The title refers both to the deceptions that Spock and the crew engage in to cover what happens to him, as well as Pikeās desperate attempt to play the game ācharadesā as a delaying tactic.
The episode was written by supervising producer Kathryn Lyn and showrunner Henry Alonzo Myers. Lyn wrote what is the best LD episode to date, the amazing āwej Dujā. This explains the LD-esque type of observational humor in the dialogue.
Chapelās personal log is stardated 1789.3. She and Spock are in the Vulcan system, to survey the moon Kherkov on the far side of the sector. It is unclear if this means that Kherkov is in the Vulcan system itself, or when she means sector she means the system. Star Trek has always been vague about how large a sector is, and in TOS days even how large a quadrant is. In Geoffrey Mandelās Star Charts, a sector is defined as a cube of 20 ly. Kherkov was inhabited by a long vanished civilization and rumored to have had advanced medical knowledge.
What the script means by āsub-impulseā speeds is also unclear, as impulse operations are already sublight in nature. Perhaps this merely means at low impulse speeds.
MāBenga mentioned Korbyās principles of archeological medicine. Roger Korby, known as the Pasteur of Archeological Medicine, would eventually become affianced to Chapel, vanish on the frozen planet of Exo III and turn up five years later as an android (TOS: āWhat are Little Girls Made Of?ā).
Spock is headed for Deck 12, which, according to Franz Josephās Enterprise deck plans, is in the interconnecting dorsal section, and contains an observation lounge.
MāBenga has been helping Spock with controlling his emotions (SNW: āThe Broken Circleā) after he let them loose in SNW: āAll Those Who Wanderā.
Pike claims that you can tell the difference between fresh and synthesized herbs. At this point in history, starships use food synthesizers, not replicators, although the difference between the two processes is not entirely clear. The herb Pike pushes on Spock is basil.
Spock says he uses nasal suppressants to block out the smell of humans, which Vulcans take getting used to. In ENT: āThe Andorian Incidentā, TāPol uses a regularly injected nasal numbing agent to help with the same issue, although she also partially acclimatizes.
Lieutenant Sam Kirk makes his first in-universe appearance since SNW: āAll Those Who Wanderā. An alternate timeline version did appear in SNW: āA Quality of Mercyā.
Sam mentions increased sunspot activity in Eridani B. 40 Eridani is a star system comprised of three suns - Eridani A, B and C. It was established in Franz Josephās Star Fleet Technical Manual as Vulcanās system. It is 16 ly away, consistent with ENTās mention of Vulcanās distance from Earth. In 2018, an exoplanet was apparently discovered orbiting Eridani A which some fans wanted named Vulcan, but recently the discovery of 40 Eri b turned out to be a mistake.
A Vulcan ceremonial engagement dinner is known as a VāShal dinner. Spock mentions that he is āstillā not speaking with his father. In TOS: āJourney to Babelā it is revealed that the two fell out after Spock elected to join Starfleet rather than the Vulcan Science Academy, and had not spoken since 2249. Amanda assumed that it was because Sarek disapproved of Starfleet as an organization, but the reasons are a bit more complicated, as we find out in DIS: āLetheā.
TāPringās parents here are TāPril and Sevet. In the novel Vulcanās Glory, TāPringās father was named Solen.
Spockās (almost) use of the āfā word is of course for comic effect: the first time the expletive was used in Trek was in DIS: āChoose Your Painā, used by Tilly and Stamets.
The alien entity identifies themselves as Yellow, of Kherkov. The rupture was a transport tunnel, which explains its visual similarity with the Bajoran wormhole (DS9). Yellow is pretty much a Customer Service operator who just wants to get you off the line.
Aliens not knowing how humans are put together is an old trope - we first see it in Trek in TOS: āThe Cageā, when Vinaās disfigured form is explained as the Talosians not knowing what a human looked like before they healed her. A modern example can be seen in Doctor Whoās āThe Empty Child/The Doctor Dancesā.
Chapel is working to reverse Spockās genetic alteration. As we saw in SNW: āStrange New Worldsā, she has an expertise in modifying genomes, although that was temporary and for the purpose of disguising away teams.
The enticing aroma of bacon - at least to humans - is due to the Maillard Reaction, which triggers our bodyās natural cravings for salt and fat. Spockās fascination and inexperience with bacon is also because post-Surakian Vulcans are vegetarian. As a human, Spock appears to have forgotten that. Spock would eat meat in TOS: āAll Our Yesterdaysā when transported thousands of years into the past and reverting to the Vulcans of those days.
MāBenga describes the Kherkovians as inscrutable, interdimensional beings that donāt experience space and time the way we do. They sound more and more like they could be related to the Prophets.
