Now here's a challenge!
What is the #StarTrek episode you enjoy the LEAST
And say something nice about it :)
Code of Honor gives us lots of Tasha Yar content in a show starved of her.
@trekculture.bsky.social
What is the #StarTrek episode you enjoy the LEAST
And say something nice about it :)
Code of Honor gives us lots of Tasha Yar content in a show starved of her.
@trekculture.bsky.social
Comments
Thinking back on it, CoH only had three major Black speaking roles in that episode. Deep Space Nine's had Ben, Jake, Joseph, Cassidy, and Worf all in fairly leading roles.
Stop making me praise code of honor please 😂
It highlights everything wrong with Voyager. The first time they are able to get a message to Starfleet to let them know what happened to them is instead spent on adventures with Andy Dick with a brief hint at the emotional impact at the end.
Nice: The Doctor still rules
It gives a nice quick introduction to the Hirogen, who are one of the best species they encounter in the Delta Quadrant.
Kate Mulgrew absolutely nails that brief emotional impact at the end.
The immediate next episode following it shows why the show shouldn't have been as episodic.
‘Up the long ladder’
I’d rather eat gagh than watch that ever again.
But at least Colm Meaney is in it, you know someone with an actual Irish accent
In the end, the combatants (Tasha and Yareena) support each other and toss out the patriarch that put them in that situation in the first place.
"A Night in Sickbay". At least Porthos is cute and John Billingsley puts in a great performance.
- Prototype of the DS9 version of the Trill makeup
- Geordi acknowledges the existence of dolphins on the Enterprise
- Max Grodénchik got a paycheque
Nice thing: It made me realize that even when i die and become a ghost as long as there is a candle around i might get some jiggy jiggy 😂
Something nice? The weather looks terrific.
I will say it has good acting. It's even pretty well paced.
But the episode is an abomination. Given how many people watched Trek at the time, it's entirely possible that episode inspired victims not to come forward.
It could legitimately have got people killed or abused.
“Skin” something nice: Data coming close to his first emotional moment.
“Voyages” something nice: it was great right up until Riker showed up.
Enough said
At least there are some men in it?
I really do struggle to find any redeeming value with this episode whatsoever.
Also the face Terry Farrell pulls with the line "well, I hope she does" after Quark shading Worf.
Funny, charming, in-character and I'm reminded why I hate the episode.
It gives some decent character development to Worf and has the one of best Quark lines in the show
Quark: [hands Bashir his Horga'hn] Here. You need this more than I do.
::Thinks of something nice to say::
...still computing
T'Pol.. that's all I got!
The visual effects are (mostly) gorgeous. Also Rayner "Voyagering" the Breen. Everything else was a catastrophic failure in writing and the worst final season I've seen in all of Trek and I say that as someone who vehemently defends every other season. Such a let down. ~J
And then in one line, it fell apart.
It does give Keiko a really heartfelt episode where she can show she's a great mom.
Also found this GIF.
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The makeup on Robert Duncan McNeill was actually pretty good, from the few times I haven't skipped the episode.
Another one where Miles suffers.
At least it isn't the episode with the Leprechaun.
Louise Fletcher was amazing in every scene. No on one TV has ever made my skin crawl like she has.
As for something nice to say about it...um...it gave us some fun jokes and memes about the salamander kids? 😅
The Klingons in Subspace Rhapsody were hilarious.
I'd have to go with The Naked Now.
Not in itself a terrible episode, but the rehashing of an old TOS plot seemed a little lazy.
The highlight for me though.
I am fully functional, and programmed in multiple techniques. 😏
Scientific Method shows is that his tattoo wraps all the way around his ear, which is really an interesting detail.
Killing people for an accident is hardly a compelling reason to put the prime directive front and center in an episode and just makes the planet Edo feel like someplace extremely dangerous that you'd have off limits
First, it was not that bad considering it was written in five days.
Second thing, they decided to showcase how the future will deface Paris, and the Eiffel Tower, in some insane way...
That said, the payoff where Eden is a place which will kill us is pretty cool.
...gave us our first real look into Hoshi Sato's character, and Hoshi is one of my favorites overall, so the focus on her was welcome.
If not, it's a toss up between Voyager's Paris and Janeway becoming tadpole lovers and whatever Archer, Reed and Hoshi turned into on that alien planet in Enterprise.
It definitely has a concept.
Nice: Nostalgic.
But it's an episode that shouldn't have happened.
The working title for this episode was “Riker’s Brain”, a nod to the TOS episode “Spock’s Brain“. That’s funny.
Riker was a bit...eh...stiff, but we still had the holodeck scene! :)
So it’s a struggle just to choose one, let alone say something nice that isn’t generic.
Nice things coming up…
The babies were cute.
Unlike Scott, I can say nothing nice about Spock's Brain...except it exists and we must acknowledge it.
That’s a nice thing to say… right?
..nice thing; there was a visit to the Starship at one or two points.
The acting.... is ..... soooooo...
overthetop.
...
... has Jeffrey Combs in it.
Wow, this was hard.
At least it makes you think.
It’s a cool story. A star fleet crew being stranded and their own mind/dreams being the reason they are going crazy could make a good #StarTrek horror episode.
... almost.
Plus, UpIsNotJump has a great video on Threshold.
Nice comment, it highlights unconventional relationships/culturel differences in a positive light
Look. It was nice that René got to direct? and Blanch Deveroux's brother was in it? and Vanessa Williams is in it?