It's time to go Star Trekking as we continue our season by season look at Star Trek: The Next Generation.
We're up to season 6 now and I will concede that TNG is feeling a bit... tired, I guess?
There is some experimentation that should feel invigorating but just feel like desperate attempts to keep things at least a little bit interesting.
I suppose the big thing to happen in this 6th year of the Next Generation was an expansion of the franchise, a 2nd Stat Trek series.
Star Trek: Deep Space Nine debuts midway through TNG's 6th season so resources were spread a bit thin.
Miles and Keiko O'Brien would disembark from the Enterprise to take up residence on the space station home of the new series.
Reviewing the 6th season for this week's spotlight episode, I had some interesting ones to choose from.
"Relics" gives us a crossover with original Star Trek as James Doohan reprises his role as Capt. Montgomery Scott. Aye but his friends call him Scotty. And we get a scene of Capt. Picard with Scotty on the TOS Enterprise bridge. Total fanboy geek out!
"Rascals" is a strange but fun tale that de-ages Guiban, Ro, Keiko and Picard into pre-adolescents.
"A Fistful of Datas" is a western pastiche with Worf and his son Alexander as a sheriff and his deputy against a bunch of bad guys... who all look like Data. It's dumb fun but it has it's charms.
"Face of the Enemy" provides a challenging role for Deanna Troi as an undercover spy on a Romulan ship.
"Tapestry" features a greviously injured Picard encountering Q in the afterlife. Q has an offer for a second chance at life.
"Starship Mine" puts in Picard in solo action hero mode to stop a group of mercencaries with nefarious plans for the Enterprise.
"Timescape" is a timey wimey adventure with the Enterprise frozen in time mere seconds before blowing up. Unless Picard, Data, Geordi and Deanna can do something about it.
But the episode I selected for today's post is "Ship In A Bottle" which first aired on January 23, 1993. Written by René Echevarria (one of TNG bettter writers) and directed by Alexander Singer, this episode serves a sequel to a classic 2nd season story.
Our adventure begins on the holodeck where Data and Geordi LaForge are in Victorian era garb as Sherlock Holmes and Dr. Watson, accompanied by a gentleman who looks like Terry Jones from Monty Python.
Holmes is expounding on his clever deduction that has exposed the gentleman as a murderer.
DATA: it was then that I began to suspect that your brother did not die by his own hand. That he was, in fact, murdered.
GENTLEMAN: Murdered? Huh. Good Lord!
LAFORGE: But, Holmes! The vial of poison found in his hand.
DATA: That was the first clue, Watson. The vial contained strychnine, which as you well know induces violent muscular spasms. It is difficult to imagine that someone in the throes of so gruesome a death could have held on to so delicate a container without shattering it.
Man, you just know Brent Spiner is having a ball channeling Basil Rathbone as Sherlock Holmes.
LAFORGE: You don't mean?
DATA: Exactly! The vial was placed in his hand after he died.
LAFORGE: Then what was the cause of death?
DATA: The cigar, of course.
GENTLEMAN: Cigar?
DATA: Upon closer inspection of the room where your brother was found, I discovered a fresh burn mark on the carpet. Further analysis of the ash revealed that the cigar was laced with strychnine.
GENTLEMAN: This is utter nonsense. What about the suicide note? It was written in my dear brother's own hand.
DATA: With practice, handwriting can be forged. It takes a trained eye to notice certain discrepancies. For example, whether someone is right or left handed!
(Data throws a box of matches to the gentleman, who catches it in his right hand.)
DATA: Your brother was right handed! The alleged suicide note was written by a left handed individual such as yourself!
LAFORGE: Er, Data, it's in his right hand.
DATA: Curious. There seems to be a problem in the holodeck's spatial orientation systems.
LAFORGE: Freeze programme. La Forge to Barclay.
Data and LaForge cosplaying as Holmes and Watson was introduced in the 2nd season episode "Elementary, Dear Data".
That title was a play on Holmes saying "Elementary, my dear Watson."
FUN FACT: Holmes never said "Elementary, my dear Watson."
The technician LaForge summons to the Holodeck is Lt. Reginald Barclay. Played by Dwight Schultz (Mad Murdoch in The A-Team), Barclay was introduced in the 3rd season tale "Hollow Pursuits". Barclay is a brilliant engineer but is lacking in social skills even more than Geordi LaForge.
Making one of his appearances as a recurring character. Barclay arrives at the holodeck and gets to work.
