re:Discovery

Splendid Chaps Productions

A Star Trek Discovery podcast.

  1. EPISODE 4

    An Obol for Charon (S02E04)

    Set your face to ugly cry – in this week’s episode “An Obol for Charon”, Discovery’s most elegant soul, Saru, faces a fatal illness – the vahar’ai; the ship is held in place by a sentient orb which causes havoc to its systems; and Tilly is consumed by the fungal entity “May”. Team re:Discovery discuss the central theme of polarisation between action and surrender, whether we exist if there is no one to remember us, the “soft butch showdown” between Stamets and Reno, if shirtless Saru met our expectations and much much more. So grab a hanky and press play! Connect with us and let us know your thoughts via Twitter, Facebook or our website. A transcript of this episode is available. Wikipedia has a limited description of soft butch; this term, mostly used by the queer community, can describe anyone masculine presenting with a touch of femme.Majel Barrett-Roddenberry also played Nurse/Doctor Christine Chapel and a whole host of characters in Star Trek: The Animated Series, including a young Amanda Grayson (Spock and Michael’s mother). Her run as the voice of the Federation’s computers actually lasted past Star Trek: Voyager through to Star Trek: Nemesis, as well as JJ Abrams’ first Star Trek film, which premiered the year after she died.Captain Christopher Pike’s appearances in original series episodes The Cage and The Menagerie were the only pre-Discovery insight into the pre-Kirk history of the Enterprise.

    36 min
  2. EPISODE 5

    Saints of Imperfection (S02E05)

    In this week’s episode “Saints of Imperfection” the Discovery crew launch a mission to rescue Tilly from the mycelial network and pursue Spock’s shuttle craft. This episode is heavy with entities existing where they shouldn’t – Phillipa Georgiou on Spock’s shuttle, Pike’s old friend Leland running Section 31, and in the season’s first (expected) whoa moment, the highly problematic return of Hugh. Team re:Discovery discuss the history of the theoretical tachyon particle, body diversity in the crew, the queer significance of Discovery and the technology of transporters. Like everything in this episode, it doesn’t work how you think it does! Connect with us and let us know your thoughts via Twitter, Facebook or our website. A transcript of this episode is available. TV Tropes covers “Bury Your Gays” in detail; basically it’s when LGBT characters are killed off in a way that makes them feel more expendable than the non-queer cast. The TV Tropes entry for Discovery notes that the producers – and Wilson Cruz! – talked about the trope immediately after Culber’s death went to air, promising this wasn’t like that. Time will tell.Spock’s death and resurrection traverses the films Star Trek II – The Wrath of Khan, Star Trek III – The Search for Spock and Star Trek IV – The Voyage Home. They’re all great!Mycelium Running is a book written by real mycologist Paul Stamets, and was a huge influence on Discovery’s spore technology. You can read more about it in this article, published soon after season one, which has a few guesses about the future of the show…Psychotropic drug enthusiast and artist Alex Gray makes art that encapsulates the feeling and experience of being on mushrooms. See some his art works here.The CIA has a long, documented history of murdering political leaders, killing civilians, interfering with foreign elections and performing highly unethical and illegal drug experiments on vulnerable and unknowing civilians.As well as Spock Must Die!, James Blish also wrote novelisations of several Star Trek episodes. This article by Colin Milburn goes into more detail about tachyons, Blish’s 1954 short story “Beep” and Gerald Feinberg’s writing on the subject.RENT is a rock musical loosely based on the opera La Boheme surrounding the AIDS epidemic in New York in the 1990s. It debuted in 1996.Wilson Cruz was the first openly gay person to play a gay character on TV: Enrique “Rickie” Vasquez in My So Called Life, a high school drama which also starred Claire Danes and Jared Leto. Carla was close with 1996, but the show actually debuted in 1994.Jenny Schecter of The L Word, played by Mia Kirshner, is possibly the most hated queer TV character of all time.Anthony Rapp was the first person to accuse Kevin Spacey of sexual misconduct, claiming Spacey was sexually inappropriate with him when was 14 years old. (He had first voiced his allegations many years earlier, but not named the actor involved.) This created the first cascade of accusations and was the first gay #metoo moment.Jane Lynch is a national treasure.Portia de Rossi is also a national treasure, but in this case, it’s the nation where Carla and Ben live.The Star Trek: The Next Generation episode “The Outcast” featured Commander Riker having a romantic liaison with a member of the “genderless” J’naii species. Jonathan Frakes thought the episode “wasn’t “gutsy” enough” and should have cast a man as his J’naii counterpart, but producer Rick Berman shied away from doing so because he felt that Frakes kissing a male actor “might have been a little unpalatable to viewers”.

