renaeden wrote:
Star Trek is my favourite but in rl I tend to keep quiet about it because no one wants to talk about it with me.
I would LOVE to talk trekkie with you if we ever met in person! Though I don't consider ST a special interest (isn't half the world of NTs enthralled by the ST universe anyways?), I still have some insights and opinions. For example....WHY, in ALL the ST franchises, was there NEVER a Vulcan-Klingon hybrid? I googled for this and found nothing.
If Vulcans have 5x human strength, why was one human man able to restrain T'Pol -- especially while she was in a fit of rage -- in the episode where she contracts a neuro disease that impairs logic?
Why was Michael Westmore, who designed alien species, fixated on the forehead ridging? The majority of alients have some variation of this. In fact, whenever I was watching an episode in any of the franchises, and I knew a new alien would soon be entering the scene, I accurately predicted like 90 percent of the time that they'd have forehead ridging.
Why were B'Elanna's eyebrows toned down after the first season of "Voyager," making her appear one-
quarter Klingon even though she was one-
half Klingon?
Why was every single humanoid man of authority, in the original series, at least 65? Yet any WOMAN in authority usually appeared around 30, and was never older than mid 30s?
Why wasn't there ever hand-to-hand combat between a Klingon and Vulcan man? Doesn't matter if their species had friendly relations; on an individual level there could still be a fight, just like the U.S. is friendly with Canada, but this doesn't mean that an American and a Canadian can't get into a brawl. I would've also loved to have seen a fistfight between a human man and a female Klingon -- no weapons.
I would've like to have seen a half Ferengi, half human, and a half Ferengi, half Klingon.
Among my favorite franchise episodes are "Blink of an Eye" (not to be confused with the original series "Wink of an Eye," though THAT, TOO, is among my favorites. "Future Imperfect" ranks right up there, with its very surprise ending. Also thought the "Tuvix" one was great!
Perhaps the biggest enigma is when Edith Keeler gets hit by a car in "City on the Edge." She would've never gotten hit had she not seen Jim across the street. Yet, the true line of history was that she died young. So, had Jim never traveled back in time, what killed Edith???? This was a major continuity flaw.