Star Trek Lower Decks

Fero McPigletron

Feel the fear!
Citizen
Thanks for enemy info.

Wow, you folks are picking up future plot stuff that's just flying over my head.
 

Dake

Well-known member
Citizen
Woo, tough crowd here. Yeah, it was a well-worn sitcom trope but I didn't really see anything out of the ordinary for the show aside from perhaps not putting the twist on it that they tend to be good about.

Carol is rightfully stressed based on everything she and the ship has been through, and the Swing-by program is her attempt to regain status not just for herself but for the entire ship class.

Mariner is a victim of her own decision making. Yes, she was innocent this time, but she was also utterly dismissive of her mom's concerns in the build-up. Not to get too heavy, but anyone that's been in a semi-abusive/co-dependent relationship can relate to the idea that trust once lost is hard to recover and even easier to lose again. The proverbial straws are smaller than ever in those situations. Obviously they are ALL in need of real counseling which is beyond the scope of this show, but it's far from unrealistic that the Captain's response was swift and draconian and not even really out of left field - SB 80 has been the threat for a bit now.

Even Boimler and gang believed she had done it - just that she hadn't realized what the results would be. As for Jen, she's known her for even less time so I'm not surprised. Ultimately it's just a good example of if you act like a self-absorbed, inconsiderate asshole most of the time, don't be surprised when people assume that's who you are all the time.
 

Kalidor

Supreme System Overlord
Staff member
Council of Elders
Citizen
Tropes are okay. I just feel like they didn't really do anything outside the box to subvert it. I feel like the whole thing was just an excuse to provide a set up for the final scene.
 

LiamA

Active member
Citizen
And we know from Picard that there's a synth "uprising" in four years (in 2385, whereas LD is currently in 2381).


When Peanut Hamper escaped the debris field, we saw Rutherford's old implant float by and suddenly become active. There could be a trace of Badgey on that, either as or in addition to whatever "evil-Rutherford" protocols the Section-31-like guys installed.

But is Lower Decks in the same continuity as Picard?
 

MrBlud

Well-known member
Citizen
Having Badgey and/or the other “hilariously” evil machines playing any role in the deaths of 90+ thousand Martian colonists would seem to erase all of the comedy and just leave the malice…which wouldn’t be very funny IMO.
 

ZacWilliam1

Well-known member
Citizen
The Captain is 100% right about Starfleet needing the Swing-by program. Wrath of Khan alone establishes that.

I loved the reference to how Picard cut the druggie planet off and then just left because that's exactly the sort of thing that happened in Classic Star Trek when the plot or metaphor of the week tied up. And when you think about it that's pretty messed up. It's exactly the sort of thing it's fun to see Lower Dec recognize and play with.

-ZacWilliam, as soon as the Reporter turned on them it was obvious it was not actually Mariner imo, but I would have liked to see some reaction from the crew whose fault it actually was when the footage aired.
 

wonko the sane?

You may test that assumption at your convinience.
Citizen
I kinda wish TNG had followed up on the onarrans, simply because I want to know how many people picard's actions killed.
 

Dvandom

Well-known member
Citizen
While I agree that it would be a tonal problem to have the LD evil AIs involved in the Synth Uprising, if we ever do get more detail or background on that, you can be assured that Jeffrey Combs will be involved somehow.

---Dave
 

Kalidor

Supreme System Overlord
Staff member
Council of Elders
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I guess I just always assumed off camera ships did follow up and establish relations. I feel like this was even mentioned in passing once or twice.

They still need to follow up with the gangster planet.
 

wonko the sane?

You may test that assumption at your convinience.
Citizen
I think they did the gangster one in a book: they found mccoys communicator, developed starfleet level technology, and peacefully co-exist in three factions: red shirts, blue shirts and yellow shirts.

Yeah... I mean... Consistent at least.
 

Kalidor

Supreme System Overlord
Staff member
Council of Elders
Citizen
I have to be honest here, I don't know anything or care anything about the books. Anything that's not on-screen is fanfiction to me. I'm glad other people had it on their minds, I just don't even bother with books, comic books, story books. Even Star Trek Online isn't something I take too seriously.

Lower Decks is pushing it, but at least it's something that interacts with the stuff on TV and movies.
 

Shadewing

Well-known member
Citizen
Well, if you want to get pedantic, anything Star Trek that wasn't made by Gene Roddenberry is technically just official fanfiction; regardless of medium.
 

MrBlud

Well-known member
Citizen
I always like Star Wars (old) approach to canonocity.

Everything is canon unless/until a Movie or show overwrites it.

It gives you a much more comprehensive universe without breaking stuff into “tiers” like most other stuff does.
 

Dake

Well-known member
Citizen
Except for all the folks that ignore it when they don't like something. 🤣

I think Logan had the best solution to the canon issues: anything contradictory is from in-universe fiction like comic books. Of course, that's kind of what they did with Enterprise and that really made people mad.
 

wonko the sane?

You may test that assumption at your convinience.
Citizen
When you get something this big, this long... spanning this many generations... it gets entirely too complicated on a social and cultural scale to bother figuring out how to do it "right". The way that gets more content made is the right way to do it, that's pretty much all there is.
 

Cybersnark

Well-known member
Citizen
I mean, Star Trek has canonically included parallel universes since TOS.

Interestingly, TOS, TNG, DS9, and even the Abrams movies all suggested (and Discovery all but confirmed) that these parallel timelines are actually parallel --as in something that happens in one universe (like a random group of people all coming together to serve on the same crew) has an increased likelihood of happening in another universe, and another, and so on. Call it fate, destiny, or quantum resonance, but it means that even if a specific work is non-canon, something similar might have happened.

Spock commented on this in the Abrams movie, and Worf saw it in "Parallels," where some of the alternate timelines were so similar that he didn't initially realize he'd shifted (while even the apocalyptic Borg-infested universe still had a Galaxy-class Enterprise). Discovery's confirmation was in establishing that by the 32nd century the "Mirror" universe had diverged so much that it was no longer "accessible." We also see it in Star Trek Online, which cribs elements from the Relaunch novels and the "canon" timeline, but is still happily not burning down its own house because it's irreconcilable with Picard.

(This also allows me to accept that the Secret Hideout era just happens in a different timeline, where events similar to Classic-Trek played out, but everything looks different.)
 

Kalidor

Supreme System Overlord
Staff member
Council of Elders
Citizen
Well, if you want to get pedantic, anything Star Trek that wasn't made by Gene Roddenberry is technically just official fanfiction; regardless of medium.
Perhaps. But I still limit myself to the first rights holders, not licensed products.
 


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