Tuesday, May 19, 2026

Tuesday TV Touchbase Too: Jeopardy Times Three!

 What? A second Tuesday TV Touchbase in one day?!?!

Well, I do watch a lot of TV.

Which includes perhaps too much Jeopardy?

On with the Touchbase Too!


Last week was a plethora of Jeopardy options for Andrea and I.

On the regular show, contestant Tristan Williams is on a bit of a run with 9 games and  $188,000 in cash won as of  last night. 

Tristan is a nice guy but his appearance seems almost computer generated.  I described his head as early 1990's Pixar.

Well, I'm not the only one to compare him to Pixar animation.

Jeopardy! fans took to social media to put side-by-side photos of the Jeopardy champion and a certain Pixar character. 

“Do you actually see Woody from Toy Story in Tristan??” a Facebook user wrote. Many fans agreed with the poster.


Tristan is aware of the comparison and is cool with it.  "
I had heard once or twice before that I kind of looked like Woody from Toy Story, and then the internet caught it, it spread like wildfire, and it’s so fun!" 

Meanwhile, last week was the start of season 2 of Pop Culture Jeopardy.   Colin Jost (SNL star and Andrea's not so secret boyfriend) is still the host but a lot of other things have changed.

The venue has changed from Amazon Prime to Netflix.  There are no scheduled ad breaks. Once an episode starts, it does not stop until the end.

Instead of the admittedly unwieldy teams of 3, the contestants are in pairs.  

The winning contestant can advance to the next game with an old school limit of up to 5 games.  

I spend a lot of time with Pop Culture Jeopardy going "I didn't understand a word of that" for certain clues and contestant responses. I'm just not up on my rap music and social media influencers.  

Colin has a looser vibe than Ken Jennings. Colin is free to mock the contestants who in turn feel free to mock him right back. Colin's ownership of the Staten Island Ferry remains fodder for comedic commentary. 

And if that wasn't enough Jeopardy, ABC ran the last 4 episodes of Celebrity Jeopardy All Stars over 4 days in a row.

Congratulations to ESPN sportscaster Mina Kimes on winning the tournament, beating out Ike Barinholtz and Steven Weber.


Kimes won $1 million for the SELAH Neighborhood Homeless Coalition in Los Angeles.

In describing their charities to Ken, a lot of the celebrities had a constant refrain: programs designed to provide housing, food, health services and other things to help people were struggling due to government funding cuts and could really use whatever money they could win on Jeopardy to help them out.

Thanks to Kimes' fast work on the buzzer and her knowing a lot of shit, there's $1 million to help the homeless of Los Angeles.

More Ken Jennings?:  Click here for this past weekend's edition of NPR's Wait! Wait! Don't Tell Me! with Ken Jennings as the celebrity guest and he plays Not My Job with questions about H&R Block.

More Game Show News:  On Wheel of Fortune,  Jason Nieradka won $78,000 PLUS a brand new Corvette. Jason lives in Kernersville NC which is about 10 minutes up the road from our home here at the Fortress of Ineptitude.  

TV Stuff That Is Not A Game Show: Andrea and I recently finished season 2 of Leverage.  We've got 3 more seasons of that series then 3 more of it's reboot Leverage: Redemption.  The series features a team of con artists who pull jobs to help people who have been screwed by big business, the governments and unscrupulous millionaires. It's revenge porn for people who want to see the rich and powerful pay for their transgressions instead of getting tax breaks and pardons. 

We're gonna have to wait until Januay 2027 to find out what happens to Nick Wagner who was last seen bleeding out in Morgan Guillory's arms in the season 2 finale of High Potential. ABC announced the 3rd season is being held back as mid-season entry in their schedule.  

For now, that is that for this Tuesday TV Touchbase Too.

Next week, the series finale for The Boys.  

I do not anticipate the same reaction I had to the series finale for Outlander.  

Unless they kill off Hughie.  Those fuckers better NOT kill off Hughie!

AND there will be another Tuesday TV Touchbase Too as we bid farewell to The Late Show With Stephen Colbert.  

Until next time, remember to be good to one another and try to keep it down in there, would ya? I'm trying to watch TV over here.   


Tuesday TV Touchbase: Outlander

Today's Tuesday TV Touchbase is a solemn one.

We mark the end of Outlander.

Spoiler Alert: I will discuss the ending of the last episode.