Barclay pulls a panel from the arch wall.
BARCLAY: Computer, run a diagnostic on all Sherlock Holmes files. Display any anomalous programming sequences.
COMPUTER: Diagnostic complete. All files conform to specified parameters, except those contained in protected memory.
BARCLAY: Protected memory? Display those sequences. Computer unlock this sequence and run the programme.
A black garbed figure with an imperial bearing materializes.
BARCLAY: Who are you?
MORIARTY: Professor James Moriarty.
BARCLAY: Moriarty. Oh, that's Sherlock Holmes' arch enemy. Are you left or right handed?
MORIARTY: Left handed, Would you very much mind telling me
(Barclay throws a tool towards Moriarty who catches it with his left hand)
BARCLAY: No problem there.
MORIARTY: Where is Captain Picard? Is he still Captain of this vessel?
BARCLAY: How would? How do you know the Captain?
How indeed! Back in "Elementary Dear Data"....
You know what, I'll just let Moriarity explain himself
MORIARTY: A holodeck character? A fictional man? Yes, yes I know all about your marvellous inventions. I was created as a plaything so that your Commander Data could masquerade as Sherlock Holmes. But they made me too well and I became more than a character in a story. I became self-aware. I am alive.
BARCLAY: That's not possible.
MORIARTY: But here I am. Tell me, has a way been found to allow me to leave the confines of this holodeck world?
BARCLAY: Leave the holodeck? No, of course not. You can only exist in here.
MORIARTY: Damn you, Picard. He promised me something would be done. I should have realised he would have said anything to get me to release my hostage.
BARCLAY: Hostage?
That was Dr. Pulaski by the way.
MORIARTY: How long have I been locked away?
BARCLAY: Well, it l ooks like about four years.
MORIARTY: It seemed longer.
BARCLAY: What are you talking about? You can't possibly have been aware of the passage of time.
MORIARTY: But I was. Brief, terrifying periods of consciousness. Disembodied. Without substance.
Let me take a moment to talk about Moriarty. He is played by Daniel Davis who was the very British butler Niles on The Nanny. Don't let the impeccable English accent fool you. Daniel Davis was born in Arkansas.
MORIARTY: I'd like to talk to Picard.
BARCLAY: Well, I can ask.
MORIARTY: Ask him to meet me in the sitting room at Baker Street. That would be far more appropriate.
BARCLAY: I'll have to store you in memory again until I get an answer.
Barclay pulls out a chip and puts the cover back.
Moriarty vanishes.
Barclay leaves.
Moriarty reappears with a sly smile.
While this mystery is unfolding on the holodeck, there's some science shit that needs to be dealt with.
The Enterprise has arrived at the Detrian system to observe the collision of two planets.
That's pretty cool, huh?
In engineering...
DATA: Since both planets are gas giants, neither possesses a solid surface. Their atmospheres, however, will come into contact in approximately seventeen hours nine minutes.
LAFORGE: If their collision causes a self-sustaining fusion reaction, this is what we are likely to see. The birth of a new star. The Enterprise will hold position until the gravitational instability subsides and we can get in for a closer look. Now I want triple redundancy on all of the sensor arrays. We'll probably never get another chance to see something like this. I don't want to miss anything. Okay?
Damn! That's a lot of exposition.
LeVar Burton has sticky notes on the inside of his Geordi visor.
No, he doesn't.
(Barclay enters.)
BARCLAY: Commander, you'll never believe what happened while I was working on your programme in the holodeck. Professor Moriarty appeared, out of nowhere.
LAFORGE: What?
BARCLAY: And he wants to talk to the Captain.
So Captain Picard arrives at the Baker Street sitting room and explains to Moriarity that many efforts were made by the Enterprise crew as well as experts at Starfleet HQ and no one could figure out how to make a hologram exists outside the holodeck.
We're gonna take his word on this as NONE of this has ever been broached onscreen.
Moriarty is NOT taking him at this word, assuming he had been forgotten.
PICARD: Professor, I am concerned to learn that you experienced the passage of time while you were stored in the computer memory. I can assure you, we had no idea that that would be the case.
MORIARTY: Enough of this. I no longer believe anything you say.
PICARD: Professor, I understand your frustration.
MORIARTY: Do you really? When this is over, you will walk out of this room to the real world and your own concerns, and leave me here trapped in a world I know to be nothing but illusion. I cannot bear that. I must leave.
