USSBurritoTruck

joined 1 year ago
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”I guess you guys weren’t ready for that, but your clone offspring are are going to love it.”

Only if they can't help it.

'Academy' hasn't even started filming, so likely not.

Spock's insecurities being the cause for whatever is happening here is my hope as well. It's a funny moment, but it falls apart under even the slightest scrutiny, so I'm hoping Trelene did it or whatever.

[–] USSBurritoTruck@startrek.website 2 points 4 months ago (4 children)

Strange. I assume that is not the case for other posts on the board?

[–] USSBurritoTruck@startrek.website 3 points 4 months ago (6 children)

What is it you are seeing?

[–] USSBurritoTruck@startrek.website 5 points 4 months ago (1 children)

I think you’re good on spoilers since it is the first episode where the shuttlebay three reveal happens.

The crew knows that shuttle bay three is there, they just call it ”the restricted hanger” which makes me question what the difference between a shuttle bay and a hanger is. I don’t think that accounts for the three missing decks. It could be that Zero was simply wrong.

Or it could be that deck numbering aboard Starfleet ships makes no damn sense.

Also, unless you count the Infinity there aren’t any shuttles in shuttle bay three.

Inspector Spacetime?

12 is what I want to pick as well, just because I feel like Riker and Kirk are some of the more gregarious characters, and would make for the best conversation, but that would be three relatively burly dudes in one another's space for a pretty long time.

I think ultimately I would have to pick 8.

Thank you! These are always fantastic. Please keep them up!

Thanks, I appreciate it. I'm going through season two as I'm able, but with Netflix dropping them all at once, and my other obligations, I can't say I'm going to be especially quick with the posts. Hopefully I can do two or three a week, but I make no promises.

 
 
 
 
 
 

• The episode title, “The Inner Fight” calls back to two previous titles, TNG’s “The Inner Light” and VOY’s “The Fight”.

• We’ve seen outpost scientists wearing the same jumpsuits as the Persioff IX researchers in “Mining the Mind’s Mines” and “Reflections”.

• T’Lyn comment’s that Mariner’s behaviour ”has grown increasing dangerous since [the] mission to Ferenginar” referencing travel guide updating duty the Lower Deckers were assigned in “Parth Ferengi’s Heart Place”.

• Ransom pulls up a display of four of the vessels we’ve seen attacked by the Mysterious Threat over the course of the season: Bynar, Orion, Romulan, and Ferengi. The only ship missing is the Klingon Bird of Prey, IKS Che’Ta’.

    • Ransom specifies that all the attacks have been against non-Federation ships, which establishes that the Bynaus is not a Federation member world.

• Apparently someone is targeting ex-Starfleet officers, and there are four specific individuals the Starfleet is concerned about locating:

    • Seven of Nine - Though she severed on the USS Voyager, Seven of Nine was technically never Starfleet; instead she was more akin to a civilian contractor. She will not actually become a Starfleet officer until season three of PIC, 20 years after this episode, more or less. Seven may have already joined the Fenris Rangers by this point.

    • Beverly Crusher - At this point, Doctor Crusher has left Starfleet and is still pregnant with, or has given birth to her son with Captain Picard, Not David Marcus.

    • Thomas Riker - Will Riker’s transporter duplicate. Last seen in “Defiant” leading a team of Maquis. He turned himself over to the Cardassians to serve in a labour camp; Kira gave him her word they would get him out, and he was never mentioned on DS9 again.

    • Nick Locarno - The senior cadet in Nova Squadron, Nick was expelled from Starfleet Academy after getting one of his team members killed performing a dangerous and banned flight maneuver, and then getting the other members to lie about it, in “The First Duty”.

       • Ransom summarizes the events of “The First Duty”.

• The USS Vancouver was seen in “Cupid’s Errant Arrow”.

• Mariner, Tendi, T’Lyn, and Boimler take the shuttlecraft Death Valley on their danger buoy girls trip, which is the shuttle Tendi arrived to the USS Cerritos on in “Second Contact”.

    • Normally the Death Valley has the same NCC-77567 registry that all the Cerritos shuttles have, but in this episode we see that registry, along with NCC-70492, which is the registry of the Vancouver.

