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Uhhhhhhhhhhhhhhh https://twitter.com/realdonaldtrump/status/1220821545746141187?s=21
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# ? Jan 24, 2020 23:02 |
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# ? May 26, 2024 06:17 |
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Timby posted:They've discussed having him in season 2, but they have very explicitly said that neither Geordi nor Worf are in this season, and that at one point they considered not bringing back any TNG cast members, because they wanted the show to stand on its own and not feel like TNG: The Return. https://twitter.com/StephenAtHome/status/1220728753703309312?s=20
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# ? Jan 24, 2020 23:03 |
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god is dead
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# ? Jan 24, 2020 23:04 |
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egon_beeblebrox posted:Uhhhhhhhhhhhhhhh Section 31 logo will be unveiled soon.
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# ? Jan 24, 2020 23:21 |
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Someone edit that Tweet so it’s the Terran Empire logo
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# ? Jan 24, 2020 23:38 |
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Christ, how many trekkie nerds in the upper echelons of the military just have massive, painful erections
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# ? Jan 24, 2020 23:44 |
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Humerus posted:What I really liked about Picard episode 1 was that Picard actually lives up to the ideals of the Federation and Starfleet* to a fault. He's like the human Worf. That was, indeed, good, but I was pretty annoyed by the implication that Mars getting attacked meant the Federation, and Starfleet, decided to leave all the Romulans to die (except for what few Picard managed to get to safety). Starfleet is made up by people like Picard. The crew of the Enterprise, or DS9, or...other vessels/stations/units may be exceptional ones, but they are extremely representative of all the people serving in Starfleet, and to a similar degree, the Federation as a whole. 80%, minimum, of Starfleet should have said 'gently caress these orders' and gone rogue to join Picard to save the Romulans. Hundreds of ships, all warping out alongside the Enterprise and mentioning they had some subspace communication issues keeping from from getting that weird message from Headquarters earlier in a veritable tapestry of other captains' faces appearing on the Enterprise's viewscreen as every single one of them hails him to announce they're there to help. It was really disappointing, and I hope it's rectified to at least some degree, but the whole goddamn point of Starfleet and the Federation is that they are a more enlightened, better society than our own, overall. They're the kind of people that, if they get a super lovely order that violates the oaths they took to the Federation's ideals, are more likely to ignore it than they are to comply and claim later that they were just following orders.
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# ? Jan 24, 2020 23:44 |
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egon_beeblebrox posted:Uhhhhhhhhhhhhhhh Yeah, just the AFSC logo put into a circle, basically what I expected. (Since Space Force is just AFSC given its own branch and absorbing some other operations). Using the orbit from the NASA logo is a nice little graphical tribute without going overboard, nice work on whoever did that bit. Arrowhead/delta/chevrons are basically compulsory for agencies to do with space, anyway. MikeJF fucked around with this message at 00:09 on Jan 25, 2020 |
# ? Jan 25, 2020 00:02 |
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EimiYoshikawa posted:It was really disappointing, and I hope it's rectified to at least some degree, but the whole goddamn point of Starfleet and the Federation is that they are a more enlightened, better society than our own, overall. They're the kind of people that, if they get a super lovely order that violates the oaths they took to the Federation's ideals, are more likely to ignore it than they are to comply and claim later that they were just following orders. I think one of the things Star Trek has shown, over and over, is that, regardless of what you think of Federation society, human nature hasn't changed. That's what makes it an optimistic show...it suggests that the capability to make a better world is in us. But along with that, if we have it in us to be better, the people of the Federation have it in them to be worse. The Federation utopia, such as it is, is bought with cheap energy bit its maintained by vigilance. And we've seen this throughout Star Trek too. There's a reason that it's a recurring joke that all admirals are evil. TNG episodes like Measure of A Man and the Drumhead work because, while Picard prevails in the end, there's a real desire among some of the population to scapegoat somebody with Romulan blood or to build a race of disposable robot slaves In DS9, you see the abandonment of settlers along the Cardassian border for the sake of peace, and you also see an attempted Starfleet coup because of fear of the Founders. It goes back to TOS. In "A Taste of Armageddon", Kirk admits that humanity is a species of instinctual killers, "But the instinct can be fought. We're human beings with the blood of a million savage years on our hands, but we can stop it. We can admit that we're killers, but we're not going to kill today" So it's not unbelievable that the Federation could get worse.