    40 min
  3. EPISODE 6

    The Sounds of Thunder (S02E06)

    This week’s episode “The Sounds of Thunder” returns Saru to his homeworld Kaminar. The Red Angel has directed Discovery there – but why? We finally meet the Ba’ul – the mysterious oppressors of the Kelpiens – and ponder what level of action is ethical to stop genocide (you know, just regular Star Trek stuff). Team re:Discovery return to “that episode” to discuss the huge amount of listener feedback we received, and cheekily deliver our audit of #startreknudebutts. Thanks for listening! Connect with us and let us know your thoughts via Twitter, Facebook or our website. A transcript of this episode is available. Netflix (or at least Australian Netflix) lists this episode as “The Sound of Thunder”, but everywhere else has “Sounds”, plural. We’re running with the majority on this one, but we might have used both titles in our discussion.“Skin of Evil” is the first season episode of Star Trek: The Next Generation in which Enterprise security chief Tasha Yar is killed – halfway through! – by Armus, a creature manifesting as a thick, black oily liquid which could move and change into a vaguely humanoid shape.Odo, chief of security on the starbase Deep Space 9 in…er…Star Trek: Deep Space 9, is a shapechanger who normally appears humanoid, but must revert back to his natural liquid form every 18 hours or so to rest. For most of the series, he does this in a special bucket.“Soylent Green” is a bland but nutrient-rich foodstuff made by the Soylent Corporation, supposedly from plankton, in the dystopian future of 2022 depicted in the 1977 film Soylent Green. As revealed in the film it’s made from…well, not plankton. (The film is loosely based on Harry Harrison’s 1966 novel Make Room! Make Room!)Traditional Betazoid wedding ceremonies – as we are informed by Ambassador Lwaxana Troi – are performed in the nude.In Buffy the Vampire Slayer, Buffy dies and is magically resurrected by her friends, but struggles to adjust to being alive again. (We’re being deliberately vague on the details; while we’ll no doubt bring it up again, it’s a great storyline and we don’t want to spoil it too much if you haven’t seen it.)In the long-running British sci-fi sit-com Red Dwarf, David Lister is the sole surviving human being, lost three million years in the future aboard the massive mining ship Red Dwarf. The series two episode “Thanks For the Memory” revealed Lister had his appendix out many years earlier, but in the series six episode Legion, he has his appendix taken out again! Lister’s weird life offers several fixes for this continuity error; the standard fan explanation is that in the series four episode “DNA”, when he is transformed and then restored to his original self by a DNA altering machine, the machine remade his body complete with a new appendix.Watch out for our round up of Star Trek‘s nude butts in a separate post soon. (We’ll add a link to these notes when it’s ready!)

    39 min
  4. EPISODE 7

    Light and Shadows (S02E07)