PICARD: That is not possible. You cannot exist outside this room.
MORIARTY: Are you certain of that?
PICARD: Computer, exit.
(the door opens onto the corridor)
PICARD: Although an object appears solid on the holodeck, in the real world they have no substance.
(Picard throws out a book. It vanishes)
MORIARTY: An object has no life. I do.
PICARD: Professor, you are a computer simulation.
MORIARTY: I have consciousness. Conscious beings have will. The mind endows them with powers that are not necessarily understood, even by you. If my will is strong enough, perhaps I can exist outside this room. Perhaps I can walk into your world right now.
PICARD: Professor, I ask you to believe me. If you step out of that door, you will cease to exist.
MORIARTY: If I am nothing more than a computer simulation, then very little will have been lost. But if I am right? Mind over matter. Cogito ergo sum.
(Moriarty walks out into the corridor, and does not disappear)
MORIARTY: I think therefore I am.
So that's a big ol' "fuck you" from Moriarty to Picard.
How did he do that?
Well, that's a puzzler.
CRUSHER: As far as I can tell, he's real. He's human.
MORIARTY: What else would I be, dear lady?
CRUSHER: His DNA is a little unusual, but all the major systems are there and functioning normally.
LAFORGE: As far as I can tell there's no evidence that his molecules are losing any cohesion. They seem to be as immutable as ordinary matter.
PICARD: Well, Professor, my crew will continue to investigate, but for now it would seem you have accomplished a miracle. The question is, now that you're here, what do we do with you?
MORIARTY: I ask only that I be allowed to explore this new world. Your vessel, for instance. What sea does she sail? Might we go above deck? Weather permitting, of course.
PICARD: Professor, I think there are some things of which you should be made aware.
Really? Moriarty doesn't know he's in space?
In "Elementary, Dear Data", Moriarty was able to suss out the design and layout of the Enterprise. He was programmed to be smart enough to defeat Data.
And he doesn't know he's in space?
Sitting in Ten-Forward with Picard, looking at the stars, Moriarty contemplates this vast universe laid out before him and what his future might hold.
MORIARTY: In considering all these vast possibilities, I suddenly feel very much alone. I am a man out of time, Captain, and that isolates me. You have been more gracious than I could ever have imagined, I wonder, may I impose on your generosity once again? There is a woman, the Countess Regina Bartholomew. She was created as a holodeck character for one of Commander Data's programs. She was designed to be the love of my life. Could she also be brought off the holodeck?
OK, that's a big ask of the guys who have NO idea how the hell HE walked off the holodeck.
Hey, what about those colliding planets?
The Enterprise is approaching the planets while on the bridge...
PICARD: Mister Worf, launch four Class A probes toward the planets.
WORF: Aye, sir.
(Nothing happens.)
PICARD: Mister Worf?
WORF: I don't understand.
It's alright, Worf. You know, you get older, perhaps you're tired and the mood just isn't right and your Class A probe won't launch. We've all been there, dude.
Well, not me. My Class A probe works just fine.
Back on the Enterprise bridge...
The consoles go dark then flicker on and off.
WORF: Controls are not responding.
DATA: Command functions are being rerouted, sir.
PICARD: For what reason?
DATA: Unknown, sir.
PICARD: Computer, route all command functions to the Bridge.
COMPUTER: Command functions are offline.
PICARD: Reinitialise them on my authorisation.
COMPUTER: Authorisation denied.
PICARD: Explain.
COMPUTER: Picard command codes are no longer valid.
PICARD: What's happening? Who's transferred the voice authorisation?
MORIARTY (entering): I have. I'm afraid I had no choice but to take control of your vessel.
PICARD: Professor, this situation is more serious than you realise. In less than five hours, those two planets will collide and a new star will form. Unless we move to a safe distance, this vessel will be destroyed.
You know there's nothing like a little threat of total annihilation to focus the mind.
Data and Barclay get to work on solving the unsolvable: transporting a holographic thing to the real world.
Barclay goes to the holodeck with transport enhancers, activates the Holmes program and is greeted by a new visitor.
Welcome special guest star Stephanie Beachum (from Seaquest DSV) as the Countess Regina Bartholomew.
Barclay is puttering about with the enhancers and a holographic chair while the Countess expresses curiosity about what is going on.
Barclay would like to forego all the technobabble but...
COUNTESS: Are you suggesting that it's beyond my comprehension?