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# ? Jan 25, 2020 00:23 |
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EimiYoshikawa posted:That was, indeed, good, but I was pretty annoyed by the implication that Mars getting attacked meant the Federation, and Starfleet, decided to leave all the Romulans to die (except for what few Picard managed to get to safety). I don't disagree and I think it would have been more likely that Starfleet scaled the operation back and not just dropped it altogether-like those ships were already out in former Romulan space, surely? But it does make sense that a huge attack like that would make them circle the wagons, and since the Utopia Planitia fleetyard was destroyed it makes sense they may want to limit the risks their ships are exposed to. Getting into speculation territory but I'll spoil it because some of it was in the episode: There's obviously going to be a lot of Romulan resentment about the Federation abandoning them after promising to help, and I'm sure the Borg cube that's being reconstructed will play into the big revenge (sub?)plot that is coming. Guess it might be time to check out the other thread though
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# ? Jan 25, 2020 00:50 |
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Lmao Donald trump made Star Trek real. fine.
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# ? Jan 25, 2020 00:56 |
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https://twitter.com/DPRK_News/status/1220857978036711424
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# ? Jan 25, 2020 01:06 |
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Yeah I thought it was weird that a synthetic super-terrorist attack on Mars prompted the Federation to abandon the Romulan relief effort. I wonder what it is exactly that makes Star Trek so obsessed with terror attacks. Was the television producer class so scarred by 9/11? Terrorism has never touched me or anyone I know.
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# ? Jan 25, 2020 01:14 |
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Arglebargle III posted:Yeah I thought it was weird that a synthetic super-terrorist attack on Mars prompted the Federation to abandon the Romulan relief effort. Funny thing is, the best terrorism-related episode is that DS9 episode from like 1996 where the moral of the story is that you don't give in to fear or it will rule you.
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# ? Jan 25, 2020 01:15 |
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Lmfao
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# ? Jan 25, 2020 01:17 |
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FlamingLiberal posted:All of that stuff is post-9/11. First the Xindi attack, then the ST:ID thing with Khan, now this (there may be another one I am forgetting) Star Trek was far from the only television series to take a serious post-9/11 shift.
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# ? Jan 25, 2020 01:22 |
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The hope is at least the Picard show will perpetuate how wrong and short sighted that attitude is, rather than poo poo out the hard times call for hard decisions narrative that is pushed in shows like (early) Discovery, which clearly comes from a more cynical (and sadly realistic) reflection of modern times, rather than the utopian ideal dream future implied in TNG. Edit: I think it fits narratively as well as a call for action for a 92 year old Picard to be inspired to come out of retirement. Most other scenarios probably would have felt pretty forced or looked silly. Isometric Bacon fucked around with this message at 01:48 on Jan 25, 2020 |
# ? Jan 25, 2020 01:32 |
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Timby posted:Star Trek was far from the only television series to take a serious post-9/11 shift. 24 is the most hilarious one.
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# ? Jan 25, 2020 01:36 |
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I mean I know, but when 9/11 happened, nobody I knew was affected even to two degrees of separation. It's so nuts that it became such an obsession that even now the first episode of a 2020 science fiction drama invents a literal super-powered terrorist attack.
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# ? Jan 25, 2020 01:38 |
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9/11 is a cultural scar that will affect us for decades. It's like Pearl Harbor, or Sharon Tate's murder, or the JFK assassination, the Challenger explosion, stuff like that. Things that we think of being 100% safe and secure are shown devastatingly to be vulnerable, and it breaks our brains. It doesn't matter the scale or the reason behind it or the flawed reasoning that led the culture to the false belief that those things couldn't happen. Those things then leave profound aftershocks in the culture - everything from somber remembrances to stories of reflection to silliness and gallows humor. It's how we cope.
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# ? Jan 25, 2020 01:50 |
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Someone needs to go grab James Cromwell and keep him sober in case first contact happens soon.