    In “Light and Shadows”, the search for Spock is finally over as Michael has an emotional reunion with her brother. Meanwhile Discovery finds a time rift whilst investigating the tachyon particles left behind near Kaminar, with Pike and Tyler bonding through space, time, robot octopi and touching fingers. This was an action-packed episode with a forward thrust, temporally, through all versions of Star Trek – re:Discovery is living for this episode and the rest of the season! Connect with us and let us know your thoughts via Twitter, Facebook or our website. A transcript of this episode is available. The “wipe” is a method of transitioning one shot into another in film; there are various kinds but vertical wipes – where one shot is vertically removed to reveal the next – are best known to English-speaking audiences in George Lucas’ Star Wars films. He was inspired by Japanese filmmaker Akira Kurosawa, who used them extensively, but they’re now associated strongly with Star Wars.Mega Shark Versus Giant Octopus is a terrible 2009 film made by “mockbuster” production house The Asylum and starring 80s teen sensation Debbie Gibson. It’s almost worth watching for the scene in which the titular shark leaps out of the ocean to eat a passing jetliner. Almost.Arrival is Denis Villeneuve‘s 2016 film about linguist Amy Adams trying to communicate with giant mysterious multi-limbed aliens. (By contrast, The Arrival is a 1996 American-Mexican sci-fi film about a stealthy alien invasion, starring Charlie Sheen and directed by David Twohy. Ben also liked that one.) Villeneuve did indeed direct Blade Runner 2049, the 2017 sequel to Ridley Scott’s Blade Runner (1982), and is currently writing and directing a new film adaptation of Frank Herbert’s novel Dune, due for release in 2020.It’s worth mentioning that there is another Star Trek captain who constantly puts himself on the line, potentially leaving his crew with no leader: the otherwise affable Jonathan Archer! Considering we’re both watching Enterprise at the moment, we don’t know how Ben missed that one.“Future Echoes” an episode of Red Dwarf where the crew break the light barrier and experience events that will occur in the future that can be seen in the present. Dyslexia is a difficulty with reading, thought to have a genetic and neurological cause, and affects as much as 7% of the world’s population, usually diagnosed while in school. It’s not treated medically, but through alternate teaching methods for those affected.In the future universe of Dune, sophisticated computers are outlawed, so complex calculations are performed by humans known as Mentats who are trained to think logically to efficiently process and analyse information. In David Lynch’s 1984 film version, Mentat Piter de Vries (played by Brad Dourif) chants: “It is by will alone I set my mind in motion. It is by the juice of sapho that thoughts acquire speed, the lips acquire stains, the stains become a warning. It is by will alone I set my mind in motion.“Sarek finally speaks to Spock (and holds fingers with Amanda) in the second season Star Trek episode Journey to Babel, which is set in 2268 – eleven years after the events of Light and Shadows. This is Sarek’s only appearance in the original series, though Mark Lenard would return in the role for Star Trek III: The Search for Spock, a brief appearance in Star Trek IV, and several episodes of Star Trek: The Next Generation. Hiding in an asteroid was made a “classic of the genre” by Han Solo when he used this trick to hide from an Imperial fleet in the 1983 Star Wars sequel The Empire Strikes Back. As you probably know, we do our “little recaps” at the start, not the end as Ben suggests. (Our lovely reviewer did not make the same mistake.)Props to redditor VistaVizion who spotted the cute labels on the shuttle controls; here’s the still on imgur.It turns out Spock’s number is from the original FASA Star Trek roleplaying game, where the coordinates of Talos IV were given as 7.49S 1.48E – galactic latitude and longitude coordinates, expressed in parsecs. That’s still kind of ridiculous, but we do love that the writing team are such nerds that they looked this up. (A parsec is a measurement of distance equal to about 3.26 light years.)A google search with exactly one search result is known as a “googlewhack“, and traditionally has to be made up of only two words. The term was coined by Gary Stock in 2002, but popularised by UK comedian Dave Gorman in his 2003 live show, Dave Gorman’s Googlewhack Adventure, in which he goes looking for a sequence of ten googlewhacks instead of writing a novel.The first Star Trek episode (discounting excellent pilot “The Cage“), in which everyone loses their inhibitions – including Sulu taking his shirt off, getting oiled up and running about the Enterprise with a fencing foil, and Spock struggling to control his emotions – is “The Naked Time”. It was more or less remade as “The Naked Now”, the second episode of Star Trek: The Next Generation, in which we first discover that Data is “fully functional”.The “rule of three” is that three is the minimum number of things you need to set up and then disrupt a pattern, a basic technique of comedy. (The “rule of threes”, which is what Ben says but doesn’t mean, is closer to what Amanda says – in the Planescape campaign setting for Dungeons & Dragons, the “rule of threes” is literally that everything comes in threes.)