BARCLAY: It's really very simple. I need to enhance the molecular pattern of this chair so that the transporter can get a better lock on the signal.
COUNTESS: This has to do with taking James and me into the real world.
BARCLAY: You, you, you know about that? You understand about the real world?
COUNTESS: James has explained it to me. It sounds like a grand adventure. There's nothing I love more than voyaging in the unknown. Have you ever been to Africa, Mister....?
BARCLAY: Er, Barclay. Lieutenant Reginald Barclay. No, no, I haven't.
COUNTESS: I have. When I was seventeen I went on safari with my uncle. My mother took to her bed in terror I'd be bitten by tsetse fly, but I had a marvellous time. I got to wear trousers the whole time. It was hard to go back to a corset, I can tell you.
BARCLAY: Yes, I'm sure it was.
COUNTESS: After that, I never stopped travelling. I couldn't bear to be stuck in one place for very long. So you see I'm so looking forward to this new experience. My. Travelling the stars.
BARCLAY: You know about that? You know where we are? Countess, forgive me, but you just don't sound like a holodeck character.
MORIARTY: That's because she isn't.
COUNTESS: James!
(Moriarty and the Countess kiss passionately)
MORIARTY: If you loved a woman like this, Lieutenant, would you be content to let her remain a simulation?
BARCLAY: You, you gave her consciousness?
MORIARTY: Yes, just as it was given to me.
BARCLAY: Well I'm not so sure that's a good idea.
MORIARTY: Nonsense. It was the only thing to do.
BARCLAY: Have you tried to take her off the holodeck yet?
MORIARTY: No. I am unwilling to risk the Countess' safety. I want to make sure nothing will happen to her.
COUNTESS: We may be closer to freedom than you think, James. These devices will enhance our molecular patterns. They'll help take us into the real world.
MORIARTY: Oh, please, proceed.
The experiment to transport a chair from the holodeck doesn't work and something occurs to Data.
Meanwhile in Engineering....
PICARD: You wanted to see me?
LAFORGE: Yes, Captain. I think I've found a way to reinstate your vocal authorisations. Give it a try.
PICARD: Computer, route all command functions to this location.
COMPUTER: Command functions are offline.
PICARD: Reinitialise them on my authorisation.
COMPUTER: Please input command codes.
PICARD: Picard, epsilon seven nine three.
COMPUTER: Command codes verified.
LAFORGE: That's it. That should do it. Wait a minute. It didn't work. The computer won't release the command pathways.
DATA: Geordi.
(Data throws a small device to La Forge, who catches it in his left hand)
LAFORGE: Why did you do that, Data?
Because Geordi is right handed and... uh oh!
Data drops the bomb on Picard.
DATA: Captain, I have determined how Moriarty was able to leave the holodeck. He never did. Neither did we. None of this is real. It is a simulation. We are still on the holodeck.
KA-BOOM! Mind blown!
PICARD: Mister Data, who is real here?
DATA: You and I are real, sir, as is Lieutenant Barclay. We entered the holodeck together when we first went to see Moriarty.
PICARD: And from that point we have been existing in a holodeck simulation created by Professor Moriarty?
DATA: I believe that is the case, sir.
PICARD: I have just given the computer my command codes, thinking I would get control of the ship.
DATA: You may have inadvertently given Professor Moriarty the means of gaining control of the real Enterprise.
Yeah, about that....
Meanwhile on the bridge...
RIKER: Where is Captain Picard? What have you done with Lieutenant Barclay and Commander Data?
MORIARTY [on viewscreen]: They're safe, for now.
RIKER: Release control of this ship.
MORIARTY [on viewscreen]: I'm afraid I can't do that.
RIKER: What do you want?
MORIARTY [on viewscreen]: I only want what you have the luxury of taking for granted. Freedom. I want to leave this holodeck.
RIKER: I think you know that's impossible.
MORIARTY [on viewscreen]: Your crewmates here in my little ship in a bottle, seem a bit more optimistic.
RIKER: Oh?
MORIARTY [on viewscreen]: They attempted to use your transporter device to remove a simulated object from the holodeck.
LAFORGE: If they tried it, they must have thought they were on to something.
MORIARTY [on viewscreen]: Their attempt was futile because their transporter was a facsimile. I expect more from you.
LAFORGE: Just because our transporter is real doesn't mean it's going to work.
MORIARTY [on viewscreen]: I sense a distressing lack of enthusiasm on your parts.
