Worst. Fragmentation. Bomb. Ever.You're all just jealous of my ginger bundle of happiness!
The DREAD issue which alienates Tilly from the rest of the crew is her "snoring".
But no, Autism is fine and dandy, nothing to write home about.
Worst. Fragmentation. Bomb. Ever.You're all just jealous of my ginger bundle of happiness!
You can do better.You're all just jealous of my ginger bundle of happiness!
You can do better.
I just hope Cadet Tilley doesn't change Burnam, Stamets, Lorca and Sari into bears. #changeyerfate
But I did quite enjoy her. Didn't find her that grating. To me she was more Barcley 2.0.
Teresa Jusino, a contributor for The Mary Due, wrote an article hypothesizing that Tilly might be on the Autism Spectrum.
I personally don't ascribe to this theory, although as a person who is on the Spectrum, I can certainly see why that conclusion could be drawn.
Also fascinating is that Tilly specifically stated that "Michael" was a very unusual/atypical name for a female, indicating that Burnham may be unique in human culture for that fact. Keep in mind, in the other threads on her name, the best we could come up with for other women named Michael was less than half a dozen individuals throughout all of human history.
This was an oddly 20th-century viewpoint, I thought. It's 2017, and I'm not at all surprised to hear names I've never hard before, or to see names that deviate from traditional gender distinction. I'd think it would be perfectly common by the 23rd century, especially in an organization made up of many worlds. But I guess baby boys are still dressed in blue in the Trek future.
I just don't personally ascribe to the theory myself, largely because I can see myself in her without having to attribute her quirks specifically to Autism.
To the OP's point, though, I can see the similarities to Ezri, although the character Tilly reminds me the most of is Harry Kim.
Well, Tilly's reaction gave us an inkling as why the creators named the character "Michael:"
It's so that people meeting her for the first time will recognize her immediately as one of the criminals who started the Klingon war. "
This was an oddly 20th-century viewpoint, I thought. It's 2017, and I'm not at all surprised to hear names I've never hard before, or to see names that deviate from traditional gender distinction. I'd think it would be perfectly common by the 23rd century, especially in an organization made up of many worlds. But I guess baby boys are still dressed in blue in the Trek future.
And could also lead to some people believing (if they recognize the name) that the perp is a man, and be very surprised when they meet her.
*Angry person builds up a full head of steam, ready to yell at Mike.*
*Burnham enters and identifies herself*
*Angry person deflates, revelation of her ID surprising enough to make them step back and re-calculate*
It's a common trope in literature.
Conspiracy Theory
Cadet Tilly is the mastermind of this whole affair.
Why would an innocent special needs cadet be placed as a roomate for a lifer?
Why was Tilly picked for the secret mission on the shuttle?
She's playing Burnham and us all...
The fact that people, we as humans, back down or become more confrontational based on our "opponent's" gender or sex is ridiculous and disingenuous to the truth.
She's playing Burnham and us all...
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