If you've seen the episode or do not care about the series but you are amused by watching me suffer through an emotional breakdown, well...

As it says on the title of this blog, I am so glad my suffering amuses you.

So read on if you dare.  And be amused by my suffering. 


So I watched the series finale of Outlander and...

And...

And...

<gulp!>

I'm gonna need a minute.  Sorry! 


Let's try that again.

So I watched the series finale of Outlander and...

And...

<sob>

I'm NOT crying! You're crying!  

No, you shut up!!

Damn it! 


One more time! 

So I watched the series finale of Outlander and...

And...

C'mon, Dave-El!  Hold it together!  

You are an American 100% all MAN! 

Who also happened to watch Outlander

And it's over and I...

And I...

....

And I am going to write this blog post, damn it! 

I watched the series finale of Outlander and...

Well, Jamie Fraser died! 

But then...

Well, it's complicated.  

I actually came late to the Outlander party.  

I started watching in the middle of season 2.  Jamie and Claire are in France.  Claire's pregnancy ends in tragedy with her baby daughter Faith stillborn (we find out at the start of season 10 that no, Faith did not die) and Claire herself bleeding internally and beyond the reach of 18th century medicine.  

But the mysterious Master Raymond heals her with a strange and ethereal blue light. We never learn who Master Raymond is although I suspect he's a fellow time traveller.  

We see in season 10 that Claire herself seems to possess this healing blue light as she saves a stillborn child on Fraser's Ridge.

All of this is relevant.

Brianna along with Roger and the kids have travelled back from the 20th century to rejoin her parents in the 18th century.  Brianna has brought a history book written by her 20th century "father", Frank Randall.  

A book that tells of the Revolutionary War battle on King's Mountain in North Carolina.   

Where Jamie Fraser will die.

The last episode of the series brings us to that fateful day. 

General Ferguson has brought his British troops to the mountain. Jamie leads his militia from Fraser's Ridge to join other Patriots who will fight there. 

Claire has accompanied Jamie and his militia to provide medical assistance. And re-write history if she can.

The battle is brutal, fierce and bloody.  Bullets whizzing about, swords and bayonets flashing through the smoke and the cries of the wounded.  

But just as Claire fears time is running out and Jamie will not escape, there is a lull in the din of battle.

A lull broken by calls of "I give up" and "I surrrender". The British are surrendering.  The battle is over. 

And Jamie Fraser has survived. 

Yay! 

Screw you, Frank Randall! You and your book were wrong!

I point and laugh at historians!  

Except...

With his forces in disarray and capitulating to the victorious Patriots, a bloodied and beaten  General Ferguson pulls out a gun and shoots Jamie in the chest.

This was not in battle. The battle was over. This was a cowardly act of murder.  

All of Jamie's men step up to take turns shooting Ferguson. Ian McMurray puts a goddam hatchet in him. 

Meanwhile, Claire runs up screaming and sobbing, taking Jamie up in her arms begging him not to die.

Jamie whispers "Forgive me, Sassenach" and dies.

Damn it! 

One by one, the soldiers all leave and it's just Claire cradling Jamie's body in her arms as she whimpers "He just needs to rest."

Day turns into night and Claire will not let go of Jamie.    

Roger McKenzie returns the next day to find Claire still holding on to Jamie.  Sorrowfully, he says that Jamie is gone and he needs to be taken home to the ridge to be buried.

Claire still refuses to let go. 

As the camera pulls up from Claire holding Jamie (Wait! Was that...? Did I see...?) we get a flashback...

Flash forward?!

Wibby wobby timey wimey.

We go to episode 1 of season 1 and it's the ghost of Jamie Fraser watching Claire from a distance in 1945.  

Who the what how when now? 

And then we get a montage of every emotional moment between Jamie and Claire over the course of 10 seasons.

And then....

We're back on the top of King's Mountain.

Claire's hair is completely white.  She opens her eyes.

Jamie opens his eyes and breathes and...

Fade to black.

Show's over?!?!

God damn it! REALLY?!?! Is that where we're going to end this?!?!? REALLY?!?!?!

Damn it! 

Damn it! 

Damn it! 

I HATE THIS SHOW!! Whose stupid idea was it for me to watch this show?!?!

Oh yeah, it was mine.

But it's not quite the end.  