WORF: Sir, warp core temperature is rising. Approaching critical levels.
MORIARTY [on viewscreen]: I have nothing to lose, Commander.
RIKER: Mister La Forge, start working on the problem.
By the warp core cools back down.
Picard returns to Baker Street to have a little chat with the Countess.
Distinguished British ACTOR person in a scene with another distinguished Bristish ACTOR person? We're in for some good stuff now!
PICARD: What does a woman like you see in a man like Moriarty?
COUNTESS: He's an exciting man, Captain. He's brilliant, incisive, he's ruthless. He has an almost irresistible appeal.
PICARD: He's also an arch-criminal.
COUNTESS: Only because he was written like that. I see him entirely differently, Captain, he is not a villain.
PICARD: So it's your desire to leave the holodeck to be with him.
COUNTESS: More than anything. Can you help us?
PICARD: Yes, I can. We have learned that if we uncouple the transporter's Heisenberg Compensators and allow them to re-scramble randomly, we can beam a holodeck object or a person off the grid with all of the cohesion of conventional matter.
COUNTESS: Oh! Oh, that's splendid. I must tell James.
PICARD: No, please. Wait. I have brought you this information because I think you are someone who will listen to a reasonable proposition. Someone whose mind is open to compromise.
COUNTESS: Yes?
PICARD: My ship is in danger. It is imperative that I regain navigational control. I want you to persuade Professor Moriarty to return the voice command to me, or I will not modify the transporter.
COUNTESS: I see.
PICARD: Now, once I have regained voice command, I will transport you from the holodeck.
COUNTESS: Forgive me, Captain, but that does sound more like a threat than a compromise.
PICARD: Countess, you must understand that I am responsible for more than one thousand lives.
COUNTESS: I will do what I can.
What she can do is tattle to Moriarty.
MORIARTY: Think, my dear. You're certain he said they had to uncouple the Heisenberg compensators?
COUNTESS: Yes, James, I'm quite certain. But he won't do it unless you return control of the ship to him.
MORIARTY: I have them running around like rats in a maze.
COUNTESS: What harm would there be in accepting his proposition?
MORIARTY: My dear, you are as brilliant as you are beautiful. Nonetheless, there are things you do not understand. Now, please, you must let me handle this. Computer, arch. Moriarty to Commander Riker.
RIKER [OC]: Riker here.
MORIARTY: Commander Riker, a pleasure as always.
RIKER [on monitor]: I don't have time for games, Moriarty. This ship is falling into a gravity well. It'll be destroyed within twenty five minutes, holodeck and all.
MORIARTY: Then I'm sure you'll be motivated to listen to me very, very carefully. I want to talk to you about uncoupling the Heisenberg compensators.
We turn to the transporter room where Moriarty and the Countess materialize.
RIKER: Welcome aboard.
MORIARTY: May I present Regina, the Countess Bartholomew.
RIKER: Countess.
COUNTESS: Commander.
RIKER: You'll forgive me if I skip the formalities given the circumstances.
MORIARTY: Ah, yes. I expect you want me to relinquish my hold on your vessel.
RIKER: Please.
MORIARTY: I'm afraid that won't be possible just yet.
RIKER: We had an agreement.
MORIARTY: And I intend to honour it. I have no desire to see your vessel destroyed. Just give me one of your shuttlecraft, and allow us to leave in peace.
RIKER: We don't have time for this. You release the command codes and we'll talk.
MORIARTY: I will not release your vessel until I am looking at it through a shuttlecraft window.
So a shuttlecraft exits the Enterprise into the diamond studded taspetry of space.
COUNTESS: This is so beautiful.
MORIARTY: Indeed, my dear. It is a wondrous sight. The first of many we are sure to encounter in our travels. Computer, interface with the central computer on the Enterprise.
COMPUTER: Interface complete.
MORIARTY: Release command function lockouts. Authorisation Moriarty, alpha two four one five nine.
COUNTESS: James?
MORIARTY: Yes, my love?
COUNTESS: Can we go back to Earth some day?
MORIARTY: Of course, my dear. Of course.
Back in the Enterprise shuttlebay...
Hey, what's Picard doing there?
PICARD: Computer. Store programme Picard delta one in active memory and discontinue simulation.
(the shuttlebay disappears)
WAIT! What the what?
Everyone gathers in the observation lounge with a cube shaped thingy on the table.
Hey, lay some plot exposition on me!