• Tendi comments that it looks as though someone tampered with the communication relays on the danger buoy, and then we see it through the viewscreen of the Che’Ta’. In “The Vulcan Hello”, the USS Shenzhou was investigating a communications relay that had been sabotaged by T’Kuvma’s followers.

• The Che’Ta’ appears to be under the command of G’reck, who was introduced in “wej Duj” as one of the Klingon lower deckers.

    • In “Twovix” G’reck commented that Ma’ah “[would not] be captain much longer,” and his spear was the one floating in the fabricated wreckage of the Che’Ta’

• When we see the exterior of the Che’Ta’ is has a representation of the Kolvoord Starburst, as shown in “The First Duty”, painted on the port wing structure.

    • Nick has the same image on his jacket when we see him later in the episode.

• On the planet Sherbal V, we see the commanding officers of various ships attacked by the Mysterious Threat throughout the season:

    • Gem - Ferengi captain introduced in “Parth Ferengi’s Heart Place” - played by Eric Bauza, who a number of characters in PRO, LDS, and the “Very Short Treks”, including Ass Face, Screwhead, and the information broker in this episode

    • Vreck - Romulan sub-commander introduced in “I Have No Bones Yet I Must Flee” - played by Paul F. Tompkins who is the voice of Doctor Migleemo

    • Ma’ah - Klingon captain introduced in “wej Duj” - played by Jon Curry

    • Cosmia - Orion captain introduced in “Something Borrowed, Something Green” - played by Kari Wahlgren voices a variety of LDS characters, such as the Anabaj from “Envoys”, and news anchor Sylvia Ront in “Grounded”

    • Z’oto - Orion first officer introduced in “Something Borrowed, Something Green”

    • The Ferengi first officer introduced in “Parth Ferengi’s Heart Place”

    • The Romulan officer introduced in “I Have No Bones Yet I Must Flee”

    • The Bynar co-captains introduced in “A Few Badgeys More”

    • There is also a pair of Cardassians commanding officers; we did not see any Cardassian vessels attacked by the Mysterious Threat

• When Ma’ah steps in the trap set up by Gem and Vreck, we see that his blood is a bright pink, as Klingon blood has occasionally been depicted, such as in “Star Trek: The Undiscovered Country” and “Battle at the Binary Stars”.

    • G’reck’s blood is also the same colour and Ma’ah bites him to death.

”Captain, did you know we have pockets?” Rutherford discovers that Starfleet uniforms are made from smart technology that accommodates the wearer’s needs, such as in “Ensign Ro” when Ro was able to unzip her uniform jacket in the front, despite the uniform clearly having its closure in the back.

• Cap’n Freeman, Rutherford, and Shaxs visit Mudds, a dive bar which shares it’s name with one Harcourt Fenton Mudd, introduced in “Mudd’s Women”.

• The doorman at Mudds is played by Paul Scheer, who voices chief engineer Billups.

”Jippers are half price for tripeds today.” In “The Escape Artist”, Mudd’s android duplicates were programmed to claim, ”If I had any money, I’d be sipping jippers on a beach somewhere.”

”The Klingons are up to something. Just like when they attacked us with the Pakleds.” Mariner references the events of “wej Duj” and she, Tendi, and Boimler learn that T’Lyn was present at that fight. T’Lyn also apparently learns that the Cerritos was Starfleet ship the VCF Sh’vhal was fighting alongside.

”Teach me how to tap-dance, Beverly Crusher.” We learned in “Data’s Day” that Doctor Crusher was once known as the Dancing Doctor, and she taught Data to dance in that same episode.

• Mariner explains to Ma’ah that she received a promotion she didn’t want, and that she tired to get demoted but her commander wouldn’t follow through, recalling events in “Twovix” and “I Have No Bones Yet I Must Flee”.

”Back at the Academy my dream was to be a captain.” In “Much Ado About Boimler” we learned that everyone in Mariner’s class thought she would be the first of them to make captain.

• We learn that Mariner was friends with Sito Jaxa, who was introduced in “The First Duty” and died in the TNG episode, “Lower Decks”. Mariner references both episodes explaining who Sito was to Ma’ah.

