#star trek chain of command
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Data should've been promoted. We were robbed.
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oh mon dieu


#Hes so cute look look at that old bald man#Just watched chain of command and had to look at his asscheeks but you know what. Its okay. It’s fine#whatever#jean luc picard#captain picard#star trek picard#star trek tng#st tng#tng#the next generation#star trek the next generation
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beverly: *casually shows up in this little number*
jean-luc:
#star trek#star trek tng#jean luc picard#dr beverly crusher#gates mcfadden#star trek: the next generation#beverly crusher#tng: chain of command#trek caps#star trek memes#picard memes#star trek caps#gorgeous beverly crusher#i'm fucking obsessed with that coat or whatever it is
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"How. Many. LIGHTS ARE THERE??"

"YOUR MOTHER!!"


#star trek#star trek tng#star trek the next generation#jean luc picard#captain picard#gul madred#chain of command#yo mama#ive been giggling so hard rn
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#imzadi#deanna troi#will riker#edward jellico#chain of command#star trek tng#star trek the next generation#carro art
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Just rewatched Chain of Command and that Gul Madred dude is so fucked once the Obsidian Order gets their hands on him for how badly he bungled that interrogation.
I’m sorry you had Jean-Luc fucking Picard captain of the goddamn Enterprise on your ship and you didn’t just throw him in a cell until you could get him to a qualified Order agent?
You told him personal anecdotes that were… true? You absolute fucking moron? You brought your daughter in? Did you know that children are not a trigger point for him? No of course you didn’t you dipshit.
The only reason he went in that last time when he knew Picard was freed was to try to get something to show for himself to save his ass from Tain’s wrath. “See! See! He was about to break! I didn’t fuck up!”
Oh and that Cardassian captain? (The one who was dealing with starfleet and loving every second of being righteously furious that Captain Picard? Was found? Committing a crime!? Against Cardassia!?) he obviously hates Madred’s guts so I can only imagine when Madred was like “I know we’re supposed to take prisoners like this to the Order but should I just like… do the interrogation myself?” The captain dude was like ‘for the good of Cardassia I should convince him to not do the interrogation, and instead wait until we get back to Cardassia for an expert to–’ “Yes Gul Madred, you should be the one to interrogate Captain Jean-Luc Picard. You are more than capable and I cannot foresee this resulting in embarrassment or death for anyone involved.”
Meanwhile the Obsidian Order plant on his crew is just taking notes shaking her head like “oh god. Oh no. Oh Tain is gonna be so fucking pissed.”
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Captain is in danger? Of course Spock is going to beam down personally. Why wouldn’t he?
#the chain of command goes out the frickin window#the security team must be so bored#star trek tos#Spock#Jim Kirk
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sometimes when i finish watching a tng episode i kinda just stand in a corner like this

and go what the fuck just happened .oh god .and then i continue with life
#the offspring i borg and chain of command im FUCKING LOOKING AT YOU#basically any episode where data and/or picard get put in Situations has me in shambles#I ALWAYS WATCH TNG IN THE EVENING TOO SO THEN IM EXISTENTIAL AND AUTISTIC FOR THE REST OF THE NIGHT#ITS AWFUL#star trek#tng#star trek tng#star trek the next generation#st:tng#ticketts thoughts
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To Be Continued: Multi-parters in Star Trek (Part 1)
By Ames
Back in the day when Star Trek series were less serial, stretching an episode out to two weeks was a sneaky sneaky way to stretch a dollar, applying two weeks’ worth of budget to one story. Relatedly/unrelatedly, this was also the heyday of the season finale cliffhanger, in which a show would leave their audience in suspense for a few months in order to ensure they’ll return next season to see how their heroes get out of their latest scrape. Trek of the streaming era does this less since modern series are arguably all one continuous plot, so that got your hosts here at A Star to Steer Her By thinking: What makes for a good two-parter?
Over the years, we’ve very rarely been satisfied with multi-parters. Our constant refrain has been: “This should have been one episode.” So let’s look back at our first batch of two-parters from The Original Series and The Next Generation to see how the pattern emerged. Check ‘em out below and listen to our chatter on this week’s podcast episode (skip to 55:25) to see which ones actually had enough material for a sequel and which ones could have been trimmed to a 44-minute slot. And spoiler: it’s gonna be a cliffhanger!
[Images © CBS/Paramount]
TOS: “The Menagerie”
The only two-parter we see in the ultra-episodic original series was really just a way to keep up with deadlines and to work around budget limitations, already thin mere months into the franchise’s existence. The unused pilot, “The Cage,” (which we talked about the other week in our pilots post!) already existed. The team had a full week’s worth of material right there to release at no extra cost! It was just a matter of writing a frame story around it to feature the current cast, and presto! It’s basically a clipshow that audiences wouldn’t realize is a clipshow!