After the closng credits, we open on a book store in the 21st century.  Signing copies of her Outlander books is Diana Galbadon.  On the table next to her is an old journal.

A fan asks Diana about it and she replies, "It's wee bit of inspiration."

It's Claire Fraser's journal!

Oh, my mind is blown!  

Like I said, I came late to the Outlander party, starting mid-way through season 2. (I did go back to catch up on season 1 later.) The Doctor Who nerd in me came for the time travel but I stayed for the drama. And oh my God, was there so much drama. 

I really got caught up in this world of passion, peril, political intrigue, love, sex, death, war and some people just being fucking bastards. 

And at the core of it, the undying love of Claire and Fraser. 

And as that final second before the end reveals, literally undying. 

I'm going to miss this world a lot.

I know there's still Outlander: Blood Of My Blood  which is it's own kind of good I suppose but....

It's not the same.

It won't be Jamie and Claire.

SIDE NOTE: In the blog banner that my son Dean drew, the guy with the flowing hair behind me? That's Jamie Fraser. 


Well, it's supposed to be.  😉  (Sorry, Dean!)  

That is that for this week's Tuesday TV Touchbase.

Until next time, remember to be good to one another and try to keep it down in there, would ya? I'm still emotionally verklempt.

Raya Yarbrough, take us out with Bear McCreary's Skye Boat Song.


Monday, May 18, 2026

American Idolatry

Really? You came back? For the second Trump post of the day? 

Should I be grateful for the attention or worried you might need some kind of medical intervention?

Anyway...

While Donad Trump was in China being cock blocked by Chinese president Xi Jinping and being insulted online by  inexplicably unrestricted Chinese citizens, back in the United States, a golden edifice glistened in the bright Florida sun.  

The Don Colussus, 22 feet of gilded fealty to the man, the myth, the legend, the maker of America's new golden age, a harbinger of greatness blessed by almighty God himself! 

Gee, that kind of rhetoric should get me a free MAGA hat!

This gold statue was installed at Trump National Doral golf resort in Miami last month.

C'mon! Every good cult should have a golden tribute to it's dear leader! 

But seriously, doesn't this seem like a bit much?  

A gold statue in tribute to someone who is still living like their a god or something? That's like something out of a comic book. Or a TV show.

Or a TV show about a comic book.  

Just as Trump's golden statue was unveiled, an episode of The Boys dropped which revealed a golden statue of Homelander as part of his roll out as America's new God. 

Executive Producer Eric Kripke was bugged that Trump had once again upstaged his comic book satire about fascism. As Kripke said, "Seriously, what the fuck?!" 

This is the 2nd time Trump has upstaged the fictional absurdity of The Boys.  


Erecting statues for a living person is something done for dictators. Surely we're not comparing Li'l Donnie to a dictator are we? 



Yes, we are and don't call me Shirley.

(Yeah, that joke doesn't work as well as in print as it does verbally.)  

So there was an event a few weeks ago to unveil and dedicate the statue.

Somebody call a preacher! 

South Carolina based MAGA minister Mark Burns led the dedication event and called it “a moment of gratitude, honor, and remembrance.”

Burns was also emphatic the statue is NOT a golden calf .  

It's Preacher Mark for the defense: “What amazes me is how quickly some people have compared this beautiful statue, created and made possible by more than 6,000 patriots, to a golden calf or idol worship. Let me be very clear. We worship the Lord Jesus Christ and Him alone. “

That is quite clear. Worship only Jesus! 

Worship only this guy! 

Oh shit! That's Donald Trump! 

My bad!  

As a person whose Christian membership card is frayed around the edges, far be it from me to debate an alleged Christian preacher person about religious stuff. 

While the comparison of a GOLDEN CALF to a GOLDEN TRUMP is fairly obvious, I think the Bible story that is of more striking relevance here is from the book of Daniel.  

Nebuchadnezzar II, king of Babylon, was having a recurring dream.  A giant metal statue was being erected in his honor.

Well, ain't that great! The people must really love him to put up this big honking statue to remember him forever and ever. 

BUT Nebuchadnezzar's dreams take a dark turn when a giant stone crushes the statue and the stone becomes a mountain that fills the whole world.

Well, that's not very nice! What about the legacy of Nebuchadnezzar lasting forever and ever?

Daniel is summoned to interpret the king's dream. (Well, it is HIS book of the Bible after all.)  

