It has been said a few times. I get why it would be at this time but it was never stated it was in TOS.Just started watching, interesting retcon, the TOS Enterprise is the flagship
It has been said a few times. I get why it would be at this time but it was never stated it was in TOS.Just started watching, interesting retcon, the TOS Enterprise is the flagship
It's becoming a bit weird at this point. They're clearly avoiding writing for her. It feels like they just don't have confidence in her as a performer, so they don't give her anything beyond the same one note again and again.And the episode gives us our longest, best look at Ortegas - though it seems she's frankly not that deep of a character. TBH, she comes across as an average Jane on a ship of super-geniuses here.
I respected this episode a lot more than I enjoyed it.
Not the first time this has been mentioned in the showJust started watching, interesting retcon, the TOS Enterprise is the flagship
She's still on "Sick Leave" given that the treatment that was applied to her is relatively new & untested.BTW why is Captain Marie Batel still on the Enterprise?
M'Benga is the CMO on the FlagShip of the Federation, also the one who devised the treatment.What is the in universe reason she is not under Starfleet Medical supervision?
Number One: Did Beto ask us about Section 31?Starfleet has some cracks in its foundation.
As a pointed message to Sarek and Amanda and to the family of his former childhood friend and other Vulcans who disparaged his humanity, I can believe it. It’s very passive aggressive and very human. Sarek won’t talk to him. This is how Spock will talk to Sarek.A nitpick, but did anyone else just not believe Spock would tell such a vulnerable childhood story in a documentary interview, for public consumption?
The direction in this really could not have been better. On a technical level, I've never seen this fake documentary thing done so well. You could tell so much careful thought had gone into the camera placement and all of that.
The Menagerie already showed us that the TOS Enterprise had internal cameras.In-ship security cameras!? OK the 'SNW isn't canon' people might have a point!
When a writer creates a character they give that character motivation which usually includes the character's personal deeply held beliefs. If I write a character who strongly believes abortion is wrong I need to imbue that character with sincere, abiding reasons for that that belief even if I myself disagree.![]()
Yeah, the colonizer line really stood out to me. It felt like the writer injecting some modern politics into the episode. I do think the ending does redeem the episode somewhat. Obviously, the documentary concludes that starfleet is not evil. Although, I feel like the message that it is the people who make starfleet good to be a bit simplistic and corny. A lot of the episode felt like a US military recruitment ad with messages about being a family, serving a greater cause and finding purpos
Yeah, that kind of startled me. Also it was a disturbing confession.A nitpick, but did anyone else just not believe Spock would tell such a vulnerable childhood story in a documentary interview, for public consumption?
Except not in the turbolifts for some reason since people are always stopping them to have private conversations that no one else is supposed to know about.The Menagerie already showed us that the TOS Enterprise had internal cameras.
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