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# ? Jan 25, 2020 02:01 |
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Evek posted:24 is the most hilarious one. How so? Genuinely curious because I'm not aware of anything about that. The show began airing November 2001 (honestly kind of surprising they allowed it that soon, since those first few months they usually erred on the side of sensitivity). Obviously that means the first run was in the can before 9/11, but I feel like the show was very "post-9/11" from the start anyway.
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# ? Jan 25, 2020 02:02 |
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https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nnRPom8PlA0
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# ? Jan 25, 2020 02:06 |
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Arglebargle III posted:I mean I know, but when 9/11 happened, nobody I knew was affected even to two degrees of separation. It's so nuts that it became such an obsession that even now the first episode of a 2020 science fiction drama invents a literal super-powered terrorist attack. Respectfully, the fact that nobody you knew was affected even remotely doesn't decrease the fact that it was a massively traumatic event for millions of people directly. I agree with ashpanash; it's a cultural scar rivalled IMO only by Pearl Harbor in scope. BUT I also think that not every terrorist attack in a modern TV show is a 9/11 analogy, but terrorism in general is basically an ubiquitous part of many peoples' lives at this point. I have noticed that the trend in depicting them in media slowly seems to be turning towards the actual major source of American terrorism these days (aka white supremacists and nazis) instead of brown people.
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# ? Jan 25, 2020 02:20 |
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Isometric Bacon posted:The hope is at least the Picard show will perpetuate how wrong and short sighted that attitude is, rather than poo poo out the hard times call for hard decisions narrative that is pushed in shows like (early) Discovery, which clearly comes from a more cynical (and sadly realistic) reflection of modern times, rather than the utopian ideal dream future implied in TNG. In the pilot two-parter of Star Trek: Discovery, Michael Burnham does some “hard decisions” in response to the hard times, it goes very badly for everyone, she is then court-martialled from Starfleet, and the show depicts this punishment as justified.
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# ? Jan 25, 2020 02:35 |
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Comrade Fakename posted:In the pilot two-parter of Star Trek: Discovery, Michael Burnham does some “hard decisions” in response to the hard times, it goes very badly for everyone, she is then court-martialled from Starfleet, and the show depicts this punishment as justified. And then the entire rest of the show is more Hard Choices which seem to be justified over and over and she completely escapes her punishment and is effectively promoted to Heroine Then in an epic tell, not show, she makes an impassioned speech about Starfleet, but unlike when JeanLuc does it, it rings completely hollow
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# ? Jan 25, 2020 02:47 |
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I think the Mars thing alone is really dumb seeing as though Earth got attacked by random aliens that killed 7 million people in seconds and then a year or so later is forming major coalitions with other aliens and overcoming xenophobia within their population but a shipyard getting nuked is the end of utopia.
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# ? Jan 25, 2020 02:50 |
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Arglebargle III posted:I mean I know, but when 9/11 happened, nobody I knew was affected even to two degrees of separation. It's so nuts that it became such an obsession that even now the first episode of a 2020 science fiction drama invents a literal super-powered terrorist attack.
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# ? Jan 25, 2020 03:01 |
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Pick posted:Lmao Donald trump made Star Trek real. fine. Yeah we live in the mirror universe. Our Spock will have a goatee.
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# ? Jan 25, 2020 03:17 |
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Fidel Cuckstro posted:They seem to actually understand Picard as a character as opposed to just doing Patrick Stewart epic guy. Pleased to read from all the above posts that the first Picard episode has some nuance and understanding of the characters, etc. But, Patrick Stewart Epic Guy specifically made me think of those old ytmnds like http://epicpacardhair.ytmnd.com
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# ? Jan 25, 2020 03:27 |
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Thom12255 posted:I think the Mars thing alone is really dumb seeing as though Earth got attacked by random aliens that killed 7 million people in seconds and then a year or so later is forming major coalitions with other aliens and overcoming xenophobia within their population but a shipyard getting nuked is the end of utopia. Let me try to explain why I don't think it's necessarily dumb via analogy. Given the right pressures, Latin has evolved into Spanish. Given different pressures, Latin has also evolved into French. Spanish and French keep evolving. You know what doesn't evolve? Latin. Because it's dead. (Edit: I'm posting in a Trek thread so surely someone will make a technical argument about how it is still in use in the sciences and in some small circles so it is still being added to and is not dead in that sense. I know. There are always exceptions. I'm using it here as a generalization for the purposes of analogy.) ashpanash fucked around with this message at 03:55 on Jan 25, 2020 |
# ? Jan 25, 2020 03:52 |
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I'm finally getting to watch Picard. So far, the theme song is really lovely and gives me chills. And somehow, it makes me appreciate the Discovery theme more as part of the "family."
