trappedslider
Legend
Another repeat of Voyage Home with the "I only work in outer space"
I was expecting that cop to be another Q!
I'd like to think so.Dr. Gaius Baltar interogating a Cylo...err, synthetic Picard.
Did US army provide him with a small nuke for his cylon detector?
Picard's always been flawed. But he's never been worthless (not even in Picard). What's with contemporary fandoms's allergic reaction to humanizing protagonists?Yea, yea, yea, Picard is a worthless, weak, flawed person because of French Horror Story and Little Boy Picard.....sigh, whatever.
Remember the scene in TNG when Q walks into Ten Forward and Guinan sticks her hands out like she's going zap his smug as... posterior with some Space Magic of her own?The Q could snap their fingers an obliterate the El Arueans from existence.....so how do you have a war?
James Callis does a really good sinister . . . . I didn't expect the twist towards the end that he was Picard's father, Maurice, and he WASN'T a "monster". I was fully expecting some sort of alien intelligence monitoring or testing Picard . . . .Dr. Gaius Baltar interogating a Cylo...err, synthetic Picard.
Did US army provide him with a small nuke for his cylon detector?
True. Wil Wheaton interviews the actress playing the younger Guinan, Ito Aghayere, in "The Ready Room" this week, and they discuss that quite a bit. I enjoyed her performance much more this episode than the first time we saw her a few episodes back.Picard's always been flawed. But he's never been worthless (not even in Picard). What's with contemporary fandoms's allergic reaction to humanizing protagonists?
Remember the scene in TNG when Q walks into Ten Forward and Guinan sticks her hands out like she's going zap his smug as... posterior with some Space Magic of her own?
(the actress playing Guinan in Picard makes the exact same gesture, BTW).
The idea the El-Aurians could hold their own against the Q has been around for a long time. And it's not like there's a shortage of space gods/demigods in the Star Trek universe...
Sometimes Trek utopianism has to take a back seat to keeping Trek humans as humans we can relate to. And the show was unclear on what treatments were available, only that she refused treatment.But what makes me sad is the writers deciding yet again to "expose" the bright future of Star Trek as a bit of a facade. Namely their take that: apparently in the future, humanity still has no clue about mental illness and how to properly treat it.