I blew the s off of canons with a cannon.So, the plural of 'canon' is still spelled and pronounced 'canon', then; stet.
I blew the s off of canons with a cannon.So, the plural of 'canon' is still spelled and pronounced 'canon', then; stet.
Mushrooms. Even allowing for The Caretaker (VOY) and all kinds of TOS and TAS weirdness, the mental stumbling block is mushrooms. The other things may be nonsense, but it’s in that wheelhouse of Treknobabble nonsense. Mushrooms, well, we eat those. Then, even if you went with the seventies flower-child drive system, then they asked to go with Ripper The Giant Bug.
Then there's Picard's plant-based planetary defense system.![]()
Why must the two be mutually exclusive?![]()
(As previously stated elsewhere) In my opinion. it's a different Universe,
How is it any different from PICARD'S speechifying
If they had now only said "mycelial network," ok. But "mushrooms" is just such a dopey sounding word. 'Shrooms, man. These gross, rubbery things in my yard. It just seems dumb to these ears.
When I was a kid (70s) we had "matter-antimatter reaction" and "warp drive." Very scientific.
If they had now only said "mycelial network," ok. But "mushrooms" is just such a dopey sounding word. 'Shrooms, man. These gross, rubbery things in my yard. It just seems dumb to these ears.
And I am on record elsewhere here freely acknowledging deck by deck gravity and inertial dampers are exceedingly unlikely. Even a space navy. If we don't kill ourselves as a species, eventually we won't need ships to access everywhere.
With DSC, it's just that they chose shrooms to power the thing. I wish they'd come up with a different magic, one-of-a-kind drive. Oh well. It's not a super-biggie to me.
If Space Lincoln genuinely bothers you then you take life way too seriously and you don't do Trek right.
I wonder if that is part of the off putting nature of Discovery. It takes itself very seriously in a way that past Treks would do but in a different mixture. Discovery is something that takes itself incredibly seriously, has a lot of real world parallels of what the characters are going through without demonstrated easy answers at the end of the episode. TOS, in particular, would have a different feel to it, that even if the characters are struggling they immediately step right back in to the fray and solve the problem.
I can see it being jarring. It's why episodes of TOS like "City on the Edge of Forever" stand out so diametrically from the rest.That's part of the problem with the spore drive for me. It's a jarring, fantastical element in a show that, as you say, takes itself quite seriously. I don't mind the Space Amoeba, because it's a strange, goofy conceit in a colorful show that regularly embraced strange, goofy conceits. It's at home in TOS in a way that the spore drive isn't in Discovery.
Similarly, quippy Georgiou seemed tonally at odds with a lot of stuff happening around her. It's like she walked in from another show. After Fuller left, I get the vibe there wasn't consensus on what this show was going to be, so it ended up something of a hodgepodge.
Tone issues aside, I'd argue that Discovery offers the same easy answers TOS did, only now the end of the episode is the end of the season. That's one thing I've found disappointing about it.
I can see it being jarring. It's why episodes of TOS like "City on the Edge of Forever" stand out so diametrically from the rest.
Now, I don't think Discovery is as tonally off as it is for others. I think Georgiou's quips are perfectly fine in line with her character, especially as a sarcasticwho deals with uncomfortable feelings through sarcasm.
But, I don't think DSC has easy answers. I think it tries to wrap up neatly but still leaves a lot of open air. It's very ambiguous as to its resolution, and not clear cut right/wrong answer.
I do too. I think the show suffered a bit because the tone shifted from all the BTS shifts, as well as the simple fact it was trying to do something a little bit different than past Treks. So, I am hoping for that light heartedness to be woven and maybe it will with the new setting.Yeah, in fairness to the show, I do think serialization presents a big challenge for a franchise that traditionally liked to alternate drama and whimsy in individual episodes. What does that look like now? I thought the Mudd episode managed it pretty well, but that was basically treated as a one-off -- a brief return to episodic in a serialized season. I don't doubt it's tricky to weave light-hearted fun into a serialized narrative without it feeling out of place -- especially for a show that loves escalating stakes as much as Discovery.
Yeah, in fairness to the show, I do think serialization presents a big challenge for a franchise that traditionally liked to alternate drama and whimsy in individual episodes. What does that look like now? I thought the Mudd episode managed it pretty well, but that was basically treated as a one-off -- a brief return to episodic in a serialized season. I don't doubt it's tricky to weave light-hearted fun into a serialized narrative without it feeling out of place -- especially for a show that loves escalating stakes as much as Discovery.
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