Kate's moment without her Zeedex was really powerful because not only did it fully establish the danger of the toymaker and the giggle but it also shows what Kate may be struggling with as a person. All the pressure from being in charge of unit is leading her to be so fractured deep down and she's really just holding on to a thread and trying not to fall apart for unit, her friends, really just the whole planet. She's got all this pressure put on her especially with her father's legacy and you can even see her trying to hide from that legacy by going by Kate Stewart in the earlier series. Also like many characters in doctor who it's hard to call her a fundamentally good person. She has her failings and her wrongdoings, but often times you can see she's trying her best to do what's right like what she says when she hugs the doctor. She's been through so much and she's just had to deal.
I'm exited to see how they handle her story next season, as she has been confirmed to be in one episode. Especially with the fact she had picked up the tooth containing the master (My theory. I mean it did look like her hand. Not confirmed though.). She's such a cool character with so much potential for deep and interesting story lines and I hope they give us more of her story and more of her struggle.
Просто загуглите, как мопсу стригут когти)) Just Google how a pug gets its claws cut))
The Bronze-Age culture of Mintaka III knows nothing about spaceflight or life on other planets. One of them, Liko, chances to discover a hidden Federation research facility, which has been damaged by equipment failure. In the ensuing commotion, Liko is gravely injured and taken aboard the Enterprise for treatment. Efforts to suppress his short-term memory fail, and Liko soon tells his village that he was brought back to life by a pantheon of gods ruled by “The Picard.”
A curious detail about this episode is the choice to portray the Mintakans as resembling Vulcans. Star Trek heavily relies on the conceit (“Hodgkin’s Law”) of aliens that just happen to look like humans, but I believe this is the first time that reasoning has been extended to aliens that look like other, unrelated aliens. I’m not sure the idea really added enough to this episode to be worth the potential confusion for casual viewers. It’s pleasing to see the Mintakans apply empiricism to their predicament, but they didn’t have to have pointy ears and blunt bangs to do that.
Speaking of pointy ears, Riker and Troi employ the old “use cosmetic surgery to disguise ourselves as aliens” trick. The idea that resembling an alien is as easy as visiting a 20th century television studio’s makeup department was introduced on the original Star Trek series, but sparingly–Kirk got some Romulan ears one time, but the other cases involved alien spies under very deep cover. In the 1990s, though, Star Trek came to overuse this concept, with the implications becoming increasingly disturbing. Characters would casually switch from one alien look to another as if it just meant switching prosthetic latex foreheads and not, y’know, carving off chunks of bone and/or grafting on new ones.
This episode is arguably Star Trek’s most damning indictment of religion, and belief in the supernatural altogether. Captain Picard is obviously opposed to the Mintakans believing he’s a god, since it’s not true and they shouldn’t have encountered him in the first place. But beyond that, he clearly would not approve of the Mintakans adopting supernatural belief of any kind, with or without alien meddling. I can’t say I agree with that position, but fortunately Picard doesn’t let it color his dealings with the Mintakans. He is very clear that he is not a god, rather than proclaiming that there is no god.
The fuzzy definition of “god” opens up a plot hole here, in that Picard’s “proof” that he is not divine is to demonstrate that he is human. Jean-Luc has a pulse, he is “flesh and blood,” he was born, and he can be wounded or killed. He’s also named after two biographers of a certain miraculous fella who fits those same criteria, so try again. Later he emphasizes that his people have no power to truly stop or reverse death, but that really only disqualifies him as a particular type of god. I find all of this questionable because even if humanity someday transcended corporeal form and conquered death, humans still wouldn’t be gods for the Mintakans to worship, for the same reason Picard doesn’t fall on his knees when Q shows up.
The best evidence that Picard isn’t a god is that he insists he’s not a god, a point which curiously sails over the heads of the Mintakans. I guess I can conceive of a situation where a god would deny himself to his own worshippers, but my planet has had millennia to dwell on this sort of thing. “The supreme being is using reverse psychology to test my faith” is an awfully advanced theological concept for a bunch of villagers who just invented religion this morning.
LD for @mystery-lake Rodney for @cow-on-a-skateboard
“ Extraordinary people survive under the most terrible circumstances and they become more extraordinary because of it ”
Оживляем классный фандом в 2024 году) Reviving the cool fandom in 2024)
Я планирую развить эту идею с OOC Родни в следующих постах. I plan to develop this idea with OOC Rodney in the following posts.
Here are some Star Trek arts from a while back
I didn’t realise the star trek fandom was here, then again, tumblr is for fandoms.
“Number one, I know you’re on holo-deck number four!”
A short intro x reader of the robo data above (sfw, no romance):
As you traverse a newly found planet, you find what looks like a much more robotic model of commander Data standing before you. He seems to have been touched with nature, indicating that he hasn’t been operating as frequently as he should. A nearly-empty oil can falls to his feet, and it makes you jump without a sound. His cold LED eyes stare into yours before he blurts out “ANALYZING…”, his static voice is unwelcome to a response. You are hesitant to take another step towards him, so you stand still, anticipating what he might do next. The wisest choice of action is to observe him at a distance far enough to not be his centre of attention.
note: its my first reader. Let me know if you ever want a continuation in the tags or something