Basically, the stone and the mountain represent God and his kingdom on Earth which is forever and ever. Nebuchadnezzar is just some dude who is not meant to be forever and ever. He can be destroyed. God cannot.

Nebuchadnezzar acknowledges the supremacy of God and gives Daniel a cushy government job in Babylon. 

Basically as I understand this, aggrandizement of a living person in the form an everlasting legacy pisses God off. 

But Mark Burns continues to defend Don Colossus.  

“This statue is not about worship. It is about honor. It is a celebration of life and a powerful symbol of resilience, freedom, patriotism, courage, and the will to keep fighting for America. It also reminds us of the hand of God over President Trump’s life. We thank God for preserving him and not allowing his life to be taken, not once, but multiple times.”

Let's take a look some key points about the life God reportedly has his hand over.  

  • Trump was found liable for sexually abusing writer E. Jean Carroll (although the $83 million he was ordered to pay her is on hold for the time being.)
  • He has been accused of predatory behavior by dozens of women.
  • And he infamously bragged that he was free to grab women “by the pussy.”

In an interview with The New Yorker,  Burns went from defending the Trump statue to defending Trump himself.

Get a load of the moral and ethical pretzel Burns twists himself into in that endeavor.  


“But in the eyes of God, who is our ultimate judge, God is a God of forgiveness. God is a God of love. So, having said that, it doesn’t matter what President Trump has done in his past.”

I've heard this line from preachers before. Since God loves and God forgives, Trump's sins don't matter.

OK, my Christian membership card is virutally illegible. (Wait! It say "Blockbuster Video". Ooops! Wrong card.) BUT I don't think forgiveness is a simple as Mark Burns puts it.

God offers forgiveness but the person who commits the sin has to accept the forgiveness and that involves the person admitting they fucked up and are genuinely sorry about it.

To counter Burns' statement a bit, it does matter what we've done in the past if we haven't learned from it, changed for the better because of it or asked for or accepted forgiveness for it.

In the past, Donald Trump was a selfish greedy immoral bastard.

As far as I can tell just from the evidence of what I can see and hear....

In the present, Donald Trump is still a selfish greedy immoral bastard.

Burn addresses present Trump: “What does matter is this: We’re talking about the fact that it doesn’t matter what President Trump has done in his past, as long as he’s repented and asked for forgiveness. The president is not grabbing anybody or talking about grabbing anybody from their private parts today.”

Well, that's kind what I said but I would counter Burn's "as long as he’s repented and asked for forgiveness" is that he has not. That would involve admitting error and Trump is deathly afraid of saying he did anything wrong ever.   

Remember the Hollywood Access tape. Trump was proud that women would let him grab them between their legs.  

I wrote a post about forgiveness back in 2014.  

Burns had more to say:   “It doesn’t matter in the eyes of the Lord, and apparently, it doesn’t really matter to the eyes of the American voters because they voted for him and made him president twice. Many would argue three times.”

Oh goody! Burns is on the Trump 2020 Election Was Stolen bandwagon.  

I would also say that Americans who voted for Trump did so less FOR the man and more AGAINST the women who ran against him in the two elections he won.  The women who were more than capable to be President but a lot of Americans will be damned if they'll let a female woman of the opposite sex be President.  

And I will add they voted for him because of his simple solutions to complex problems. Ignorance and greed are hard to beat. 

And NO, you feckless piece of shit, "many" do NOT argue he won three times.  And your kind of devotion to  Li'l Donnie's petulant refusal to accept the reality of his 2020 loss to Joe Biden kind of underscores the cult like hold Trump has on you and others in MAGA.  

So this post has gone on too long but since we are at the intersection of Trump idolatry and religion, I need to mention the event from yesterday called   “Rededicate 250: A National Jubilee of Prayer, Praise & Thanksgiving".

This was supposed to part of the celebration of the 250th anniversary of the signing of the Declaration of Independence,an allegedly apolitical event open to Americans of all faiths.

79% of the scheduled speakers are evangelical protestants.

Evangelical protestants make up 25% of the U.S. population. 

I'm actually writing this post on Saturday but since this a Trump centric event, I'm expecting the worst.

I guess we'll know if the bottom has been reached if an actual golden calf shows up. 

And I may have to just give up and throw out my Christian membership card.

