⢠Uhura provides the stardate 2398.3 in her communications officerâs log.
Episode | Stardate |
---|---|
âThe Broken Circleâ | 2369.2 |
âAd Astra per Asperaâ | 2393.8 |
âTomorrow and Tomorrow and Tomorrowâ | 1581.2 |
âAmong the Lotus Eatersâ | 1630.1 |
âAmong the Lotus Eatersâ | 1630.3 |
âAmong the Lotus Eatersâ | 1632.2 |
âCharades | 1789.3 |
âLost in Translationâ | 2394.8 |
âThose Old Scientistsâ | 2291.6 |
âUnder the Cloak of Warâ | 1875.4 |
âUnder the Cloak of Warâ | 1875.8 |
âUnder the Cloak of Warâ | 1877.5 |
⢠Uhura is routing communications manually like a switchboard operator, because apparently every extra bit of computing power is necessary for an experiment Spock is running. Among the calls she takes are:
    ⢠Captain Pike requesting a hail be put through to Captain Batel, who was introduced in the series premiere, âStrange New Worldsâ.
    ⢠Number One requesting an update on the arrival of James Kirk from the USS Farragut. James is Sam Kirkâs brother, who was introduced in the episode âWhere No Man has Gone Beforeâ. The Farragut was first mentioned in âObsessionâ.
    ⢠Chapel is awaiting a reply from Doctor Korby regarding her application to his fellowship. In âWhat Are Little Girls Made Of?â we find out that Chapel and Doctor Korby were engaged before he went missing on the planet Exo III in 2261.
    ⢠Uhuraâs console shows names and ranks of people whom are using the communications, though we only see named characters and âcadetâ who apparently doesnât rank having a name. Interestingly, Number Oneâs is listed only as âLt. Unaâ, whereas characters other than Spock have their first initial and full surname; also, Number Oneâs rank is lieutenant commander, not lieutenant.
⢠We see lieutenant Mitchell in the captainâs chair, I believe for the first time.
    ⢠When Pike arrives on the bridge later, Mitchell is back at navigation, and an unnamed gold shirt is in the big chair.
⢠The captain of the Farragut sent a message ahead of Jamesâ arrival on USS Enterprise but weâre not given that characterâs name. Previously, the ship was commanded by Captain Garrovick, but he was killed by a predatory cloud two years earlier than this episode, according to âObsessionâ.
⢠The drink James mentions refers to the time Laâan contacting under false pretenses after watching an alternate universe doppelganger of him get killed by a Romulan agent in the past in âTomorrow and Tomorrow and Tomorrowâ.
⢠Doctor MâBenga echos the claim Spock makes in âWhat Are Little Girls Made Of?â that Doctor Korby is âthe Louis Pasteur of archaeological medicine.â
⢠The song Uhura sends through the subspace fold is âAnything Goesâ, written by Cole Porter for the 1934 musical of the same name. The version she selects was recorded by Eileen Rodgers in 1962.
⢠Spock begins singing his report, and is followed by the rest of the cast, for âStatus Reportâ. The first time we saw a character sing in Trek was in âCharlie Xâ when Uhura sings in the rec room.
⢠The opening credits are accompanied by an a capella version of the theme.
⢠The Heisenberg compensators are a transporter component introduced in âRealm of Fearâ.
⢠During the song âConnect to Your Truthâ, Number one sings, *âI can see myself up on the stage, And for three hours a night, And to everyoneâs delight, Iâd regale them all with my renditions, Of Gilbert and Sullivan.â While trapped in a turbolift with Spock in âQ&Aâ the pair sang a piece of the âMajor-Generalâs Songâ.
    ⢠The theme of the song is based in Number Oneâs new philosophy that she should not be so closed off from the crew, though in âQ&Aâ she advised Spock that it was necessary âkeep [his] freaky to [himself]â if his ultimate goal was command.
⢠While she sings âHow Would That Feelâ Laâan opens a case in a drawer in her quarters to reveal sheâs held on to the diverâs watch she and the alternate James Kirk used in âTomorrow and Tomorrow and Tomorrowâ.
    ⢠In her fantasy, we see the hotel room she and that James shared, which he was able to pay for in cash after winning a bunch of chess games.
⢠During âPrivate Conversationâ we learn that Captain Batelâs first name is Marie. Surely this, and the sudden priority one mission the USS Cayuga is assigned at the end of the episode can only mean good things for her long term prospects as a character.
⢠The improbability field causing the Enterprise crew to break out into song is expanding to the entire fleet, including the USS Cayuga. Uhura projects a map of the local subspace network on the main viewer, and in addition to the Enterprise and the Farragut we see listed:
    ⢠USS Lexington; Constitution-class - first seen in âThe Ultimate Computerâ but listed on a chart of ships at Starbase 11 in âCourt Martialâ
    ⢠USS Potemkin; Constitution-class - first seen in âThe Ultimate Computerâ
    ⢠USS Kongo - only listed on a chart displayed in âStar Trek: The Undiscovered Countryâ and named on the pin Spock wore for Starfleet Remembrance Day in âMemento Moriâ.
