Note that Q and Q are not the same person.
Note that Q and Q are not the same person.
Fun fact - the actress under that makeup also went on to play the Female Changeling.
It’s also not even remotely how DNA or evolution work.
And yet, all the carts are collected and all the shelves fully stocked.
Seems bland as hell on the surface, but hiding a spicy side.
*any port in a pon far
The remake being attached to Trek with the creator being annoyed at VOY and leaving to make his own show still kinda fits the Mormon thing with the above chart, though.
The way his conviction wavers as he says it also shows that he’s trying to convince himself and justify his actions to himself more than anything else. It’s not that he can live with it, it’s that he has to live with it.
Lucky could be Paris, but that would make Luanne B’Elanna and I don’t think that part works.
I still think each Combs in the picture should be a different character. Unless each one is a different Weyoun, in which case they already are.
Londo and Quark trying to scam each other at gambling.
Add in Sokel for the next round. He was T’Lyn’s former captain.
Also, there was just something about it that felt like a re-hash of an actual TNG episode, but I can’t pin down which one.
“Homeward,” the episode where Worf’s adoptive brother evacuates a pre-warp species to a new planet because theirs is dying using the Enterprise’s transporters and holodeck to make them think they’re just traveling over land to a new place. It’s almost exactly the plan for moving the Ba’ku.
I am part of the group that thinks Insurrection was not just bad as a movie, but bad as a plot line all together. Literally everything about the Ba’ku-Son’a conflict falls apart at the slightest scrutiny.
Season 3 has a ton of problems, but it’s still a much better send off for the TNG crew than Nemesis was, and that’s good enough for me.
I mostly chalk that kind of thing up to writers not having any idea what the Prime Directive actually is.
Depending on who’s writing the episode, yeah, and it’s a great concept that I felt was explored well. Other times, however, we have an episode where Tuvok talks at length about the training and conditioning he underwent to control his emotions, then in the very next episode, talk at length about how Vulcans are naturally emotionless and incapable of feeling emotion at all. This chronic lack of consistency in the writers’ room is a big part of why Moore left the show to reboot BSG.
Unfortunately, the writers often forget this. VOY waffles a lot on whether or not Tuvok is literally emotionless.
And a malfunction has the potential to destroy all life in the multiverse.
I didn’t like that part at all. An infinite multiverse, which they state in DSC is the case, means that anything with a probability greater than zero is guaranteed. Mathematically, the multiverse should have already been wiped out at some point. It’s also a throwaway line meant to increase dramatic tension for all of ten seconds before the scene ends, and an empty threat given that following through would end the show.
M’Benga still wears blue. Chapel wears white, but she’s also a civilian contractor in SNW and hasn’t joined Starfleet yet, so how her uniform color interacts with everyone else is unclear.