon, and I think it can be argued that they worked to de-racialize him to a certain extent, from giving him straight hair (which at times was even brown, rather than black) along with building up the bridge of his nose. We did see other black Klingons, like his brother and the Klingon lawyer from DS9, but these were in the distinct minority throughout the Berman era.
After watching Ep 4 last night, I turned to my wife (who could honestly care less about the intricacies of the Trek universe, but enjoys watching with me) and said, "Huh... I guess Klingons have last names now."Um, isn't that EXACTLY how Klingon houses work?
Martok's House is House Martok.
I felt whenever characters started speechifying, it didn’t really land and just seemed like empty phrases. And I can’t figure out why they wrote the debate portions the way they did. I’ve been watching a lot of formal debates over the years, mostly between atheists and Christians, and they almost never just throw Bible verses at each other, like the cadets did here with case law, paragraphs and law texts. In my mind debates are much more interesting when people are making arguments for why a proposition is moral or more convincing. It’s not about who can memorize the most paragraphs. This had the effect of not really showing Caleb as the skilled debater he was supposed to be. And I also couldn’t really figure out how the Doctor decided who won each round. Just on a whim?
Finding homes for billions of refuges would not be anything resembling an easy task.

After watching Ep 4 last night, I turned to my wife (who could honestly care less about the intricacies of the Trek universe, but enjoys watching with me) and said, "Huh... I guess Klingons have last names now."
That prompted me to go on a diatribe about I've never seen this in previous series. Worf is "Worf". Duras is "Duras". The only Klingon that had a last name was Alexander, Worf's son, and he took the last name of Worf's human parents.
Now I'm cool with this... but that's one of those things that, if they're gonna do it, they gotta explain it. Did Klingons start using the names of their respective Houses as surnames post-Burn as a way to pay homage to their places in the last few Houses left? With Qo'nos apparently uninhabitable (would've liked to learn a little more about that... sounds like when the dilithium reactors blew they basically went Chernobyl on a global scale) the minor "Houses of Lorgh" were probably wiped out and it became more of a "thing" to identify with a remaining house through a surname.
Apparently, everything that Starfleet was saying would happen to Qo'nos in Star Trek VI finally happened because of The Burn? I remember the talk in VI about how the Klingon Empire was doomed because of the ecological damage that the destruction of Praxis caused to Qo'nos and there were talks about planetary evacuation at the Khitomer Conference.
I dunno...my wife thinks I'm an idiot. She's not wrong.
After watching Ep 4 last night, I turned to my wife (who could honestly care less about the intricacies of the Trek universe, but enjoys watching with me) and said, "Huh... I guess Klingons have last names now."
That prompted me to go on a diatribe about I've never seen this in previous series. Worf is "Worf". Duras is "Duras". The only Klingon that had a last name was Alexander, Worf's son, and he took the last name of Worf's human parents.
Now I'm cool with this... but that's one of those things that, if they're gonna do it, they gotta explain it. Did Klingons start using the names of their respective Houses as surnames post-Burn as a way to pay homage to their places in the last few Houses left? With Qo'nos apparently uninhabitable (would've liked to learn a little more about that... sounds like when the dilithium reactors blew they basically went Chernobyl on a global scale) the minor "Houses of Lorgh" were probably wiped out and it became more of a "thing" to identify with a remaining house through a surname.
Apparently, everything that Starfleet was saying would happen to Qo'nos in Star Trek VI finally happened because of The Burn? I remember the talk in VI about how the Klingon Empire was doomed because of the ecological damage that the destruction of Praxis caused to Qo'nos and there were talks about planetary evacuation at the Khitomer Conference.
I dunno...my wife thinks I'm an idiot. She's not wrong.
Bro, do you even Star Trek? It's clear that you tech tech the tech and then things are fixed. Sum it up with a captain's log.Watch fans go, "No, TNG established that in Episode X, Y, Z that there's endless numbers of worlds to settle! Why did the Romulans take so long in Picard? They should have had the entire planet resettled in an hour."
And they still put Brian Bonsall, Alexander's actor on TNG, in makeup that made his skin darker.
Shazad Latif?
Touche. Though he's biracial, and when he was playing a Klingon his natural (fairly pale) skin color was completely covered with a layer of silicone.

Did Klingons start using the names of their respective Houses as surnames post-Burn as a way to pay homage to their places in the last few Houses left?
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