PICARD: We managed to programme the holodeck inside the holodeck, and use the same ruse that Moriarty used on us.
DATA: When he was attempting to contact the real Bridge, he was in fact speaking to a simulation.
TROI: You mean he never knew he hadn't left the holodeck?
PICARD: In fact, the programme is continuing even now inside that cube.
CRUSHER: A miniature holodeck?
DATA: In a way, Doctor. However, there is no physicality. The programme is continuous but only within the computer's circuitry.
BARCLAY: As far as Moriarty and the Countess know, they're half way to Meles Two by now. This enhancement module contains enough active memory to provide them experiences for a lifetime.
PICARD: They will live their lives and never know any difference.
TROI: In a sense, you did give Moriarty what he wanted.
PICARD: In a sense. But who knows? Our reality may be very much like theirs. All this might be just be an elaborate simulation running inside a little device sitting on someone's table. Well, we have a newborn star to study. Mister Barclay, you will keep that safe?
BARCLAY: Aye, sir.
(everyone else leaves. Barclay looks around him nervously.)
BARCLAY: Computer, end programme.
(Barclay is relieved when nothing happens.)
And we are done!
Gotta love Picard's meta reference of "All this might be just be an elaborate simulation running inside a little device sitting on someone's table." Because it is and it's called Star Trek: The Next Generation.
Both Andrea and I will cop to trying this in times when too much seems to be going wrong at one time: "Computer, end programme."
It hasn't worked.... so far.
The long time frame between appearances for Moriarty was apparently due to the estate of Sir Arthur Conan Doyle threatening to sue Paramount for monkeying around with their Sherlock Holmes IP. Paramount settled the matter by agreeing to cancel Stephen Colbert's talk show. (Oops! 21st century bitterness bleeding into 1993. Sorry 'bout that.)
I've seen conflicting stories about what happened next. Some say a deal was reached with the estate and others have said the studio realized the estate did not have a case.
One way or another we got "Ship In a Bottle".
I've always enjoyed "Ship In a Bottle" with it's twisty "what is real" plot and splendid performances from Daniel Davis and Stephanie Beacham.
I'm not the only one with a positive assessment of the episode.
- "Ship in a Bottle" was ranked the 21st of the 100 top episodes of all Star Trek by The Hollywood Reporter in 2016.
- In 2011, this episode was noted by Forbes as one of the top ten episodes of the franchise that explores the implications of advanced technology.
- In 2016, TIME magazine ranked Moriarty as the 5th best villain character of the Star Trek franchise.
- In 2012, Wired said this one of the best episodes of Star Trek: The Next Generation.
- In 2019, CBR ranked it as the third best holodeck-themed episode of all Star Trek franchise episodes up to that time.
When Moriarity proclaims "Cogito ergo sum", this is Latin for “I think, therefore I am”, a statement made by the French philosopher René Descartes (1596–1650).
Descartes' analysis has become a foundation of modern philosophy.
It shifts focus to the mind and consciousness as the starting point of knowledge.
It shows that self-awareness is undeniable proof of existence.
"I think therefore I am" is also a philosophy that is full of holes but that is a debate for more seasoned philosophers.
Moriarty may think therefore he am but he am also still a computer program running inside a little device sitting on someone's table.
The subject of holograms gaining self-awareness and sentience will become relevant in Star Trek: Voyager when the Doctor, the EMH (Emergency Medical Hologram), is brought online... and has to keep running.
The Doctor and other holographic life forms are integral to Star Trek: Starfleet Academy.
Daniel Davis returns for a brief cameo as a version of Moriarty in the 3rd season of Star Trek: Picard.
No reference is made to the Moriarty cube again. I hope it survived the crash of the Enterprise-E in Star Trek: Generations.
Dwight Schultz has a cameo as Barclay in Star Trek: First Contact and has a recurring role in latter seasons of Star Trek: Voyager as an Alpha quadrant specialist working to recover Voyager from the Delta quadrant.
It is possible Moriarty and the Countess are still having adventures in their cube on a table in Barclay's breakfast nook.
_______________________________
Once again, thanks to Chrissie's Transcripts Site for helping me compose these posts.
Next week I'm gonna uncouple the Heisenberg Compensators for a break from our season by season look at Star Trek: The Next Generation.
But we're back in two weeks for the 7th and final season as the spotlight falls on an episode that I 99% enjoy.
And the 1% that royally pisses me off!

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