Probably had one a few days after he was killed, just didn't show it.LOL. I don't want an emo scene with Stamets. I think a nice funeral service like they had for Spock or Tasha Yar would have been enough.
Probably had one a few days after he was killed, just didn't show it.LOL. I don't want an emo scene with Stamets. I think a nice funeral service like they had for Spock or Tasha Yar would have been enough.
Then either he's wrong or you're misremembering. The Menagerie takes place in 2267, and in that episode it is stated in dialogue that The Cage was thirteen years prior, which would make it 2254. Disco is stated in dialogue to be in 2256 when it started. 2256 is two years after 2254. This is both canonically and mathematically legitimate.According to Anthony Rapp, Discovery takes place two years BEFORE The Cage.
And that's enough for you ?
The spore drive represents the greatest discovery ( intended pun or not ? you choose ) that Starfleet has ever made, blows warp drive out the water. The ability to travel literally anywhere in the universe instantly.
That could have been handy during the Borg attacks, or the Cardassian War, or the Dominion war, or Voyager getting home or any one of a thousand other instances.
Yet the explanation we get, and some are happy to accept, is that Starfleet stopped using it because they couldn't find a suitable replacement for a human interface.
This despite the fact that the human interface seemed perfectly fine at the end of season 1.
Guys, it's an absolute clusterfuck. We speculated on here for months as to how the writers were going to get themselves out of the Spore drive situation. I don't think anyone saw this one coming.
Like they wouldn't simply change the date of "The Cage" if it suited them.Then either he's wrong or you're misremembering. The Menagerie takes place in 2267, and in that episode it is stated in dialogue that The Cage was thirteen years prior, which would make it 2254. Disco is stated in dialogue to be in 2256 when it started. 2256 is two years after 2254. This is both canonically and mathematically legitimate.
I'm starting to wonder if the above is true, come season two, those rumours that Michael Burnham was the Number One might come true.
And why Spock was acting emotional (just a phase?)
Unfortunately all of that is only head-canon.super secret science projects get protected by super elite security guards with black badges, I don't see a loose end here.
Also, with all the freedom Lorca had running his ship, it is not hard to imagine he gave black badges to his crewmen just to look cool and mysterious
Because Fuller was booted in the middle of writing the 4th. The other writers didn't like his Klingon War arc, and ESPECIALLY didn't like his end season idea, but CBS execs were pressuring the show delivery big time because they'd already delayed twice. So they said "fuck it" and filmed the first 4 episodes with Fuller's scripts, and then over the season tried to slowly undo his story line so that in Season 2 they could take the show in a more light hearted and Trek-like direction.
It never was established just what the Black Badges were guarding. It clearly wasn't anything related to the Spore Drive, yet there also wasn't anything else important on the ship.super secret science projects get protected by super elite security guards with black badges, I don't see a loose end here.
He may well have been experiencing emotional instability resulting from pre-pon-farr. 13 years before The Menagerie would be 14 years before Amok Time, after all...His leg hurt like a bitch.![]()
He'll be based on the Abrams movie Spock.And why Spock was acting emotional
That’s the kind of loose ends that bug me. Introducing a Klingon ship covered with tens of thousands of dead warriors screams “army of zombie Klingons!!!” to me, but it went nowhere. I’m dying to know where Fuller was planning to take that.There is clearly an interesting story to be told about how Discovery morphed during its creation. I think we will eventually hear the story, but not for years, not until it is safely in the rearview mirror. God would I love to write that book.
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