Star Trek: The Next Generation Season 1: Difference between revisions

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106: '''Where No One Has Gone Before''' ''[[1987]] [[October 26]]''
106: '''Where No One Has Gone Before''' ''[[1987]] [[October 26]]''
This is decent stuff. The weirdness of TOS or early TNG, but without TOO much of the stupid. The Traveler is an interesting character, and his talk to Picard gives a sensible in-universe reason for Picard to start treating Wesley like a member of the crew.


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107: '''Lonely Among Us''' ''[[1987]] [[November 2]]''
107: '''Lonely Among Us''' ''[[1987]] [[November 2]]''
How were the two guest races even in the farthest consideration for Federation membership? They were both batshit crazy, and if they were at an advanced enough stage to join the Federation wouldn't they have their own ships that could transport them to Parliament?


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108: '''Justice''' ''[[1987]] [[November 9]]''
108: '''Justice''' ''[[1987]] [[November 9]]''
The planet that cloth forgot. Considering so much of this episode is about the Prime Directive, how did they get in contact with these people? They don't seem too technically advanced, and wonder if the Enterprise crew are gods for being in orbit.


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109: '''The Battle''' ''[[1987]] [[November 16]]''
109: '''The Battle''' ''[[1987]] [[November 16]]''
Maybe it's my lack of practical starship knowledge, but I don't really get the Picard Maneuver. So a quick jump at high warp makes it briefly appear like there are two ships? The one way I can see this working is by the warp beating the light coming from the original image. HOWEVER, surely starship sensors aren't limited to detecting things at lightspeed? Also, when Riker and Data were talking about potential defenses... well, if you know it's coming in advance, what's to know? Even if the trick is played properly and there appear to be two ships, you know it's the closer and newly appeared one that's the real one.
I like that the Ferengi daimon got ousted from command due to unprofitable behavior.


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Revision as of 18:57, 24 February 2014

Star Trek: The Next Generation

SPOILERS TOTAL.  You've been warned.

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101 & 102: Encounter at Farpoint 1987 September 28

Being the first episode of the series, and really relatively early in all of Star Trek considering how much came after, I won't nitpick about everything that seems a bit off 26 years later. But one thing that really stuck me as weird was when Counselor Troi said something like "I'm only half Betazoid. My father was a Starfleet officer." Those are totally unrelated things, unless we're either supposed to assume that every Starfleet officer is human (clearly not, though a disproportionately large amount) or male Betazoids are prevented from serving in Starfleet.

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103: The Naked Now 1987 October 5

The Good: It's an OK idea to take a concept from the old series and bring it back, to see how it plays out differently.

The Bad: Given that this is only the second episode, the viewer isn't supposed to be very familiar with these characters yet. So seeing how they act when out of character doesn't mean much.

The Ugly: Seriously, who thought it was a good idea for the first episode after the pilot to have the crew acting stupid and sex-crazy? INCLUDING THE MACHINE!? It's a minor miracle that the Yar-Data hookup got put to dramatic use in The Measure of a Man next season.

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104: Code of Honor 1987 October 12

Zach and I found it interesting that while the Enterprise crew had a plan in place so the fight to death wasn't actually to the death, nobody tried to save the guy in the audience that got scratched by the poison weapon.  Also worth noting this is the episode the "I'm not entitled to ramble on about something everyone already knows." bit of the Picard Song comes from.

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105: The Last Outpost 1987 October 19

Considering how awesome the Ferengi became on DS9 it's really weird to look back at this early time when they were supposed to be a new rival to the Federation. But looking at it now, there's more of the later Ferengi there than I remembered. Though they're an unknown with supposedly equal tech to the Federation, they're still presented as cutthroat businessmen. Even when they're trying to diss the Federation to the old empire's guardian, they say great things like how refusing to provide advanced technology to backwards planets is squandering a business opportunity.

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106: Where No One Has Gone Before 1987 October 26

This is decent stuff. The weirdness of TOS or early TNG, but without TOO much of the stupid. The Traveler is an interesting character, and his talk to Picard gives a sensible in-universe reason for Picard to start treating Wesley like a member of the crew.

---

107: Lonely Among Us 1987 November 2

How were the two guest races even in the farthest consideration for Federation membership? They were both batshit crazy, and if they were at an advanced enough stage to join the Federation wouldn't they have their own ships that could transport them to Parliament?

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108: Justice 1987 November 9

The planet that cloth forgot. Considering so much of this episode is about the Prime Directive, how did they get in contact with these people? They don't seem too technically advanced, and wonder if the Enterprise crew are gods for being in orbit.

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109: The Battle 1987 November 16

Maybe it's my lack of practical starship knowledge, but I don't really get the Picard Maneuver. So a quick jump at high warp makes it briefly appear like there are two ships? The one way I can see this working is by the warp beating the light coming from the original image. HOWEVER, surely starship sensors aren't limited to detecting things at lightspeed? Also, when Riker and Data were talking about potential defenses... well, if you know it's coming in advance, what's to know? Even if the trick is played properly and there appear to be two ships, you know it's the closer and newly appeared one that's the real one.

I like that the Ferengi daimon got ousted from command due to unprofitable behavior.

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110: Hide and Q 1987 November 23

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111: Haven 1987 November 30

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112: The Big Goodbye 1988 January 11

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113: Datalore 1988 January 18

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114: Angel One 1988 January 25

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115: 11001001 1988 February 1

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116: Too Short a Season 1988 February 8

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117: When the Bough Breaks 1988 February 15

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118: Home Soil 1988 February 22

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119: Coming of Age 1988 March 14

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120: Heart of Glory 1988 March 21

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121: The Arsenal of Freedom 1988 April 11

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122: Symbiosis 1988 April 18

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123: Skin of Evil 1988 April 25

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124: We'll Always Have Paris 1988 May 2

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125: Conspiracy 1988 May 9

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126: The Neutral Zone 1988 May 16

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Star Trek: The Next Generation Season 2