And while the two-parter itself occasionally feels a little stretched (watching people watching Star Trek isn’t exactly riveting), we do have to admit that adding the Pike character and his fateful story into the canon would benefit us fifty years down the line. Is watching both parts of “The Menagerie” any better than watching “The Cage” on its own? Well, that may be a matter of taste and how tired you get of courtroom hearings.
TNG: “The Best of Both Worlds”
The next generation of shows would use the two-parter more commonly and to a new effect. TNG’s first foray into season finale cliffhangers is also one of its best uses of the mechanism. Ending season three with “The Best of Both Worlds, Part I”’s hair-raising final moments teases the audience so expertly that they are guaranteed to be champing at the bit after the summer hiatus to see what Locutus’s deal is, if Shelby will stay on the crew, how Riker will handle being in charge, and what the effects of firing on the assimilated captain will be.
By the time season four starts up, we also see another trend with two-parters: one part is usually far better than the other, and it’s frequently the first part. Part II is definitely laggier, and even the writers admit that they hadn’t planned how they were going to reconcile the actions of Part I until they’d already shot themselves in the face, quite literally. So while Part I was groundbreaking television, especially in the 90s, TNG still needed to learn to pace themselves.
TNG: “Redemption”
Lightning doesn’t strike twice, and the next season’s big twist in its finale is significantly less interesting than firing on a Borgified Picard. Instead, “Redemption” introduces us to another incarnation of Denise Crosby, this time as Sela. It’s more perplexing than mind-blowing, though, and the cheesy “Humans have a way of showing up when you least expect them” line doesn’t help matters.
This two-parter is on the more convoluted side, but we can forgive most of the rest of it because it’s the Klingons and Romulans at their best. From the Duras Sisters and Toral, to the Klingon Civil War, to the Romulans’ involvement, to the ship blockade, to whatever on earth Sela was supposed to be, these scripts feel as dense as one of the novels. Some may argue that there’s too much going on, but at least it doesn’t lag.
TNG: “Unification”
Oh good, Sela’s back in our next two-parter! “Unification” is plopped a couple weeks later in the middle of season 5, mostly as a way to cross-promote with Star Trek VI: The Undiscovered Country, and to get Nimoy into TNG for the fans to cream themselves over. The Romulans are up to yet more shenanigans, as is their wont, and ambassador Spock is in the mix! What’s not to love?
Well, a lot, it turns out. As far as catering to fans goes, your SSHB hosts are frequently too skeptical to take the bait. And not being blinded by all the familiar guest stars, we were able to see all the flaws. The pacing of this one struggles more than ever. Even more than “Redemption,” there’s just too much going on, the pudding is thoroughly overegged, all the sideplots on on the Enterprise feel superfluous, and Sela is far too distracting as a concept. Like most Romulan plans, everything is just overwrought. Even if that does mean it has plenty to do over two episodes, we question if it’s worth it.
TNG: “Time’s Arrow”
What definitely isn’t worth it is the frustratingly repetitive and obnoxious “Time’s Arrow,” which is on so many of our bad lists, I get to pick and choose which links to cross promote! It’s another cliffhanger episode that bridges the gap between seasons, but since none of us could even remember how Part I ended, that pretty much shows you what kind of job it did at leaving an impact. (I looked it up and apparently the answer was Picard and crew following the Devidians through the temporal door, I guess? Yawn.)
While I can (and often do!) blame most of these episodes’ faults on the ear-splitting portrayal of Mark Twain, there’s not much here that’s actually compelling overall. Any elements that could be compelling (Data dealing with his own mortality, aliens who live out of phase and feast on human neural energy, etc.) are emphatically upstaged by the goofy hijinks in the past! It’s a pair of episodes that are tonally all over the place and agony to watch. Not only should it have not been a two-parter, it shouldn’t have even been a one-parter.
TNG: “Chain of Command”
In a rare instance of an episode for which the second part is significantly better than the first part, see “Chain of Command, Part II.” The first installment of this mid-season-6 two-parter is mostly setting up what will be a phenomenal acting showcase in the second, which could frankly just stand on its own with some very simple tweaks. The Cardassian torture chamber is where the action is. The rest can’t stand up to David Warner and Patrick Stewart.
And sure, you’d want to keep Jellico’s “Get It Done” attitude, Riker’s little temper tantrum, and getting Troi in a proper uniform for a change, so maybe cramming it all into one episode would feel bloated, but maybe it’d be worth it? Or maybe we could retain the two-parter and give Patrick Stewart the proper runway to get to his “There Are Four Lights” moment if we swapped Ro in for Crusher, who just seems out of place inexplicably spelunking around for a full episode. I posit Ro could’ve balanced a mediocre Part I with the stellar Part II.