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# ? Jan 25, 2020 03:52 |
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Thom12255 posted:I think the Mars thing alone is really dumb seeing as though Earth got attacked by random aliens that killed 7 million people in seconds and then a year or so later is forming major coalitions with other aliens and overcoming xenophobia within their population but a shipyard getting nuked is the end of utopia. Both are attempts to deal with the idea of 9/11 through Star Trek, and when each story was done says something.
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# ? Jan 25, 2020 04:28 |
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Regarding the new Picard episode has anyone said this yet? Data five-queens.
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# ? Jan 25, 2020 04:45 |
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Blind Rasputin posted:Regarding the new Picard episode has anyone said this yet? Someone needs to make a Johnny Five Aces but with Data and 5 queens.
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# ? Jan 25, 2020 04:48 |
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Blind Rasputin posted:Data five-queens. There. Are. Four. Balls on the edge of a cliff.
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# ? Jan 25, 2020 04:53 |
Blind Rasputin posted:Regarding the new Picard episode has anyone said this yet?
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# ? Jan 25, 2020 04:54 |
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Plus, I mean, I know I'm a DS9 fan, so nothing else in the franchise will ever acknowledge my existence, but there was that whole Dominion War thing, where millions upon millions of Starfleet officers and Federation Civilians gave their lives just a few years before the Romulan Supernova. The Federation came out of it stronger than it had ever been, unafraid of the sacrifices they had to make to defend their ideals and their society. Millions of those starfleet officers also served alongside the Romulans on the front lines of battle, fighting and dying as brothers-in-arms alongside the Romulans and the Klingons. The alliance was still in place, as far as anyone knows, barring Shinzon (ugh, acknowledging Nemesis hurts me) and his terrorist bullshit, even then against whom Starfleet allied with Romulan officers to bring him down and defend the peace. Brushing it off as 'oh Romulans are bad we don't actually like them' kind of ignores all of that, on top of being a generally terrible anti-Federation-ideals belief, and going all huddled isolationist because "the synths" killed a mere 7 million people on Mars and blew up Utopia Planitia ignores the fact that they just fought an enormous war that killed hundreds of times that many people, one they even managed to acknowledge the existence of in the TNG movies, so they couldn't quite pretend it never happened like the rest of DS9. It just...annoys me...because I have to pretend any of this makes sense and doesn't spit in DS9's face on top of the whole 'Starfleet is made up of a majority of people like the best of the Enterprise's crew, evil admirals are the distinct minority to be ignored/rebelled against, it's BS that pretty much the entirety of Starfleet would just shrug and let all the Romulans die when told to' thing I already posted about. If this was just Discovery 2.0, I'd be fine, but it was better than I'd feared, and it's clearly trying to be better in the classic trek way, and they're handicapping themselves, and I'm sad about it.
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# ? Jan 25, 2020 05:01 |
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Thom12255 posted:I think the Mars thing alone is really dumb seeing as though Earth got attacked by random aliens that killed 7 million people in seconds and then a year or so later is forming major coalitions with other aliens and overcoming xenophobia within their population but a shipyard getting nuked is the end of utopia. In fairness, there us nothing so far saying the utopia is over. People in the Federation are seemingly fed and cared for domestically, the government isn't shown to be some Orwellian surveilance state or anything. All we know is that the space military had a major policy shift.
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# ? Jan 25, 2020 05:16 |
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# ? May 26, 2024 06:17 |
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There. Are. Four. Lights!
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# ? Jan 25, 2020 05:37 |