Whatever one's opinion of Shaw and Season 3, this is a masterclass of portraying PTSD.
Whatever one's opinion of Shaw and Season 3, this is a masterclass of portraying PTSD.
It’s PTSD mixed with Survivor’s Guilt. These are very real problems that many people deal with every day, particularly combat veterans, as Shaw was. Picard suffered a similar fate, albeit probably without Survivor’s Guilt. He hated the Borg with a passion and literally nobody had a problem with it until STFC, when Lily smacked some sense into him by using the Moby Dick metaphor. Even then, it was more about his obsessive vengeance against the Borg potentially getting people killed instead of finger-wagging at him over being a “Borgophobe”.Yeah, exactly. It came across to me like the writing was lampshading the problem. If you're aware that you're a bigoted asshole and you've not done the work to pull yourself out of that, then it's really not worth much - you're still just a bigoted asshole.
Really lost me at the Jaws "homage".Wolf 359 and realizing he survived that battle only because of sheer luck and the random chance of a senior officer picking him to board a lifeboat changed him forever. For the next 34 years he was a sarcastic asshole and egomaniac, and like the character or not Stashwick did an excellent job depicting how fragile Shaw really was beneath the verbal bullying and bravado.
They don't hold a candle to the poor lighting in PIC 3Yeah, the lighting across all three seasons of PIC sucked and the lighting in all five seasons of DSC was even worse.
Seeing how Admiral Clancy was running Starfleet in Season 1 I can see a flag officer like her saddling Shaw with a first officer he'd hate.We seldom get to meet our boogie men. And who was the Starfleet asshole that gave a Wolf 359 survivor a Borg first officer?
Who knows? Picard being there may have completely thrown Shaw off of his game.
I know TV's not what it was 30 or even 20 years ago, but this trend of "darker lighting automatically means cooler and more gritty" needs to end. It's stupid in almost any genre.They don't hold a candle to the poor lighting in PIC 3![]()
Really lost me at the Jaws "homage".
They usually hide it better. But they had a guy named Shaw telling the story about he almost died when his ship went down. Oh well at least his name wasn't "Quint".So much of Trek plays “homage” to itself and other material that I barely notice anymore.
Not a franchise for anyone that wants originality.
My only regret is I have but one like to give.I know TV's not what it was 30 or even 20 years ago, but this trend of "darker lighting automatically means cooler and more gritty" needs to end. It's stupid in almost any genre.
They usually hide it better. But they had a guy named Shaw telling the story about he almost died when his ship went down. Oh well at least his name wasn't "Quint".![]()
They usually hide it better. But they had a guy named Shaw telling the story about he almost died when his ship went down. Oh well at least his name wasn't "Quint".![]()
Hands down THE Gold Medal scene of the entire three-season run of PIC.I agree with you.
But Stashwick just fucking nails that scene. Probably the best scene I’ve seen from the series.
Hands down THE Gold Medal scene of the entire three-season run of PIC.
A performance sort of worthy of Robert Shaw from Jaws, who I think the character was named after. Derivative, maybe, but good. I liked Captain Shaw too.We seldom get to meet our boogie men. And who was the Starfleet asshole that gave a Wolf 359 survivor a Borg first officer?
Who knows? Picard being there may have completely thrown Shaw off of his game.
It’s PTSD mixed with Survivor’s Guilt. These are very real problems that many people deal with every day, particularly combat veterans, as Shaw was. Picard suffered a similar fate, albeit probably without Survivor’s Guilt. He hated the Borg with a passion and literally nobody had a problem with it until STFC, when Lily smacked some sense into him by using the Moby Dick metaphor. Even then, it was more about his obsessive vengeance against the Borg potentially getting people killed instead of finger-wagging at him over being a “Borgophobe”.
It’s so very easy for those who don’t have to endure such things to smugly and judgmentally hand-wave it away as “bigotry”, but it’s a lot deeper and more complex a problem than simple anti-other tribalism. Apparently, even still in the early 25th century. To confuse the two so readily does a great disservice to those with real psychological issues.
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