And I was so close to getting a free sub.  

Addendum:  No, there was no golden calf but click here for a write up on the prayer event and it's blatant connections to Christian Nationalism.  

_______________________________

Tomorrow: the Tuesday TV Touchbase.

Outlander ends.

I will not be OK.

Chickity China, the Chinese Chicken

Chickity China, the Chinese chicken

You have a drumstick and your brain stops tickin'

from "One Week" by the Bare Naked Ladies

In any given week, indeed on any given day... damn, at any given hour, there is so much fuckery to cover in this interminable hell we live in with Donald Trump and his minions.

I'm so sorry but you're getting two posts today about this motherfucker.

Let's start with the Chinese chicken.  

Li'l Donnie's trip to China was the embarrassment we've come to expect when der Führer deigns to expose himself to a world his handlers cannot completely control.

The fawning over the top festival of welcome that greeted Trump when he landed in Beijing bordered on parody and mockery but Li'l Donnie ate it all up.

The normally tightly censored internet in China allowed Chinese citizens to express themselves about their American visitor. And those views were NOT flattering or positive.  

Trump's thin lips were firmly attached to President Xi Jinping's backside while Xi presented himself has acting from a position of strength.  

Take a look at this photo of these two men.  One of them is a man who is confident and in control.

The other is Donald Trump.  


Xi was all "the United States best watch itself helping Taiwan or there's gonna be trouble." 

Trump could only reply "thank you, sir, may I have another?" 

Taiwan has always been a bone of contention between the U.S. and China. 

Taiwan thinks it's a free and independent sovereign nation, a bastion of democracy in Asia.

China thinks they own Taiwan and want it back.

President Xi Jinping thinks he has in Donald Trump a useful idiot to see things his way.

Until now, American Presidents have seen a free and democratic Taiwan as something worth standing up for.   Not necessarily fighting for.  Dude, China is BIG and makes all our stuff and they hold a shit ton of American debt.  

Every time Republicans cut taxes for the rich but increase the budget for the Pentagon, Congress has to go into debt. 

So balancing our relationship with China and Taiwan takes a great deal of intelligence, wisdom and even a little bit of compassion so....

We're stuck with Donald Trump so fuck all that.  

On the line is an arms deal wherein the United States has committed to providing munitions for Taiwan to defend itself if China get's agressive.

President Xi Jinping does not want us to do that.

This calls for some kind of clever, insightful response.

Or whatever the fuck Li'l Donnie says instead.  

Trump says he'll make a decision about the arms deal in a "very short period of time".  (What happened to the "Two week Trump Timeline"?  Things are usually put off for a couple of weeks.) 



While Li'l Donnie appeared to be bending towards
 Xi Jinping over what China wants, there was virtually no indication of any Chinese capitulation to what Trump wants.  

Like helping with the war der Führer started with Iran.  

Or buying more soybeans from America.  Soybeans is... or rather WAS a cash crop for American farmers with China as the biggest buyer. Then Li'l Donnie got snippy with China, slapped a bunch of tarriffs on Chinese goods and China was all "we can do snippy too, bitch" and stopped buying soybeans from America. 

Or getting China to buy American aircraft.  Allegedly Trump did report making a deal with der Xi Jinping to buy 200 airplanes from Boeing.  
  1. Trump said Boeing was expecting to sell 150 planes but he got it up to 200.
  2. Actually, Boeing was looking to sell 500 planes to China.
  3. China has not confirmed anything Trump said. 
  4. Donald Trump is a dumbass.

There was a long list of things important to American interests that Xi Jinping would not capitulate to or was not committal or didn't even make the agenda.  

Like all things involving Trump, the whole meeting with Xi Jinping was more for show than anything substantive.

Just as they did for his arrival,  China also pulled out the pomp and circumstance for Trump's farewell.


再見,你這傻逼!

Sorry my Chinese is a bit rusty but that translates to "Good bye you dumb motherfucker!"  

Once out of Chinese airspace, Li'l Donnie was back on Truth Social with various diatribes of self praise about what a great job he did in China and bitching and moaning about other people.

Like Joe Biden.  

Apparently Xi Jinping insulted Donald Trump to his face but Li'l Donnie was too dumb to realize it or maybe the translator softened the blow.  Xi Jinping referred to the United States as a nation in decline. 

