(Freed) Dobbie vs Q; who would win?
Two notes from random things seen on Facebook:
I just saw a picture of the Rikers with their daughter and it occurred to me for the first time: Vadic went to their planet, pretended to be Will, kidnapped Troi to use as leverage....and left their daughter alone. Maybe they have neighbors. It didn't seem like it. Maybe she's old enough to take care of herself for a while. A few years older than when we saw her, I guess. Was she off playing in the woods? Seems like she'd help with the leverage thing.
IIRC Season 3 was supposed to be in 2403 or something (to justify Jack's age, Picard's second retirement, Seven being aboard Titan rather than Stargazer, etc), but then someone decided to awkwardly shoehorn it into 2401 to line Frontier Day up with the first episode of Enterprise.They have played weird with the years. It seems like a lot of time passes between seasons, but they called it 2399 in Season 1 and 2401 in Season 2.
It's odd, I hadn't even thought about how the flashback was so specific. For Picard to be old, happy to carry on about Starfleet values and the value of a crew, but still weirdly dismissive of biological family after his own various family troubles, it'd have to happen in between S1 and S2, and then there's the bar thing on top. You know I really prefer to just pretend that Picard spent a bunch of years that way too.IIRC Season 3 was supposed to be in 2403 or something (to justify Jack's age, Picard's second retirement, Seven being aboard Titan rather than Stargazer, etc), but then someone decided to awkwardly shoehorn it into 2401 to line Frontier Day up with the first episode of Enterprise.
The big sticking point is that flashback of Jean-Luc at Guinan's bar "five years ago" --which now would have been in 2396, when Jean-Luc was A) a bitter recluse and B) hadn't been to Guinan's bar (whereas a later setting would have had it be during his tenure as Academy headmaster post-S1, making it more reasonable that a gaggle of cadets would know where to go to interrupt his lunch).
True. I guess in retrospect it makes sense. Maybe we've just had so much of that garbage that it felt like the norm so it didn't feel like it was leading anywhere to me, and I just thought it was Picard S1 Starfleet back on their bullshit.Yeah, but unlike other modern Trek shows, those bread crumbs matter somewhat. The changling infiltration didn't happen overnight. The isolation and compartmentalized communication between assets was intentional and all coordinated by Ro. The less Raffi knew the better. Now it might have been better to extrapolate on that but I think the implication was that she was one of many such operatives that weren't interacting with Starfleet as a whole and why Worf wanted her to leave stuff alone until ordered otherwise to maintain that "off the grid" interaction.
NX-01
It feels like they're putting a finger in the dyke of obligatory Enterprise flagships, doesn't it? The NX Enterprise was all but a prototype shakedown cruise. The NCC-1701 Enterprise was a ship of the line and the best the fleet had to offer, but not officially any different from the other twelve ships in its class or whatnot. The B, C, and D all seemed to have been named for the exploratory NCC-1701 and -A, but had a more diplomatic role, including one called an Ambassador class. Even so, there's a 20 year gap from C to D, and 50 years between the launches of the B and the C.I also just saw a clickbait article by someone who wishes Seven had gotten the Enterprise-F. My first thought was that it is fine if the Enterprise isn't the flagship and just one out doing its work. Especially if it is exploring.
And the Enterprise was said to be among the first generation of warp drive ships at one point, and a lot of basic things like what year it is and what the parts of the ship do weren't decided until TMP or TNG. TAS and TWoK show us two very different ideas of what the rest of the fleet looks like, and the latter one stuck and expanded from there. But the 12 ships line fits pretty easily into the retcon as just referring to the Constitution class, which is the prestige class of the time, if only Discovery hadn't insisted on making every single ship it introduced bigger. In any case, I do think it's fair to say that they were collectively the best of the fleet, but Enterprise itself wasn't singled out as special in any way, and the cache of the name comes from the accomplishments of Kirk and his crew.I'm glad you mentioned "the 12 ships". In tos it was never explicitly stated but the entire Starfleet (which wasn't even it's name sometimes) was comprised of 12 identical ships and that was it. There were other "spaceships" in the series but the only "Starships" were the Enterprise, etc.
And in those cases they were mostly regarded as an Earth based organization that interacted with aliens rather than the "United Federation of Planets" that we came to know and/or love.