ST01 013: The Conscience of the King

In this episode:

Star Trek does Shakespeare for the first but by no means the last time.

Kirk continues his habit of seducing women to get close to a criminal mastermind–this time with another TOS sexist female stereotype character.

And she hides a phaser on overload in the most easily foiled murder plot ever.

ST01 012: Miri

In this podcast:

Another case of the producers hammering home the idea that Star Trek should not  be be written as straight Science-Fiction

An exploration about how this episode used the parallel Earth trope, and how future Trek writers tried to explain/retcon its use for Miri’s World

A takedown of the episode’s premise: 300 year old children would not act this… childish.

ST01 011: Dagger of the Mind

In this podcast:

A fascinating window into the producers’ views on how to avoid technobabble and other science-fiction cliches

The first episode that depicts Kirk as a cad, and not just because he kisses a sexy android

Another average episode about a mad scientist who lacks clear motivation for his dastardly deeds–didn’t this happen in last week’s episode?

ST01 010: What are little girls made of?

In this episode:

  • Why this TOS episode earns its reputation as one of the most disappointing–it could have been great but unravels in the last act.
  • Poor Nurse Chapel–why she is not well loved, even by the actress who played her.
  • But it can’t be all bad when you have a dead alien race called the Old Ones killed off by their android progeny (Take note Silicon Valley singularity hustlers).

ST01 009: Balance of Terror

In this episode we discuss:

  • Why this classic is good but by no means perfect
  • Roddenberry’s explanation of why NOT to use technobabble and HOW to avoid it
  • More world building: still no mention of Starfleet or a Federation
  • More on Kirk’s inner conflict and how it explains his deep friendship with Spock
  • Oh, and we get one of the best alien species introductions in all of Star Trek: the Romulans

ST01 008: 1st Quarter Analysis

In this episode of Masterpiece Science-Fiction Theater we look at the narrative trends over the first 7 episodes of Star Trek.

Listen for the analysis, but you can see some of the tabulations below:

Narrative Structure

Antagonist Type

Monster Episode: a non-human, mysterious antagonist puts the ship and/or crew in danger

 

 

Where No Man… (1)

The Man Trap (5)

Charlie X (6)

The Corbomite Maneuver (2)

The Enemy Within (4)

71%
Action/Adventure: a human(oid) antagonist or a force drives the conflict; the ship and crew overcome a series of obstacles to achieve a goal The Naked Time (7)

Mudd’s Women (3)

29%

Narrative Type

Boiling the Frog Plot: introduce a threat and ratchet up its danger over several acts Where No Man…

The Man Trap

Charlie X

43%
Dodgeball Plot: continuous pile on of multiple conflicts and narrative threads The Corbomite Maneuver

Mudd’s Women

The Enemy Within

The Naked Time

57%

World Building

Michael Okuda: Whenever you have an invented universe, the most important thing is your look, your style. Even if you have a huge budget, you can’t really build a Starship enterprise, you cannot really build Star Fleet Command. What you can do is suggest it and let the audience’s mind fill it in. So you do you do that? It turns out, you pick a style, you pick a particular color planet, a particular way of shooting things, a particular way of shooting visual effects, a particular way of telling stories, and that becomes your style. And once you define that, if you defined it well, if you believe in it, if your stories believe in it, the audience will by into it.  

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vHOpSrDwZNM

5 planets–all desolate and deserted or near-deserted:

WNM: Delta Vega

Mudd’s Women: Rigel 12

Enemy Within: Alpha 177

Man Trap: M-113

Naked Time: Psi 2000

Charlie X: Thasus

TNG Season 1 comparison: Encounter; Lonely Among Us (Antica and Selay): 2 of first 6 are exclusively about admission to the federation. 9 of 25 episodes (36%) are either have either the A plot or the B plot be about the Enterprise settling a political dispute between different worlds or between the Federation and an alien group (and I’m not counting the Ferengi, Klingon or Romulan episodes)   

Final Analysis

Masterpiece (5 points) Corbomite Maneuver

The Naked Time

10
Classic (4 points)   Where No Man

Enemy Within

Man Trap

Charlie X

16
Average Outing (3 points)

 

2
Dime Store Paperback (2 points)

 

Mudd’s Women
Hackish Drivil (1 point)
Total Score 28

 

DSC 001: The First Discovery Trailer

In this podcast episode I discuss my big take aways from the first Discovery trailer.

If you have not see it yet, here is the link to Trekmovie’s screen cap breakdown.

Also, if you have not read my piece on the implications of Sonequa Martin-Green’s Commander Burnham being the lead character but NOT the captain, check it out here.

