I still maintain that Jellico’s decision to disrupt everyone’s sleep cycles by changing to a four-shift rotation was unforgivable under the circumstances.
I agree that ideally they would maintain that kind of fuzzy timeline to maintain our connection to their future. In fact, many years ago on the old Daystrom I tried to argue that we shouldn’t take dates on the show literally other than as an indication of the general order in which things happened – leading to massive pushback from almost everybody! It seems like Picard season 2 went pretty far out of its way to endorse the fan-favored theory that the Trek timeline forked sometime prior to the 90s, though, and I worry about the slipshod continuity management that is emerging as the streaming era matures. Of course, the Picard finale also abruptly undid the whole climax of season 2, so maybe the official position is that we’re going to pretend season 2 never happened.
It still seems like they could have coordinated the two plots in a more transparent way, given that the shows are running concurrently and have overlapping staff. Fans shouldn’t have to do this much mental gymnastics to reconcile episodes that aired two years apart. The in-universe claim that the pre-history of our era is constantly shifting seems like a cop-out in those circumstances.
Why did they have to show Khan shifting into the future just one year after Picard and co. travelled back to the same time and we saw Soong on trial for the Khan project (a past event)? What benefit is there to jacking around with what they just established?
Even if they could have made it more organic than it is, it is still more organic than the Data/Lore thing is to Picard’s plot.
I agree that the Construct was a bit of a kludge to make it so they couldn’t just go directly back to Starfleet. But I would defend the Rutherford plot as more organic – it’s not just that he’s the victim of a mindwipe, which we already kind of knew. We need to understand why he would cooperate with something evil, or even why the evil people would single him out. Making him become a different person with the mindwipe actually adds the the coherence (or provides them with a way out of the hole they had inadvertantly opened up with the mindwipe plot… that’s the nature of long-running storytelling).
I will edit to hedge.
That’s a great observation – I may have caught it if I’d had the endurance to continue my rewatch.
The biggest gap in the existing series is the one-two punch of the Romulan War and the founding of the Federation, which we only missed due to ENT’s cancellation. Finding some way back into that era, beyond Riker’s holodeck program, would be number one on my wishlist.
There wasn’t one – that’s what @khaosworks was pointing out.
Okay, first they try to cover it up, because it’s easier if the Klingons never find out. But then once she’s uncooperative, you go all out to show it’s serious. And you don’t have a Klingon observer because you don’t want the general public to know the Klingons are dictating such an important domestic policy.
Of course you can watch it and it mostly makes sense from a PTSD/pragmatism perspective – that’s how they structured it so that it would reward rewatching.
Yes! I’ve been thinking for a while that Discovery season 1 is the Last Jedi of Star Trek – except of course that Star Trek started with that alienating move for its new era.
I am on record as a defender of the Lorca reveal, though a recent rewatch really brought home to me the fact that they spent way too many episodes in the Mirror Universe and should have used at least some of that time to build up to the climax. I also believe that the reveal is meticulously planned out from the very start and is therefore integral what’s good about the earliest stretch. Either way, though, we agree that Discovery started out extremely strong and we also agree that it’s a shame they never found their way back to that level of quality – nor has any of the current Trek, as far as I’m concerned.
It also occurs to me that Worf and Burnham were both raised on a foreign planet by foster parents of a different species and feel like outsiders or anomalies in Starfleet. The fact that this parallel exists with a Klingon would presumably make Burnham feel some kind of way, as the kids say.
Yes, I agree. I wish the writers had made it a bit more clear that Burnham was being scapegoated for “starting” a war the Klingons wanted no matter what.
I connected Spock’s willingness to steal the ship for La’an more directly to his willingness to do so later for Pike.
Still, it seems like a risky and high-handed move in context. Most likely he’s just doing it because it’s how things were on his own ship and to assert that his way goes. I’ve never heard anyone give an account of why it would be better to change the shifts.