Star Trek: The Next Generation Season 2: Difference between revisions
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TNG Moriarty really is an interesting character. Grown from the seed of a fictional bad man, but going through rapid change and learning with his actions only an attempt at escaping the cage he's found himself born into. | TNG Moriarty really is an interesting character. Grown from the seed of a fictional bad man, but going through rapid change and learning with his actions only an attempt at escaping the cage he's found himself born into. | ||
Data may not have emotions as most humans know them, but he clearly has his own sort of excitedness we can see when he gets the chance to play Holmes. | |||
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204: '''The Outrageous Okona''' ''[[1988]] [[December 12]]'' | 204: '''The Outrageous Okona''' ''[[1988]] [[December 12]]'' | ||
Oh boy. Joe Piscopo. | |||
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206: '''The Schizoid Man''' ''[[1989]] [[January 23]]'' | 206: '''The Schizoid Man''' ''[[1989]] [[January 23]]'' | ||
Seems noteworthy to me that while Data eventually has access to the extra hardware of an emotion chip, at various times such as this one his body isn't a hindrance to emotions for other... software using it. | |||
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Revision as of 19:03, 24 March 2014
Star Trek: The Next Generation
Star Trek: The Next Generation Season 1
SPOILERS TOTAL. You've been warned.
201: The Child 1988 November 21
Picard never played with puppies? What a weirdo.
Maaaan, Counselor Troi's relationship with that child is messed up. If it was really her child, OK. But while genetically so, in actuality it was something already existing. It is some sort of pretender and... benevolent rapist?, but she loves it as her own.
Season 2 is a real in-between stage. Geordi and Worf secure in their new positions and uniform colors, Riker's beard in place, but everyone still with the older style uniforms. O'Brien is in the transporter room but without a name yet. Teen Crusher living on a ship without Mom Crusher. Dr. Pulaski a dick to Data right from the start.
202: Where Silence Has Lease 1988 November 28
I remember as a young one the ideas of a limited space the Enterprise kept looping in, and then the even more compact repeating bridge, really sparked my interest.
I notice this time when they activate the self-destruct, they aren't stuck with just 5 minutes.
Something that kind of bugs me not only on this occasion, but: when they say the sensors show nothing. Well clearly they're seeing something that the ship's sensors are recording and displaying on the ship's screens, so there's detectable visible light radiation, yeah?
203: Elementary, Dear Data 1988 December 5
Man, Pulaski is a total dick to Data. I think the idea she and Geordi come up with to test Data's abilities is flawed, though. Her reasoning is that since Data is a computer, he can't solve a mystery he hasn't read yet. So their plan is to test it with a new mystery... created by the ship's computer. If Data can't be expected to be good at solving a mystery, why should the ship's computer be relied upon to write a creative mystery?
TNG Moriarty really is an interesting character. Grown from the seed of a fictional bad man, but going through rapid change and learning with his actions only an attempt at escaping the cage he's found himself born into.
Data may not have emotions as most humans know them, but he clearly has his own sort of excitedness we can see when he gets the chance to play Holmes.
204: The Outrageous Okona 1988 December 12
Oh boy. Joe Piscopo.
205: Loud as a Whisper 1989 January 9
206: The Schizoid Man 1989 January 23
Seems noteworthy to me that while Data eventually has access to the extra hardware of an emotion chip, at various times such as this one his body isn't a hindrance to emotions for other... software using it.
207: Unnatural Selection 1989 January 30
208: A Matter of Honor 1989 February 6
209: The Measure of a Man 1989 February 13
210: The Dauphin 1989 February 20
213: Time Squared 1989 April 3
214: The Icarus Factor 1989 April 24
217: Samaritan Snare 1989 May 15
218: Up the Long Ladder 1989 May 22
220: The Emissary 1989 June 29
221: Peak Performance 1989 July 10
222: Shades of Gray 1989 July 17