They didn't talk about it because crazy shit happened to that fucking ship every day. I could just imagine some ensign going home to his wife like 'The ship gave birth today' and she just rolls her eyes and goes back to her book.
“Oh god, what did Riker stick his dick in this time?”
“Actually it was La Forge!”
The funny part about that is, even though he was the one who got the shit over it, the fucking ship came on to him. He just wanted to talk about the goddamn warp drive.
It is wild how much shit Geordie gets for the Leah Brahms hologram.
It is also wild that no one ever interrogates the fact that the computer essentially made a hologram so it could hit on Geordi, either.
I forgot that part! It made the god damn hologram in the first place!
We can set aside how Geordi conducted himself after the hologram had been made as well, if you'd like. That doesn't even begin to address how he acted when the real Dr. Brahms came on board the ship. Dude's a certfied incel creep.
The way he acts towards the read Doctor Brahms certainly does not cast the character in the most flattering light, but what did he do in "Booby Trap" that was so bad?
"Riker stuck his dick in La Forge? Huh, you know what, I am happy for those two, they had it a long time coming."
Wait, Riker fucked LaForge?
My favorite example of this is from The Chase, where they discover the origin of all humanoid species in the galaxy, probably the most important discovery made in the history of Starfleet, and it's never mentioned again.
i had a thought about this.. ive been watching lower decks
the emergence of new life forms seems almost trivial to everyone.. its something that happens all the time.
for some perspective, humans are pulled out of other humans at hypothetical, but totally realistic rate of something like 1000 babies/hour... the 'miracle of life' at volume.
for each one of these humans, its clearly a momentous occasion. in aggregate, not so much.
edit: duuude its actually closer to 16,000/hour. damn
I feel like there's a difference between a worker robot deciding it doesn't want to live or die at the command of its humanoid creators, or a collections of nanites establishing an emergent intelligence, and a Federation Starship locking out its crew of 1,014 people and seeking out a white dwarf star like a salmon swimming upstream so it could give birth to an entirely new lifeform.
Even setting aside the ethical implications of using a ship capable of such a thing as transport, and putting into dangerous combat situations, is Starfleet prepared for similar events to happen on all their ships? What happened to the emergent lifeform after it left the Enterprise? Is it still out there? Why did it look like a screen saver from 1992?
But the crew of the Enterprise are fundamentally uncurious about the wider implications of the event.
"Amazing, isn't it captain? An entirely new lifeform brought into being by the very ship we sail through the stars."
"Quite so, Number One. Tell me, what's our next stop?"
"We're going to rendezvous with the USS Hood to pick up lieutenant Ro; she just finished her advanced tactical training."
"Excellent! We'll have to throw her a 'Welcome Back' party in Ten Forward."
We'll have to have it somewhere else. They're still cleaning up bits of that guy who's head I exploded in there.
16k/hour = 4.44…/second. Whoa.
And about three people die every second.
I'm still hoping for a Moriarty spinoff!
Okay that's something I never knew I wanted. That needs to happen.
I think it's a little late now considering Daniel Davis is 78.
Wasn't that just The Nanny?
Sometimes I love Wikipedia.
They never mention the nanites or the exocomps again either.
Not on that series, but the Exocomps do appear again in Lower Decks.
Peanut Hamper! It's like Kelly Kapoor as a robot. In space!
<3 Peanut Hamper.
Lol the entire enterprise crew needs some deep therapy after all the traumatic shit they deal with on the daily. The most unrealistic part of that show was how none of them became became grizzled after 10 years of life altering experiences and losses though they often showed others who did. I want to assume they had access to more than troi and just didn't show it because an entire crew probably couldn't be supported by one therapist similarly to how whichever physical health doctor on board had lots of help and even other doctors.
...Man, there would be a great web serial just following Not-Troi's therapy sessions, in which she is yet again trying to convince an alien not to vaporize themselves/the ship/the crew/the Riker after Yet Another Traumatic Tuesday.
I think they just left Ensign Whatsherface just sticking halfway out of the bulkhead.
Don't forget Janeway and Paris's offspring!
To note in passing new life and new civilizations...
I just realized the dude looks like Stamets.
But season 7 was the last season of TNG. DS9 was busy with other things and Voyager was elsewhere.
The Ferengi from "The Price" showed up in VOY, as did the Borg Queen, and Tom Riker was pivotal to an episode of DS9.
It's a huge universe, why would this particular entity have to show up in another episode? It could be off exploring the Gamma quadrant.
Why would Starfleet be so fundamentally uninterested in learning about an enitity literally birthed by one of their Starships?
Because they can't find it? It's tiny, it flew off into the distance...for all we know, there are a dozen science ships looking for it during the entire DS9 run.
Risa
Star Trek memes and shitposts
Come on'n get your jamaharon on! There are no real rules—just don't break the weather control network.