    ⢠USS Republic - James is mentioned as having served aboard the ship in âCourt Martialâ
    ⢠USS Hood; Constitution-class - first seen in âThe Ultimate Computerâ but listed on a chart of ships at Starbase 11 in âCourt Martialâ
    ⢠USS Valiant; Valiant was one of 14 names proposed for Constitution-class ships by the producers of TOSâ second season
⢠ââŚAnd those feelings pose an actual space-time security risk.â Laâan is referring to the events of âTomorrow and Tomorrow and Tomorrowâ.
⢠*âThe secrets I keep safe inside, A skill I perfected, So I could survive.â During the song, âKeeping Secretsâ, Number One refers to the fact that she previously hid the fact that sheâs an Illyrian, and subject to prejudice and discrimination in the Federation.
⢠âThe last thing anyone wants is singing Klingons.â Klingons have a rich history of opera and drinking songs.
⢠General Garkog is played by Bruce Horak, who has previously portrayed Hemmer in season one, and the illusion of Zombie Hemmer in âLost in Translationâ.
⢠âSome of us need fun to deal with the constant threat of dying.â Kirk is killed by flying extragalactic parasites on the Deneva colony after leaving Starfleet, and his corpse is found in âOperation â Annihilate!â
⢠During âIâm Readyâ Chapel sings, âThe sky is the limit, My future is infinite, My possibilities are endless.â Chapel continues serving aboard the Enterprise for over a decade, eventually becoming and MD and taking over as chief medical officer until Kirk has Doctor McCoy drafted in âStar Trek: The Motion Pictureâ. She does not appear to be part of the crew when the ship is reassigned as a training vessel, but does show up organizing relief efforts on Earth during âStar Trek: The Voyage Homeâ when the whale probe begins to destabilize the planet.
⢠Laâan calls the incoming Klingon vessel a Kâtâinga-class ship. The term originated in Gene Roddenberryâs novelization of âStar Trek: The Motion Pictureâ; this is actually the first time itâs been said on screen.
    ⢠The model we see is the same as the one used for the D7-class introduced in âThrough the Valley of Shadowsâ. Whether or not the Kâtâinga and the D7 are the same ship has been a matter of some dispute among fans since 1979, and this likely isnât to change that.
⢠James mentions his baby mama, Doctor Carol Marcus, who was introduced in âStar Trek: The Wrath of Khanâ.
    ⢠Doctor Marcus is pregnant with their son, David Marcus, which would mean heâs around 25 years old when he appears in âStar Trek: The Wrath of Khanâ.
⢠Spock sings âIâm the Xâ, as song about how he needs to close himself off from his emotions to avoid being hurt in relationships. In âThis Side of Paradiseâ he encounters Leila Kalomi, a woman who fell in love with him six years earlier in 2261, but he never expressed his feelings to her.
⢠In âKeep Us Connectedâ Uhura recounts how everyone around her dies, beginning with the deaths of her family via shuttle crash, which we learned about in âChildren of the Cometâ, and then Hemmerâs demise in âAll Those Who Wanderâ.
⢠Spock asks how theyâre going to get 200 crew members to sing in spontaneous unison. The Enterprise had 203 crew people during their visit to the Talos system according to Pike in âThe Menagerie, Part Iâ, as well as Burnhamâs scans of the ship in âBrotherâ.
⢠During âWe Are Oneâ:
    ⢠James sings, âIf I make captain, Itâll be thanks to all of you.â Seems like heâs getting a little bit ahead of himself.
    ⢠We see the interior of the IKS parâMachstreet Boys, and it is significantly different from any Klingon bridge weâve seen before, including being extremely deep, as well as having a captainâs chair that appears capable of dollying backwards.
    ⢠The Klingon captainâs chair has Klingon glyphs on it, which appear to read âKahless Rocksâ.
    ⢠The mekâleths the Klingons are dancing with are the simpler version originally introduced in âThe Way of the Warriorâ as opposed to the more ornate iterations seen in season one of DIS, beginning with âBattle at the Binary Starsâ.
⢠Spock once again was able to drink the Klingons into not wanting destroy the Enterprise, as he did in âThe Broken Circleâ. This is not a technique he employed in other encounters with the Klingons, such as in âErrand of Mercyâ, âFridayâs Childâ or âDay of the Doveâ.
⢠âSorry, earworm.â In âStar Trek: The Wrath of Khanâ, Khan inserted Ceti eel larva into the ears of Captain Tarrell and Chekov, causing them to be extremely susceptible to suggestion.
James is Sam Kirkâs brother, who was introduced in the episode âWhere No Man has Gone Beforeâ.
Deep cut. Love how they continue to flesh out these obscure characters from Trek canon!
We see lieutenant Mitchell in the captainâs chair, I believe for the first time.
Kind of hoping they promote Rong Fu to a regular simply so that she is no longer the only bridge crew person who isnât.
IKS parâMachstreet Boys
This is canon now.
Literally a character from the second pilot and we have chuds out there saying writers donât care about established canon.
âSpock once again was able to drink the Klingons into not wanting destroy the Enterpriseâ
This might also explain how Spock convinced General Koord to aid the Enterprise in STV. Koord was definitely a drinker, too!
Not necessarily a canon connection, but Robot Chicken did do an operatic skit called Le Wrath di Khan
I enjoy these, thank you wise one.
I would add that a snippet of the original series theme is heard at one point at the end of one of the songs, and I donât remember hearing it any other SNW episode. I didnât draw any connections to it at the time but now I wonder if it was drawing a line between the characters on screen at the time. Will have to go rewatch.
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