Pike tells Amanda that Pelia sends her regards but sheās off dealing with their ādilithium shortageā. It was established in SNW: āThe Broken Circleā that Amanda was the first person to whom Pelia revealed her status as a Lanthanite. Dilithium was always a scarce resource in Trek, and its shortage would eventually lead to more dire consequences in the 31st Century. Peliaās penchant for āacquiringā antiques was established in SNW: āTomorrow and Tomorrow and Tomorrowā.
Spock wears a beanie to conceal his (in this case) lack of ears. Spock first used such a hat to conceal his ears in TOS: āThe City on the Edge of Foreverā. Amanda says that Spock isnāt a practiced liarā¦ yet. As we know, Spock will become a lot better at lying in future (TOS: āThe Enterprise Incidentā, ST II and ST VI being the most obvious examples aside from covert away missions).
The fake ears are probably the same kinds of ears Ethan Peck wears when made up as Spock. When teaching Spock how to act and sound Vulcan, Ortegasā line about āNotice how I move my eyebrow but no other muscles in my face,ā is very Beckett Mariner-like.
The VāShal ritual starts with Spock making the brideās familyās recipe for tea and serving it. Tuvok once served Vulcan tea to Captain Sulu (VOY: āFlashbackā). Next is the Ritual of Awareness, when a young couple is made aware of all their faults and flaws. While a timer counts down, TāPringās parents will tell Spock all the things they think he is doing wrong. Last is the Mind Meld, where Amanda and Spock will share a memory of his childhood.
Spockās open use of the mind meld and Pike and Unaās knowledge of it contradicts the first time it was used in TOS: āDagger of the Mindā when he tells McCoy that it was a deeply private thing for Vulcans. He also said then that he had never used on a human before but here he says heās used to seeing Amandaās memories.
MāBenga says he has some gene therapy techniques he pulled from the Trinar. Itās not clear if heās referring to a race or a ship, although closed captioning italicizes Trinar regression.
Pike has cooked traditional tevmel, but TāPril criticizes the halak as not being fresh and being salted. Pike explains he uses salt to slow fermentation as starships run hotter than your typical Vulcan kitchen.
Ortegas says that she hates analogies because theyāre never really like they say it is. Using analogies to make technobabble clearer (āItās just like skipping a stone across a pond!ā) is a time honored tradition in Star Trek.
TāPring warns Spock not to rush the pouring of the tea or else the pomkot leaves will fail to bloom.
The interdimensional space the trio find themselves in reminds me, tonally, of when Dax and Sisko first entered the wormhole in DS9: āEmissaryā. The Kerkhov they speak to this time is Blue, who notes that the complaint is lodged out of the response period. Chapel asks to speak with Yellow and is basically put on hold. Customer Service from hell, indeed.
The soundtrack during the Ritual of Awareness is underlaid with a slower version of the Vulcan fighting theme from TOS: āAmok Timeā. During the meld, Amandaās memory is of an ordinary day when she took Spock to school - the first time Vulcan children asked Spock to play with them.
Spock makes the excuse that he did not tell TāPring because of the difficulty Vulcans have lying, but that canāt be true. A better explanation would have been that it was because she would be melding with TāPril later and it might have been picked up. TāPring also reminds Spock that they have shared katras (SNW: āSpock Amokā).
Spock and Chapelās confession and clinch, of course, is in opposition to what happened in TOS: āThe Naked Timeā, but at this point, with the popularity of Jess Bushās portrayal of the character and time travel shenanigans as an excuse, itās a minor point that only the truly pedantic would even point out as part of their annotations.
I choose to believe that the term āsystemā can be used in different contexts, and that in this case itās a synonym for āneighbourhoodā.
Possibly thrusters or something similar? Maybe the ship has three different propulsion methods: thrusters (or whatever you want to call it), impulse and warp. Even impulse speed can be pretty quick - eg in TMP they got a fair way across the solar system on impulse before āriskingā engaging warp drive.
Iām hoping that the writers have an endgame for Spock (and by extension Chapel and TāPring) in mind. Arguably Spock in SNW has been exploring (or been forced to explore) his human side way too much compared to what TOS established. (By the way, Iām not saying these episodes havenāt been entertaining as hell.) Arguably also then, the impact of pivotal moments of character growth, such as āThis simple feeingā in TMP is retconned away if weāve already seen him come to terms with his dual heritage years earlier.
What I think could work however is if Spockās arc in SNW is one where he does explore his human half, but then either chooses to reject this in favour of the the Vulcan path before the events of TOS take over; or have his accommodation of his human half stripped from him.
Imagine a scenario where he and Chapel do have a romantic relationship, but that somehow, for reasons of plot, he forgets but she remembers. (Maybe in a āRequiem for Methuselahā āForgetā¦ā moment.) That would actually add a lot of subtext and poignancy to the unrequited love we see Chapel display in TOS in episodes like āThe Naked Timeā and āAmok Timeā. She doesnāt just pine for him because of what she thinks could be, but because of what she knows had been.