• We learned in “We’ll Always Have Tom Paris” that Mariner was stationed on Deep Space 9, but this is her first mention of having actually fought in the Dominion War.

“Klingons do not hug!”

    • Worf hugged an Edosian woman in “Justice”

    • Worf hugged Alexander in “Reunion”

    • Kor hugged Jadzia upon their reunion in “Blood Oath”

    • Worf hugged Doctor Crusher in “The Bounty”

    • Worf hugged Troi and Riker in “Surrender”

    • Worf hugged Raffi in "The Last Generation"

• The information broker has had cosmetic surgery to resemble the puppet Balok used to appear intimidating in “The Corbomite Maneuver”

• Tendi is able to use her leverage as Mistress of the Winter Constellations to get Cosmia to listen to Mariner. We learned of Tendi’s title during the first girls trip in “We’ll Always Have Tom Paris”.

• Nick Locarno was behind the Mysterious Threat! The Nicksterious Threat!

• Nick is voiced by Robert Duncan McNiell, who played the character in “The First Duty”, as well as Steth and Janeway in “Vis à Vis”, and the Marseilles character featured in the EMH’s holonovel in “Author, Author”.

    • The animated version of Nick Locarno looks similar to the animated version of Tom Paris, both there are some noticeable differences beyond the stubble and scar. Nick eyebrows angle up, where as Paris’ angle down, and Nick’s nose points down while Paris’ is slightly upturned.

 
 

• The Orion starship we see in the opening is visually similar to the Orion interceptors seen in “Borderland” with some distinct differences.

     • Notably, this interceptor has a pair of arms extending from the underside of the ship, similar to the Orion starship seen in the TAS episode, “The Pirates of Orion.”

• Starting with Risik’s tattoos, we see several examples of the Orion alphabet introduced in “Borderland”.

• Among the plunder the Orion lower deckers are sorting is:

     • A Bat’leth

     • A number of 24th century Starfleet type-2 phasers

     • A Vulcan harp

     • A 23rd century Starfleet type-2 phaser

     • A Starfleet compression phaser rifle

”Hey, did you guys see that Maleer got big pieces of metal attached to her head?” In “Borderland” we were introduced to the idea that Orion body modification practices do include grafting bits of what appears to be scrap metal to their bodies.

• The captain’s chair aboard the Orion ship is similar in shape to the one seen in “The Pirates of Orion”.

• The Mysterious Threat destroys the Orion vessel, just as it did the Klingon Bird-of-Prey, IKS Che’Ta’ in “Twovix”, and a Romulan ship in “I Have No Bones Yet I Must Flee”.

“I have put my foot in my mouth enough when it comes to Orion stuff.” Tendi was hurt by Mariner’s insistence that all Orions are pirates who love to pillage in “Crisis Point”, and Mariner again insulted Tendi by suggesting she use her pheromones to influence a dom-jot game they were attempting to hustle in “We’ll Always Have Tom Paris”.

• Among his possessions on display, Boimler has a USS Cerritos commemorative plate.

• Tendi, Mariner, and T’Lyn take the Yosemite II shuttle on their away mission/girls’ trip. The original Yosemite was destroyed in when Mariner and Boimler were caught in a gravity well and forced to crash land in “Where Pleasant Fountains Lie”, and the Yosemite II was introduced in “Grounded”.

• As the shuttle approaches Orion, we see an Orion barge of the type operated by Harrad-Sar in “Bound”.

• Several of the buildings on the Orion skyline bear the symbol worn by the Orion crew in “The Pirate of Orion”.

“You grew up in a castle, like friggin’ Billups?” We learned that chief engineer Billups grew up as heir to the throne of the human colony Hysperia, which is populated entirely by “ren faire types.”

• Tendi confirms that her family is part of the Orion Syndicate, a criminal organization first mentioned in “The Ascent”.

• B’rt Tendi is played by Nolan North, who’s portrayed several Trek characters, including:

     • Bridge officer of the USS Vengeance - “Star Trek Into Darkness”

     • The Half a Rascal - “Much Ado About Boimler”

     • Cerritos transporter chief, Lundy

     • Sokel - “wej Duj”

     • K’ranch - “The Least Dangerous Game”

• The A.B. Chambers is the steamboat that Mark Twain briefly worked on.