A couple of days later, Mr. America First goes to bat for the good ol' U.S. of A. by.... agreeing with him? Trump said Xi Jinping was talking about America under "Sleepy Joe Biden" but not NOW because NOW America is the hottest country in the world blah blah blah.  Y'all know the drill by now.  

Trump was off Truth Social for the three days he was in Beijing. Because Truth Social is banned in China.   

Gee, how can America get in on that? 

Well. it's get back to the United States where Trump can get some home grown praise and adulation without the hidden passive agressive subtext.

Which brings us to today's 2nd post.  

So you can come back in a couple of hours for that.

Or wait until tomorrow for the Tuesday TV Touchbase about the series finale of Outlander. IF I can write it through all the tears.  

Sunday, May 17, 2026

Star Trekking - The Next Generation - Season 5 - "Disaster"

 


And we're back with more Star Trekking as we resume our look back at Star Trek: The Next Generation.  

We're up to season 5 as TNG expands on it's supporting cast. After being part of the background in the very first episode of the series, Colm Meaney has developed Miles Edward O'Brien into a well rounded character and a beloved member of the team. After marrying Keiko in season 4, this season finds O'Brien adding the role of father. 

Adding to the supporting cast in season 5 is Michelle Forbes  as Ensign Ro Laren, a Bajoran officer.  Ro's flint sharp personality provides a provocative contrast to the more genial main cast.  

Her backstory lays the ground work for new alien intrigue with the reptilian Cardassians and their conquest of her home world of Bajor.  This dynamic will fuel a major development for the Star Trek franchise in the following year.  

After being written out in season 4 to go to Starfleet Academy, Wil Wheaton returns for a couple of episodes as Wesley Crusher.

But the really big name guest star on TNG in season 5 was Leonard Nimoy as Spock.

The legacy of Star Trek experiences a loss during season 5 when Gene Roddenberry dies of cadiac arrest. Gene had long deferred any involvement to Rick Berman but his shadow still loomed large over the franchise that began with the original Star Trek back in the 1960's.   

When deciding what season 5 episode I was going to spotlight for today's post, I had quite a few good ones to choose from.  

  • "Darmok" with a great performance from guest actor Paul Winfield.  The episode introduces the Tamarians who speak in allegories. A Tamarian will join Starfleet in Star Trek: Lower Decks.  
  • "Ensign Ro" which brings introduces our new Enterprise crew member. She doesn't want to be there and the feeling is mutual as far as Riker is concerned.
  • "Conundrum" where the Enterpise crew is mind wipe and in a state of war with some damn body. Oh and Riker and Ro hook up.  
  • "Cause and Effect" where the Enterprise blows up! And blows up again! And again! With clever direction from Jonathan Frakes.  
  • "The First Duty" which a strong dramatic outing as Wesley Crusher is placed in an ethecial dilemna. The episode features Ray Walston (My Favorite Martian) as Boothy, the grounds keeper.  
  • "I Borg" where LaForge makes friends with a Borg named Hugh. 
  • "The Next Phase" where LaForge and Ro get killed! And haunt the Enterprise as ghosts!  
  • "The Inner Light"  where Jean Luc Picard lives another man's lifetime on another planet. One of the most emotionally powerful episodes of the entire series.  

But my personal favorite for season 5 is this episode directed by Gabrielle Beaumont working from a story by Ron Jarvis & Philip A. Scorza. With a teleplay by TNG stalwart Ronald D. Moore, this is "Disaster".  

It's just another day on the good ship Enterprise.

In Ten-Forward,  Keiko O'Brien is commiserating with Riker, Data and Worf on the joys of pregnancy.  

KEIKO: It's all right. He's just doing somersaults. Here, feel.

(She puts Riker's hand on her bump)

KEIKO: Right there.

RIKER: He's going to be a hell of a gymnast.

DATA: May I?

KEIKO: Sure. There, feel it? When he's not turning, he's kicking and punching. When I want to sleep, he wants to wake up. At this point, I just wish it were over.

My wife Andrea complained about the same thing in the last weeks of her pregnacy.   

Meanwhile, Beverly Crusher and Geordi LaForge are cataloging some supplies in a cargo bay while the good doctor is trying to talk our engineer into something he doesn't want to do.

So it's not a sex thing?

Then what pray tell does Crusher want him to do?

Let's find out! (Read this and imagine it is a sex thing. It's fun!)

