Thank you to the late, great Peter David for getting the ball rolling in the first place. 

Good. We don't need every detail explained like in most shows now.That was a fun hijinks episode. Really love to see SNW is still playing around with themes and genres.
Also loved not only that vocal cameo, but the slight allusion to the ending of The Squire of Gothos, too. Even better, they didn’t try to spell things out or explain it.
I remarked to my wife as that played. "I guess Wham! will be classical music by then."
I agree. TOS was lit, set and costumed to be vivid and bright for black and white TV back in an era where owning a colour TV was a luxury.There's one other thing: It might be only tangentially related to this specific episode, but this episode really made it clear:
SNW is maybe the BEST star trek has ever looked! And that includes the friggin' movies.
The costumes, makeup (both alien & human), the sets, the vfx, the colours - Star Trek has never looked better. It's not just the money. DIS & PIC had that too. This show has developed an aesthetic, while very much "modern TOS", is so unique & du much it's own thing. It's kind of a Marvel to witness.
Just wish we'd get more episodes.
There should have been oneQuite fun… but would it have killed them to dedicate the episode to Peter David?
Oh, I thought it was Earth, I might have missed that, we were making pork BBQ and I was in the kitchen.But from his perspective the SNW episode happens after "The Squire of Gothos(TOS)." Trelane is older now. And Starbase 1 orbits Jupiter, not Earth.
Starbase 1's location was established way back in S1 of Disco. Were you in the kitchen that long?Oh, I thought it was Earth, I might have missed that, we were making pork BBQ and I was in the kitchen.
Starbase 1's location was established way back in S1 of Disco. Were you in the kitchen that long?
But he has emotions, as presented in the Cage, and in Yesteryear. There was some transition of Spock to be suppressed.That suppression of emotion, to the point where he didn't even know how to feel certain feelings even though the ability to have them was buried deep inside him, has always been a central part of the Spock character.
Turning Early-Installment Weirdness into Entire Prequel Weirdness.Yes, yes, early days, things hadn't been established and developed yet. All SNW is doing is taking that inconsistent way Spock behaved in the early episodes and making it fit with what was later established about himself specifically and Vulcans generally.
Exactly on point. Any supposed "inconsistencies" in Spock's character were established all the way back in the original series. Strange New Worlds is clearly just putting those inconsistencies into proper context.The same Spock who we see in The Cage grinning over vibrating plants and yelling over the disappearance of "THE WOMEN!"? The same Spock who smirks in reaction to Kirk talking about the human emotion irritation in WNMHGB? Or further smirks when he and Uhura perform a song together in Charlie X?
Yes, yes, early days, things hadn't been established and developed yet. All SNW is doing is taking that inconsistent way Spock behaved in the early episodes and making it fit with what was later established about himself specifically and Vulcans generally.
The same Spock who we see in The Cage grinning over vibrating plants and yelling over the disappearance of "THE WOMEN!"? The same Spock who smirks in reaction to Kirk talking about the human emotion irritation in WNMHGB? Or further smirks when he and Uhura perform a song together in Charlie X?
Yes, yes, early days, things hadn't been established and developed yet. All SNW is doing is taking that inconsistent way Spock behaved in the early episodes and making it fit with what was later established about himself specifically and Vulcans generally.
Boimler only knew what he read about Spock in the history texts, not the actual person. He even makes a point of bringing that up and apologizing for his preconceived notions about the crew later in the episode. History books don't always have all the details. As Sisko said, Li Nalas will be remembered as the greatest leader of the Bajoran resistance and that's how he will speak of him when asked in the future, despite knowing that so much of Li's story is more legend than fact.Spock's so inconsistent that Boimler actually had a panic attack about it when he found out.
No Andorian sex for you then!I don't care to have it in trek.
No Andorian sex for you then!
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