• Boimler and Rutherford both show up dressed as Mark Twain. The real Samuel Clemens encountered the crew of the USS Enterprise D when they travelled back to 1893 in “Time’s Arrow”.

• Tendi was first referred to as the Mistress of the Winter Constellations in “We’ll Always Have Tom Paris”.

• The bottle the Slit Throat bartender pours from features an image of the Orion captain from “The Pirates of Orion”.

• The stir stick in Madam G’s drink is topped with the symbol worn by the Orion crew in “The Pirates of Orion”.

• New Seattle is a colony on Penthara IV, a world the Enterprise D responded to a disaster on in “A Matter of Time”.

• The pattern on the privacy screens of the hump dungeon mirror those of the fence in the fantasy Captain Pike experienced of Vina as an Orion “slave girl” in “The Menagerie, Part II”.

• T’Lyn observes that the male Orions in the hump dungeon appear to be under the influence of pheromonal chemical manipulation. It was established in “Bound” that Orion culture is actually matriarchal, with women controlling the men via the use of pheromones.

”Tendi’s made it clear that Starfleet made those pheromones up.” Actually, all Tendi ever said in “We’ll Always Have Tom Paris” is that she’s, ”not even that kind of Orion.”

• Coqqor is played by Eric Bauza, who’s portrayed several PRO and LDS characters, including:

     • Barniss Frex - “Asylum”

     • Scot’Ee and Sool’U - “All the World’s a Stage”

     • Assface and Screwhead - “Skin a Cat”

• Though there has previously not been any canon Chalnoth ships, the design here appears to be based on the ships seen on the cover of DC Comics’ “Star Trek: The Next Generation” #61, published in 1994.

• The starship boneyard that Tendi and D’Erika used to play in as children contains a Federation exploration vessel of the same design as the USS Raven, which Seven of Nine’s parents used to study the Borg and get assimilated. Ship type was first seen in “The Raven”.

• Coqqor devours Rutherford and Boimler’s bonsai tree. In “Allegiance” the Chalnoth Esoqq was unable to eat the food disks provided to Picard and the others by their captors, but did strongly imply that he could subsist on the Mizarian prisoner.

”I may not be a pirate, but I’ve rerouted my share of EPS conduits.” Tendi demonstrated her shipjacking abilities in “Hear All, Trust Nothing”.

”A report without the subject’s consent would be unethical.” Vulcans monitor other species without their consent all the time, such as in “Star Trek: First Contact”, “The Andorian Incident”, and “Carbon Creek”.

• Boimler and Rutherford end the episode on the holodeck, both dressed as Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart. The works of Mozart have been featured in:

     • “Where No One Has Gone Before”

     • “The Ensigns of Command”

     • “Sarek”

     • “A Matter of Time”

     • “A Fistful of Datas”

     • “Cogenitor”

 

• Cap’n Freeman’s log records the stardate as 58759.1.

• The world of Corazonia is an artificial ringworld circling a star. In “Rosetta” and “Coming Home” we saw that Species Ten-C used similar Dyson rings to harvest energy from the stars of their original home system, and their newly established home.

     • The scale of Corazonia and its star is…questionable, but that’s hardly a new issue in Trek. Consider the USS Voyager traveling through the planetary ring in VOY’s title sequence, or the utterly massive Borg cube being visible in Jupiter’s eye in the PIC finale, “The Last Generation”.

     • Not canon, but Corazonia very much resembles the Ringworld from the cover art of Larry Niven’s 1970 novel, “Ringworld”, set in his Known Space series, which is also the origin of the Kiznti.

• Corazonia’s climate is controlled by a sentient computer, Vexilon. Other planet controlling computers have been seen in:

     • “The Return of the Archons” - Landru

     • “The Apple” - Vaal

     • “Spock’s Brain” - The Controller

     • “For the World is Hollow and I Have Touched the Sky” - The Oracle of the People

     • “When the Bough Breaks” - The Custodian

• Freeman roles up her sleeves before getting to work on Vexilon, not unlike the way Mariner keeps her sleeves all the time, despite it landing her in the brig at least once.