LAFORGE: No.

CRUSHER: Come on, Geordi.

LAFORGE: No.

CRUSHER: Just try it once. It is not as hard as you think. I'm telling you, you will be terrific.

LAFORGE: All right. (sings) I am the very model of a modern major general, I've information vegetable, animal and mineral. And.... I can't do this.



CRUSHER: Yes you can!

LAFORGE: I cannot sing in front of people.

CRUSHER: You were terrific! You were a little off pitch, but I think I can take care of that. 

As we established last season, Dr. Crusher does have a background in the arts as the "dancing doctor" and Beverly wrangling her crew mates into performing in plays will become a recurring thing. 

Gates McFadden has a background in directing and choreography.

Meanwhile on the bridge, Capt. Picard is facing down a challenge he dreads  even more than an encounter with the Borg.

Children.

TROI: Captain, I'd like to introduce you to the winners of the primary school science fair. This is Marissa, Jay Gordon, and Patterson. They're here for their tour.

PICARD: Hello.

PATTERSON: Can we see the battle bridge and torpedo bay?

PICARD: No, I'm afraid not. But we will be visiting the hydroponics and astrophysics laboratories.

TROI: I'm sure you'll have a wonderful time.

The disappointment of the children is palpable. Somebody really wanted to see that battle bridge! 

PICARD: Well. If you'll come with me.

(Picard and children go into the turbolift as O'Brien comes out)

O'BRIEN: I'm not sure who to feel sorry for, the Captain or the kids.

It's a toss up. 

So it's just another day as various people doing various things in various parts of the ship while a certain blogger uses the word "various" too much.   

Then suddenly and without warning!

KA-BLAM!!! 

The Enterprise is violently jolted, shuddering and shaking, lights flickering off, sparks flying from panels. 

It's a....

Well, it's right there in the title:  DISASTER!!! 

What happened? 

On the bridge....

MONROE: (female helm) What happened?

I just asked that! 

MANDEL: (man at ops) Sensors are picking up subspace distortions and high energy particles directly to starboard.

MONROE: Looks like we ran into a quantum filament. Damage report?

O'BRIEN: We've lost primary life support. Switching to secondary systems. Impulse and warp engines are offline.

MANDEL: There's another filament moving toward us, sir.

MONROE: All decks brace for impact!

(Thump! and it all goes dark)

O'BRIEN: Counsellor?

TROI: I'm all right. Medical team to the Bridge. Troi to Sickbay. Counsellor Troi to Captain Picard. Troi to Engineering. Counsellor Troi to any crew member, please acknowledge.

(Mandel tries to open the turbolift doors)

TROI: Medical team to the Bridge.

O'BRIEN: The computer's down. It looks like we still have impulse power but not much else.

TROI: Lieutenant Monroe!

(She's dead)

MANDEL: Chief O'Brien. The turbolifts aren't working. We're trapped up here.

Let's take a moment to mourn for Lieutenant Monroe.  

...

...

...

Well, she ain't getting any deader!  Let's move on! 

In the turbo lift, Picard is crumpled on the floor surrounded by crying children.  His leg is broken.   

PICARD: Bridge, this is Picard. This is the Captain. Can anyone hear me?

PATTERSON: Why don't they answer?

PICARD: I don't know.

JAY GORDON: They're all dead.

PICARD: They're not dead. Communication is down, that's all.

JAY GORDON: We're going to die, too.

PICARD: We most certainly are not. Now listen to me. No one here is going to die. The bridge will be sending a rescue party as soon as possible. So I want you all to stop crying. Everything is going to be all right.

Which makes the kids cry even more.

Back on the bridge...

O'BRIEN: This is the Federation Starship Enterprise calling any vessel within range. We are in distress and need assistance. Please respond. I'm still not sure we're even transmitting. I'll set the message on auto repeat and see if we get a response.

(a turbolift door is forced open, and Ro Laren hauls herself out of the stuck car)

O'BRIEN: Are you all right?

RO: I'm alive. What the hell happened?

O'BRIEN: We were hit by a quantum filament. Most of our systems are down and we haven't been able to contact anyone off the bridge.

RO: Well, don't count on leaving through there. An emergency bulkhead closed just beneath that lift.

The gang is assessing the situation which is grim.

Virtually nothing is working, not even internal sensors.

