Star Trek:The Next Iteration doesn't have the same ring to it.
Why did they name it "The Next Generation", anyway? It seems like a meta choice - the fans are "next generation" (80s instead of 60s), not the crew (100 years in the future - well, except for the odd long-lived species, that is.) It isn't even the next generation of Enterprise - it's two after the next.
I'd have just called it Star Trek: The Next Era, seeing how even those crews aboard the subsequent 2 Enterprises, B & C still dress & seem like Kirk's A crew. For that matter just "Star Trek: The Next Century" would've sufficed.Star Trek:The Next Iteration doesn't have the same ring to it.
How the 1701-D crew had learned the Edo customs before meeting any of them as they have no 'puters and stuff, all while saying* things like "sounds wonderful for the children and the kids need fresh air", "we found nothing worrisome about their laws, just common sense stuff, whatever those are", "they all boink like bunnies at the drop of a hat", "there are no downsides in going down, but there's this sensor glitch from out there in orbit so our new ship is probably already broken", and "Let's let Wesley go down to see if the younger folk will like it!"
* paraphrased,, all in direct chronological order -- and in the same scene!!
For the transcript, direct and proper, especially if you don't want to rewatch the episode like how I just did:
The Next Generation Transcripts - Justice (chakoteya.net)
Star Trek:The Next Iteration doesn't have the same ring to it.
I'd have just called it Star Trek: The Next Era, seeing how even those crews aboard the subsequent 2 Enterprises, B & C still dress & seem like Kirk's A crew. For that matter just "Star Trek: The Next Century" would've sufficed.
Star Trek:Enterprise-D would be lame, too.
Ain't nobody in the Q afraid of Klingons evolving enough to become a problem for them, anywhere near as much as they're concerned with humans. Hell, by the end of TNG one of Picard's own crew had already begin manipulating time naturally. The Q are on countdown until they have at the very least company & at the most competition.33-years-later fridge logic—
Q: “You are accused of being savagely violent child-race!”
PICARD: “Have you by any chance also accused the Klingons?”
…okay, that’s fair. Good point.Ain't nobody in the Q afraid of Klingons evolving enough to become a problem for them, anywhere near as much as they're concerned with humans. Hell, by the end of TNG one of Picard's own crew had already begin manipulating time naturally. The Q are on countdown until they have at the very least company & at the most competition.
For that matter just "Star Trek: The Next Century" would've sufficed.
There's no evidence for it, but Travelers and Q don't feel like they'd be antagonitic. Plus, Travelers are still corporeal and hang out on a single planet, whereas Q are higher-dimensional beings. Just my opinion.Ain't nobody in the Q afraid of Klingons evolving enough to become a problem for them, anywhere near as much as they're concerned with humans. Hell, by the end of TNG one of Picard's own crew had already begin manipulating time naturally. The Q are on countdown until they have at the very least company & at the most competition.
A Vulcan mind meld would also have worked, and the Enterprise had several Vulcans onboard.As for "The Drumhead", I used to wonder why Sabin Genestra - by all accounts a full Betazoid - didn't simply read Tarses' mind, but I suppose that Federation law would not allow that.
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