• Freeman states that she ”minored in archaic technology back at the Academy.” If Mariner is to be believed in “Room for Growth”, the USS Cerritos has been overwritten by D’Arsay technology three times.

• Boimler’s team’s shuttle is the Kings Canyon, presumably named for Kings Canyon National Park

”Statistically, ensigns serving under recently promoted commanders are more likely to experience death and/or dismemberment.” Wesley Crusher’s entire team in “Pen Pals” died during his first time in charge, and he wasn’t even recently promoted.

• Inside the anomaly storage room we see:

     • A probe resembling the Kataan probe from “The Inner Light” but with some notable differences

     • What appears to be an oversized Vulcan lirpa

     • Nomad from “The Changeling”, or a very similar Earth probe transformed into an artificial life form

     • A Wadi board game, from “Move Along Home”

     • What appears to be an empty transport case for a Medusan, including a visor missing the red protective lens; Ambassador Kollos used one in “Is There in Truth No Beauty?”

     • A bat’leth

     • A Betazoid gift box, like the one seen in “Haven”

     • A 23rd century Romulan cloaking device, like the one Kirk and Spock stole in “The Enterprise Incident”

• Billups’ pet ferret is named Lancelot; it was established in “Where Pleasant Fountains Lie” that Billups comes Hysperia, a planet colonized by “Ren faire type” humans.

• Tendi, Mariner, and Rutherford are using T-88 scanners to check the chips in the isolinear chip junction. T-88s were first seen in “Cupid’s Errant Arrow” and weren’t available fleetwide yet, but Rutherford and Tendi did steal a bunch from the USS Vancouver.

”Is it a unotronic?” Duotronic and multitronic systems were designed by Richard Daystrom, which we learned in “The Ultimate Computer”. This is the first mention of a unotronic system, though it’s not entirely clear if that’s an actual thing, or simply a bit for Billups’ joke.

• Dirks claims he was trapped in the Wadi game for a month as a child. The Wadi are a gamma quadrant civilization who were first encountered in 2369, 12 years prior to this episode.

• Boimler refers to the large blue guy as ”Big Merp.” In “I, Excretus” the scoreboard showed that another member of the same species was also named Merp. Are all members of the species named Merp? Is it the name of their species and just what they’re all called? Or is Merp simply a common name among their species?

• Rutherford ends up in the Wadi game, where he encounters the same puzzles Captain Sisko, Kira, Doctor Bashir, and Jadzia did in “Move Along Home”.

• Dirks states the Tellarite slop jazz musician Fats B’zirtak overdosed on ketracel-white. Assuming fats was not a Jem’Hadar, I believe this is the first time we’ve heard of a non-Jem’Hadar consuming ketracel-white in canon.

• The Betazoid gift box gets zapped by the not-Kataan probe and experiences an entire simulated life, similar to what happened to Captain Picard in “The Inner Light”, though at no point from Rutherford’s perspective does the gift box appear to be unconscious.

     • ”I miss my wife.” The gift box repeats Michael Sullivan’s line from two episodes ago in “Twovix”.

• After he dies we see Boimler in room which appears to be inspired by the red room from “Twin Peaks” based on the floor pattern, lamp, and end table. Outside the window he sees the black mountain, which Shaxs described as a ”spiritual battleground” in “We’ll Always Have Tom Paris”.

     • The Koala appears, and according to the subtitles it’s ”speaking Koala” but if you reverse the audio it says, “It is not your time, Bradward Boimler.”

     • This is the second time Boimler has seen the Koala, the first being when he nearly drowned in “First First Contact”.

     • Despite being at the Black Mountain, Boimler did not have to fight three faceless aspirations of his father, nor did the surviving father feed Boimler his own heart, as Shaxs described in “We’ll Always have Tom Paris”.

”You never forget your first death.” Ransom implies that he too has died.

 

Produced by: Awesome Inc
Created by: Casper Kelly
Executive Producers: Casper Kelly, Ashley Kohler
Supervising Producer: Brandon Betts
Producer/Director: Aaron Hawkins

Cast: Ethan Peck, Pete Holmes, Cristina Milizia, Bonnie Gordon, Eric Bouza

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