    36 min
  5. If Memory Serves (S02E08)

    EPISODE 8

    If Memory Serves (S02E08)

    “If Memory Serves” makes television history by creating the longest arc between two aired television episodes, spanning 53 years. Three years after the events of the “The Cage”, Star Trek’s original pilot, Captain Pike is brought back to Talos IV and his love interest Vina, and casting a shadow over Pike’s future. Spock has brought Michael to Talos IV as he knows the Talosians – with her help – can bring his mind back into a linear experience of time. Team re:Discovery discuss memories of “our” Melissa George, parallels with Doctor Who and the new Hulu show PEN15. How’s this related to Star Trek? You’ll have to listen to find out! Connect with us and let us know your thoughts via Twitter, Facebook or our website. A transcript of this episode is available. Doctor Who has used archive footage from much earlier in its history for a “previously on” style recap twice: once in the twentieth anniversary special The Five Doctors (1983), which used footage of William Hartnell from The Dalek Invasion of Earth (1964), and then again in Peter Capaldi’s final story, “Twice Upon a Time” (2017), which used footage from William Hartnell’s final story, The Tenth Planet (1966), blending it into footage of a new actor, David Bradley, who played the character in that episode. The fiftieth anniversary special “The Day of the Doctor” (2013) uses part of the series’ original 1963 intro sequence, but no footage of previous events, though clips from various earlier stories were used in the preceding episode “The Name of the Doctor“.According to the original series episode “The Devil in the Dark”, touch is not strictly necessary for a mind meld, but does make it more effective.We had a note about Buffy Summers’ death and resurrection in our recap for “The Sounds of Thunder”.In Kurt Vonnegut’s most well-known novel, Slaughterhouse-Five, protagonist Billy Pilgrim becomes “unstuck in time”, experiencing his life out of sequence.Hulu’s PEN15 is a comedy series created by and starring Maya Erskine and Anna Konkle playing themselves as teenagers. Strangers with Candy (1999) was a Comedy Central series created by Amy Sedaris, Stephen Colbert and a couple of their comedy mates. It stars Sedaris as Jerri Blank, a high school dropout who has led a life of crime, who goes back to school at the age of 46. It was followed by a prequel film in 2005. Tim Russ is best known as the Vulcan Commander Tuvok, Janeway’s loyal friend and tactical officer aboard the USS Voyager. Among many other projects, he has appeared in Renegades, originally a Star Trek fan spin-off before having all the serial numbers filed off. He appears as Tuvok in the original fan film, and as another Vulcan-like character, Commander Kovok, in the ongoing web series. Both also feature the original Chekov, Walter Koenig.Melissa George’s credits include Charmed, Alias, Grey’s Anatomy, The Good Wife and both the Australian and American television adaptations of Christos Tsolkas’ novel The Slap.Home and Away (1988) and Neighbours (1985) are Australia’s two biggest soap operas. Home and Away is set in the fictional New South Wales coastal town of Summer Bay, and often has scenes on the beach. Neighbours is set in Erinsborough, a fictional suburb of Melbourne, Victoria’s capital city. There’s a sort of unofficial rivalry between the two, no doubt fuelled by the traditional rivalry between Sydney and Melbourne. Both are popular in the UK.You can learn all about Steven Soderbergh’s 1999 film The Limey in episode four of Carla’s other podcast, Club Soderbergh.Originally Australian regional areas were serviced by two television stations: the national broadcaster (the ABC), and a local commercial station (like Northern Rivers Television). Then the federal government introduced a program of aggregation (or deregulation, as Ben called it), which allowed the three major networks – Seven, Nine and Ten – to expand their signals into country areas, and for more distant local commercial stations to broadcast into each other’s regions. This led to the affiliation (and in many cases acquisition and rebranding) of each smaller station to one of the major networks, and subsequently the loss of most local content. This 1994 report from the last instalment of SCN local news in Victoria summarises the process and concerns of the time.Sophie’s Choice is a novel by American author William Styron, in which the protagonist reveals that she was forced by Nazis to choose which of her two children would be killed. It’s since become a euphemism for an impossible decision.Dark City (1998) is a sci-fi neo-noir film by Australian director Alex Proyas, following his break out hit The Crow. It stars Rufus Sewell, Kiefer Sutherland, Jennifer Connelly and William Hurt, and also features Melissa George, Richard O’Brien (of Rocky Horror fame), Ian Richardson and Australian icons Bruce Spence, Colin Friels and David Wenham.Though Susan Oliver is still best remembered for playing Vina in the original series of Star Trek, she led an extraordinary life, as chronicled in the 2014 documentary The Green Girl. (The documentary takes its name from the fact that she was the first to wear the green makeup of an “Orion animal woman”, albeit as an alternate version of Vina in a Talosian fantasy for Pike.)

    35 min
5
out of 5
4 Ratings

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A Star Trek Discovery podcast.