ST01 007: Charlie X

In this episode:

  • A return to the Trekian theme of absolute power corrupting absolutely, this time with a hormonal teen
  • Some interesting world-building tidbits: our first non-Enterprise Earth ship
  • Discussion of the studio conflict with Roddenberry over ship-board versus planet-based stories (Spoiler Alert: Roddenberry won)
  • The first Trek episode written by a woman: D.C. Fontana

Star Trek Discovery Will be a Different Kind of Trek, Part II

Last week it was formally announced that Sonequa Martin-Green will play the lead character of CBS’s new Star Trek series, stepping into the boots previously filled by Shatner, Stewart, Brooks, Mulgrew and Backula. What is unique about the role (other than the fact that she is the second female lead and the first black woman to helm a Trek series) is that her character–First Officer Michael Burnham–is NOT the captain of the starship that serves as the setting of the series. That distinction goes to Jason Isaacs who will play Captain Lorca.

Sonequa Martin-Green

Burnham is the new “Number One” and the writers tell us that Lorca will refer to her by that title. So Martin-Green’s character is actually stepping into the boots previously filled by Spock, Riker, Commander Kira, and Chakotay–yet she is still the series lead. This will have profound implications for how the stories on Discovery unfold.

First, let us dispense with the notion that this is a gimmick, that Lorca will be killed off early and Burnham will assume command. Part of the show’s concept and approach seems to be predicated on the lead not being in command. The entire point is to create a pathway for a different kind of storytelling in the Trek universe. Martin-Green herself recently said, “it’s going to open up so much potential for new storylines because not being the captain automatically gives you a different perspective.” At least for the first season, and possibly for more or all of the series run, Burnham will not be captain. (Only Voyager writers would introduce a character one way only to reverse themselves by the end of the first episode–see Maquis, Chakotay.)

So how different will Discovery be?

The Captain’s Speech

In most previous Trek series, the way you knew the episode was coming to a close was because the captain gave a dramatic speech summing up the moral of the story. I exaggerate, but only a little. At the climax of the first episode of The Original Series, Kirk gave the very first Kirk Speech about Gary Mitchell becoming a god: “And what will Mitchell learn in getting there? Will he know what to do with his power? Will he acquire the wisdom? … Did you hear him joke about compassion? Of all else, a God needs compassion.” This pattern continued in many future episodes. In future series the pattern was replicated with the Picard speech, the Janeway speech, and (shudder, shudder) the Archer speech. Deep Space Nine was more democratic in who got to moralize: Sisko had some important speeches, but more often than not the honor went to Kira, Odo, and even Quark–and frequently the moral was so ambiguous that the episode ended in silence because no one knew quite what to say.

How will Discovery handle this Trekian tradition?

The traditional route would be for Burnham to be given the speechifying role, making her the moral center of the show. This begs the question: who will she be speechifying to? Will it be Lorca, in his ready room, and then he goes onto the bridge and gives the orders she has talked him into giving? 

Another option is to have Lorca give the dramatic speeches, but unlike all the other series, position him to be in the wrong, or at least voicing opinions that Burnham disagrees with.

A third option is to dispense with the speeches altogether. Unless the writers are aiming for DS9-level ambiguity, this could mean that Discovery will emphasize plot and action over theme. I’m not sure how you maintain Trekian theme-based storytelling without a character to give voice to those themes. Though they might surprise us with a creative solution.

In any case, the question of who gets to make the speeches will be something to look for in the first episodes.          

The Center Seat

In every Trek series, power is situated in the captain. He or she is the one who makes the decisions and gives the orders. All the other characters, no matter how skilled or interesting or well-loved they are by fans, revolve around the captain. The viewer will eventually always look to the captain for the solution to the story because he or she always makes the final call by nature of their position at the top of the chain of command. This will be no different on Discovery, which is what makes the Burnham’s lead status so intriguing: what kind of stories can be told when someone other than the lead gets to make all the decisions?

Keep in mind this is not a ‘lower decks’ situation where the lead is toiling away down in the astro-metrics lab, taking part in stories where the command crew is not central to the plot. Burnham is the first officer, positioned right beside the captain on the bridge. She will be in the middle of the action, integral to the main mission of the ship along side the captain. And yet–somehow–we are supposed to pay more attention to her than to him. I am not suggesting it is impossible. But this is the challenge the writers have set out for themselves, and it promises to make for a refreshing new take on a 50-year-old formula.

There is the ‘bad captain’ theory, wherein Lorca is designed to be the type of captain that we do not look to for the solution or the right answer–either because he is morally corrupt, or merely incompetent. In this case, the narrative tension rests on how Burnham handles situations where she has the right solution but is unable to act on it, or has to convince Lorca to act on it.

There is the ‘good captain’ theory, wherein Burnham idolizes Lorca. Here the narrative tension would rest on her struggles to live up to his standards, to make him proud of her.

In both of those scenarios, Burnham will still be stuck in Lorca’s orbit (and Martin-Green in Isaacs’s). Perhaps the series will slyly challenge the audience’s Trek (and other more engrained) biases by forcing us to turn our gaze from the white man in power to the black woman at his side. Yes, he is in the center seat and he gets to make the decisions, but the true drama and the real story is in her. That would be a radical change, and it would be a welcome updating of Trek’s long tradition of inclusivity and social commentary.