TNG: “Birthright”
We’d take all the part ones of “Chain of Command” we could handle over “Birthright” though. Over the course of an episode and a half, Worf finds a colony of Klingons under the rule of Romulans while looking for Mogh (which turns out to be a red herring). And for the other half episode, we get some surrealist Data stuff plus a random Bashir cameo.
The writers seemed to know there wouldn’t be enough of the Worf plot to stretch over two episodes, so they stapled on this Data dreaming plot that ends by the time Part I is over. Which just feels weird because then Part II is nothing BUT Worf plot… and it’s just not that compelling. Part I ends with Worf just finding the camp, which makes everything up to that point feel like exposition. And thus skippable. I’d say it should have been condensed down to one episode and then you could move the Data plot to some other episode, but frankly they could have both been skipped entirely.
TNG: “Descent”
While I wouldn’t put “Descent” among my favorite TNG episodes or anything, it might actually be a decent example of a two-parter. There may be a little stretching of Part I to get to the cliffhanger, but overall it keeps the pace moving along. I can’t think of a time during either episode when I was feeling bored or thinking more things ought to be happening. Sure, the season 6 cliffhanger revealing that Lore has been behind the whole scheme is kind of a corny twist to keep fans abuzz over the season break, but it does its job.
It’s also a two-parter that keeps most of the characters busy, which is a rarity! Crusher flies into a sun. Geordi gets tortured by Lore. Troi tries (and fails) to help Data with his emotions. Everything is working toward the same goal instead of tacking on more and more disparate things. It’s not perfect, as the Borg would prefer, but it might be the most worthy of being a two-parter so far. Dang, that’s something I never thought I’d say.
TNG: “Gambit”
The final two-parter of TNG we get until the finale (which we talked about last week!) comes in the middle of season 7, and boy does it fall flat. Picard feels out of character, like he’s involved in this whole pirate shenanigan just for the sake of plot. Riker’s on top of things, but that’s pretty typical. But everyone else feels like they’re just spinning their wheels while the other plot unfolds.
Unlike in “Descent” where I felt like the other characters’ plots felt organic and in service of the whole concept, this one just feels like everyone’s doing busywork so they could justify putting them on the callsheets. In terms of our pirate friends, they keep momentum for the full two parts, revealing things as they go to open up new possibilities. So yeah, “Gambit” definitely fills its airtime. It’s just not that interesting.
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Our story continues next week with more multi-parters, so make sure you’re following this space. Go to Black Alert with us over on the podcast as we catch up on episodes of Discovery on SoundCloud or wherever you like to listen, and compare cliffhanger theories with us over on Facebook. To be continued…
#star trek#star trek podcast#podcast#two-parters#the original series#the next generation#the menagerie#the best of both worlds#redemption#unification#time's arrow#chain of command#birthright#descent#gambit#cliffhanger
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Chain of Command
#more like chain me to the bed#data soong#star trek data#data tng#data star trek#lt commander data#star trek tng#star trek the next generation#tng data#commander data
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#david warner#patrick stewart#a christmas carol#chain of command#star trek#star trek: tng#hdjdjdk#stolen from fb#but this is such a beautifully constructed meta joke#i love it
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First time watching TNG. Are all Cardassians this cunty?
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Do you think Admiral Jellico from the Star Trek: The Next Generation episodes Chain of Command Parts 1 & 2 was a Jellicle cat?
Or if not did he at least know the words to "Jellicle Songs for Jellicle Cats?"
Or was he a difficult CO because people at the Academy used to say "Hey you, Jellicle cat!"
You don't have to answer- it's the last one and I already know I'm right.
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Data looking confident and sexy in command red and showing his superb profile. What could be better?
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s t a r t r e k t h e n e x t g e n e r a t i o n created by gene roddenberry Gul Lemec, Cardassian Military [chain of command part i, s6ep10]
'Where is Captain Picard?... I hope his new assignment is not too dangerous. It would be a shame if something were to happen to such a noted officer.' - lemec [to jellico]
#star trek#star trek the next generation#the next generation#gene roddenberry#star trek characters#tng character#Gul Lemec#John Durbin#tng season 6#the next generation season 6#tng chain of Command#chain of Command#tng chain of Command part 1#chain of Command part 1#lot: st tng season 6 ep 10/26 (ep 136/178)#latest tng posts
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Hey I'm watching Chain Of Command Pt 2 and I'm genuinely on the verge of tears Jean-Luc deserves so much better what the fuck oh my god I'm gonna puke this poor man
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