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WTF moments in Star Trek

Nothing in the episode implies that.

KIRK: Anything on intelligent life forms?
SPOCK: Nothing specific, Captain. Unscientific rumours only. More like space legends.

And

"Weaponless, I face the creature the Metrons called a Gorn. Large, reptilian. Like most humans, I seem to have an instinctive revulsion to reptiles. I must fight to remember that this is an intelligent, highly advanced individual, the Captain of a starship, like myself, undoubtedly a dangerously clever opponent."

Seems like there's no record of them prior to this to me. Or their ships, which they had no record of as well.
 
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They ought do another Ferengi episode, that adds to the "rumors" Data was talking about...
 
KIRK: Anything on intelligent life forms?
SPOCK: Nothing specific, Captain. Unscientific rumours only. More like space legends.

And

"Weaponless, I face the creature the Metrons called a Gorn. Large, reptilian. Like most humans, I seem to have an instinctive revulsion to reptiles. I must fight to remember that this is an intelligent, highly advanced individual, the Captain of a starship, like myself, undoubtedly a dangerously clever opponent."

Seems like there's no record of them prior to this to me. Or their ships, which they had no record of as well.
And yet the Gorn insist that the Federation is in the wrong and encroaching on their territory and McCoy supports this. The episode is inconsistent on the question. How can the Federation know nothing and then be encroaching on their territory.
 
The Federation may not have known. It was the Gorn captain that claimed this, with McCoy simply asking the question, "Could that be true? If so, then we could be in the wrong."

McCoy didn't support it, he simply gave the question a consideration followed by a reasonable conclusion. If the case the Gorn made was accurate.
 
And yet the Gorn insist that the Federation is in the wrong and encroaching on their territory and McCoy supports this. The episode is inconsistent on the question. How can the Federation know nothing and then be encroaching on their territory.

I think you need to watch the episode again.
 
"A Night in Sickbay" was one long WTF moment. Consider...
- A decon chamber three-way, and that didn't include the dog.
- Phlox's tongue.
- A treadmill pissing contest.
- A doggy funeral.
- Vanishing underwear.
- An escaped bat, and some very adept bat-catching.
- A taxidermy juice dog. No, I didn't come up with that one.
- Dreads. And a chainsaw.
- And let's not forget the captain of Starfleet's flagship acting like a sulky 9-year-old for most of the episode.
 
Two scenes come to mind:

The implied "grape" of Uhura (TOS, "Gamesters of Triskelion").
The graphic end of Lt. Commander Rimmick (TNG, "Conspiracy")

There may have been others, but these two still stand out in my head, 'til this very day.

DSW
 
Oh, thought of another!
"The moment" in Lower Deck's A Mathematically Perfect Redemption.

Where Peanut Hamper and Rawda first become intimate.

That was... weird. To say the very least. Actually, the very definition of a Trek "WTF" moment for me if ever there was one.
 
- A decon chamber three-way, and that didn't include the dog.
While we're at it, most ENT decon scenes would qualify for this thread. But I want to nominate the very first one in Broken Bow, because A) it's one of the dumbest and most gratuitous iirc, as Trip oils T'Pol in places she apparently can't reach like her butt and her ears, and B) being the first one worsened its impact.

Back then when it originally aired, there was a lot in that episode that made me instantly dislike the new show, but that scene was the killing blow when I just couldn't take it seriously anymore. It's so strange watching Connor Trinneer and Jolene Blalock having to play it straight as if they didn't know like everyone else--including the audience--what's really going on here. And in my opinion, both actors look very unhappy in this scene.

I abandoned ENT a few episodes in, after the Trip pregnancy/nipple episode I think. Today, after several rewatches, I have more appreciation for ENT (esp. thanks to season 4), but back then... it was rough. Admittedly, had I been around for the first four episodes of TNG, I'd probably have given up on that show too.

And let's not forget the captain of Starfleet's flagship acting like a sulky 9-year-old for most of the episode.
To be honest, I think that's how Archer is depicted most of the time. ANiS took it to another level though, as if that entire episode was written with the sole purpose to make Archer look bad. The writers must have hated him, who were they again? ...oh, right.
 
They kicked the crap out of VOY for 7 years and it somehow survived long enough to be euthanized a la "Half a Life", the way its predecessors had. So they figured if they wanted to properly kill Trek, they'd have to turn up the heat.
 
In “The Cage”/“The Menagerie”, at the end of the “Come on, we’ve got to get away from that Kaylar!” exchange, Vina makes this big weird wink just before running away. I’ve always assumed that was Susan Oliver keeping everything in perspective.
 
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