Was that Number One test makeup or Orion Girl test makeup?
That too.He wanted to get into her pants?
Uhura was on the bridge when the lockdown was ordered but next scene she is in her quarters.
Even in the 23rd century they can’t do lockdowns correctly
It was.I have to rewatch, but wasn't the order for all non-essential personnel to return to quarters?
But she was on duty.I have to rewatch, but wasn't the order for all non-essential personnel to return to quarters?
But she was on duty.
If they'd meant non-essential to be synonymous with off-duty, why did they not simply say off-duty? The fact that they didn't say off-duty pretty much implies that they're talking about a superset of off-duty personnel, in other words ordering non-essential on-duty personnel to confine themselves to quarters as well.But she was on duty.
It's possible that I've been misinformed. My information comes from a 90s book called The Star Trek Compendium, which covers the entire history of TOS from the first pitches by Roddenberry to the casting and production of the series, TAS and the movies, with a short epilogue on Generations, as the movie wasn't out yet.That's not what the description there says. birdofthegalaxy says there:
still think she should have stayed where she was. The idea of a lockdown is to stop people interacting with each other
In 1966, this was all a call back to World War II and the Nazis who passed various genetic Purity laws, and try to legislate breading to the point that it should only produced geneticly superior Germans who will of course expand and defend the Reich. (in Germany at the time anyone who was considered to have any hereditary or genetic defect was forcibly sterilized). All this was just twenty-five or so years in the past at the time the episode originally aired.@cooleddie74 is half right about the dialog in "Space Seed."
Kirk does say [http://www.chakoteya.net/StarTrek/24.htm]:
KHAN: A new life, a chance to build a world. Other things I doubt you would understand.
KIRK: Why? Because I'm not a product of controlled genetics?
But there are also these lines, one by Spock and one by Kirk:
SPOCK: No such vessel listed. Records of that period are fragmentary, however. The mid=1990s was the era of your last so-called World War.
MCCOY: The Eugenics Wars.
SPOCK: Of course. Your attempt to improve the race through selective breeding.
SPOCK: I note he's making considerable use of our technical library.
KIRK: Common courtesy, Mister Spock. He'll spend the rest of his days in our time. It's only decent to help him catch up. Would you estimate him to be a product of selective breeding?
SPOCK: There is that possibility, Captain. His age would be correct. In 1993, a group of these young supermen did seize power simultaneously in over forty nations.
Eugenics was understood in the 1960s and is understood today to mean the discredited practice of selective breeding for the purpose of increasing desirable characteristics. So, yes, clearly the original intent of "Space Seed" was that the supermen had been created by selective breeding, and "controlled genetics" was intended to be understood in the context of selective breeding.
It was TWOK that first explicitly said Khan was a product of "genetic engineering."
The premise that the supermen would have been created using only the principles of eugenics is dated, was dated in the 1980s and merited this retcon.
I'm still a bit iffy about it. Despite the quality of the first episode, I've found that the second wasn't as good, and the third a bit disappointing. I guess one thing that bothers me is how the... logic of the events, for lack of a better word, isn't very solid. I'll have to watch it again but the explanation both for the spread of the virus and how they managed to resolve it didn't work for me.Despite these hiccups, SNW is rapidly cementing itself as (IMO, for what that is worth) the best of the nu Trek shows.
In that case, everybody should have stayed where they were, whether on or off duty, essential or inessential, and the problem transcends Uhura.I still think she should have stayed where she was. The idea of a lockdown is to stop people interacting with each other
Thanks for that.EDIT: I just rechecked and it's a single picture with the caption "An unused makeup for Number One". That was the source of my comment.
Yeah, it’s good but I still think Lower Decks is the best.I agree with you. Anyone she interacted with on the way to her quarters could have been infected.
Despite these hiccups, SNW is rapidly cementing itself as (IMO, for what that is worth) the best of the nu Trek shows.
Slight corrections:The stupid "Starfleet is stupid/evil"-trope from new Trek shines through again. THe Ilyrian (sp?) "reveal" fell completely flat for me. I never liked human looking aliens, if they wanted to have a super strong woman on board - why not take La'an? And it feels this reveal doesn''t really add anything, except another layer of "Starfleet predjudiced" and "good white guys standing up to authority to make things right".
The worst part was the double-whammy with M'Benga ALSO having a dark secret (AND of course La'an...).
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