Star Trek Discovery Episode 6 (Week of 10/22/17)

There wasn’t “shilling” so much, but it seemed pretty obvious that those shirts would be on sale somewhere.

And this is different from the Vulcan item posted earlier. We have to expect that they would try to produce some “cultural artifacts” to fill out the characterization of alien species, and those items are pretty inevitably going to be be sold as reproductions (b’atleths, anyone?). Where this is different is that the shirts are clearly merch in the Star Trek universe. Somewhere on the ship there’s a gift shop where you can buy matching “Disco” shirts, and probably ball caps, shotglasses and fridge magnets too.

And now we have to wonder, do they have shops like that on all the major Star Fleet ships? Do they all make bad puns based on the ship’s names? Is there “First 'Prize” merch on the Enterprise? Does the Reliant have a cartoon ant as a mascot?

The Enterprise shirts all say “Enter” and aren’t very popular–which is why you never see them on screen.

IIRC (from “I Am Spock”) there was no previous mention in the series about the medal. Nimoy argued Spock would not decorate himself in that manner and Rodenberry wanted to cash in on Spock’s popularity. I guess what they did after the original series provides back story, but that’s not how it was presented originally.

Making shirts from the Star Trek universe is fun! I want a DEVO, EXIT (to go along with ENTER), SALAD, S M, YAM, SARA, GOD, SIT, KHIT (I am the Knight Industries Three Thousand. You may call me "K.(h)I.T.T.), BUD.

From here. Feel free to make your own:

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Star_Trek_Starfleet_starships_ordered_by_class

Now I want to see an episode of The Orville in which the navigator guy comes in for his shift in an Orville T-shirt, with an Orville hat, an Orville giant soda cup, and an Orville seat cushion.

All of them featuring Orville Redenbacher, of course.

Which is silly, when they could have sold a TON of shirts with, “Ent” on them.

/Slang for a pot-smoker, as well as its Tolkien-esque meanings.

I heard over on the Defiant, the DEF shirts are all the rage. (Mos- or -Leppard… not sure which joke to go with…)

Pretty sure even the Federation would get in trouble for the EXCEL t-shirts.

I am fearing that Cadet Tilly is not long for the world.

I take it your school didn’t have gym uniforms?

Oh! You could have Santa, and Crazy, and Crock, and Fear, and Gal, and Tit, and…

The T’Kuvma fanatics hate the Federation and despise it and believe they’re trying to assimilate the Klingon race, hence the motto “Remain Klingon,” but the other families don’t necessarily feel the same way.

Despite the cliché of Star Trek ‘there-are-no-variants-in-a-species’ there are, in fact, precedents for variations. Even in TOS The Trouble with Tribbles, we see a Klingon that has been working undercover as a human for months, if not years.

We know Voq can read English, since he’s seen going through the captain’s records. Other Klingons know English as well.

L’Rell has specifically dropped that her mother’s clan is known for spying, espionage, and other ‘distasteful’ (to a Klingon) tactics.

Aaand last but not least, there is no better terrorist than a converted zealot. We know Voq was an outcast from Klingon society because he’s albino. A backstory of what happened before he joined the Torchbearer’s fleet could easily explain his knowledge of the Feddies – and why he dislikes them so much.
That said… there is a Javid Iqbal from Chicago who is an actor, so maybe those folks at the AV Club just haven’t looked hard enough.
https://www.laughoutloudtheater.com/schaumburg/cast/12-javid-iqbal
https://twitter.com/therealjavid

Failing that, the Iqbal in the show is from Canada, so perhaps he’s an unknown actor in his first big role – which isn’t unheard of, it’s what happened with X Men Apocalypse – which is why they keep making him speak a foreign language so his acting has a reason to be stiff.

I guess I’ll go back and watch the first episode, but I thought they said that they have hardly had contact with the Klingons. They were at such a loss as to what to do that Michael talked with Sarek, and he told her of how the Vulcans simply fired upon them at every meeting until the Klingons finally agreed to talk. Prior to that, the Klingons invariably attacked them anyway.

If I have time later, I’ll watch it again and see if I remember right, and if I learn something else.

THIS is the only thing that give an ounce of credibility to a Klingon being able to so convincingly portray a Federation officer. Just an ounce though.

I had the same thought, but more along the line of ‘you know what would be incredibly lame?’. Of course, that probably just increases the likelihood of this being right… Plus, the way Michael just basically burped up her whole personal history at Ash just seemed way too constructed.

As for the episode, I think I’m beginning to like it a little more. Granted, there was some fair share of silliness (Logic extremists? What, do they kill each other over what the correct semantics for relevance logic is? And come on, ‘soul grafts’, really?), but I did like the character development, in particular regarding Lorca. It was kind of heavy handed the way they got rid of the admiral—however, I did think for a moment that this would be Lorca’s final descent into villainy, orchestrating her demise either at the hands of the Klingons or due to a tragic accident, but he didn’t even have to bother, as she was taken off the board by plot convenience. I did like how he basically used her lines to justify not immediately mounting a rescue mission, after doing exactly that for Sarek, though.