Hey, let's see if the empath can sense anything.

O'BRIEN: Can you sense anything, Counsellor?

TROI: There are a lot of people still alive. Many of them are hurt but I can't tell where they are.

RO: We need to start emergency procedures. Who's the duty officer?

O'BRIEN: Lieutenant Monroe was in command, but she's dead. I believe Counsellor Troi is the senior officer on the deck.

Are we fucked? 

RO: Counsellor Troi?

We're so fucked! 

O'BRIEN: She carries the rank of Lieutenant Commander.

To quote li'l Jay Gordon, "We are going to die!"

TROI: I'd appreciate some suggestions.

Look, she's not feeling so good about this herself.  

O'BRIEN: I recommend we initiate emergency procedure alpha two. Bypass computer control and place all systems on manual override.

TROI: Very well.

O'BRIEN: Aye, aye, sir.

RO: May I suggest that our next priority be to stabilise life support and try to re-establish intership communications?

TROI: Yes. Mister Mandel, I'd like you to assist Ensign Ro.

MANDEL: Yes, sir.

Meanwhile, the body of Lieutenant Monroe is just lying there... somewhere... out of camera range.   

Meanwhile, in the Cargo Bay, the second worst thing of the day is happening!  

(The first was that whole "modern major general" thing!)  

LAFORGE: Right. And bypass the flow current, and (nothing). The computer still won't release the doors.

CRUSHER: Can we force them open?

LAFORGE: Yes, we can try. There's an emergency hand actuator.

CRUSHER: Geordi?

LAFORGE: Yes?

CRUSHER: This wall is hot.

LAFORGE: Where?

(then something blows out where he had removed a panel, knocking him off his feet)

LAFORGE: I'm all right, but I think we've got a new problem. One of the energy conduits must've ruptured and ignited the polyduranide inside the bulkhead. That's a plasma fire.

(and it's green)

CRUSHER: It's putting out a lot of radiation. We can't stay in here very long.

LAFORGE: We've got a bigger problem than that. The quaratum in these containers is used in emergency thruster packs. It's normally pretty stable stuff but when you expose quaratum to radiation, it has a way of exploding.

Way to bring down the room, Geordi! 

Meanwhile, in the turbo lift, Picard gets the kids to calm down with field promotions:

  • Marissa is First Officer ("Number One")
  • Jay is Science Officer
  • Patterson is executive officer in charge of radishes.

Radishes? It's... it's a thing. Accept it. Patterson did. 

Let's move on.

With bulkheads on lockdown (as Ro mentioned earlier), Riker and Data are hustling through a Jeffries Tube to get to engineering to suss out what is what.

Back on the bridge, Troi is trying to get up to speed.

TROI: Yes. How big is a quantum filament?

O'BRIEN: It can be hundreds of metres long, but it has almost no mass, which makes it very difficult to detect.

TROI: So, it's like a cosmic string?

O'BRIEN: No. that's a completely different phenomenon.

Well, God bless her for trying.

And Ro delivers some bad news.  Well, bad news is her specialty.  

RO: We've got half impulse power available, but I'm getting some odd readings from the warp drive. I'm reading a spike in the warp field array. It looks like a containment deviation.

O'BRIEN: Switch to primary bypass.

RO: Nothing. Field strength's at forty percent and falling. We've got a problem. The quantum resonance of the filament caused a polarity shift in the antimatter containment field.

O'BRIEN: When the filament hit us, the ship was momentarily charged, as if it had come into contact with a live electrical wire.

RO: That weakened the containment field surrounding the antimatter pods. The field strength is at forty percent and it is still falling.

O'BRIEN: If it falls to fifteen percent the field will collapse and we'll have a containment breach.

TROI: Which means?

RO: Which means the ship will explode.

Well, that's something we can all understand.

Elsewhere in a Jeffries tube, Riker and Data are trapped by an sparking white hot arc of energy and Data suggests breaking the circuit with his body.

Riker does not like this plan.   

DATA: Commander, our options are very limited.

RIKER: First of all, android or not, I wouldn't ask anyone to take that kind of risk. Second, if the computer is not working in Engineering, I'm going to need your help to get control of the ship.

DATA: My positronic brain has several layers of shielding to protect me from power surges. It would be possible for you to remove my cranial unit and take it with you.

RIKER: Let me get this straight. You want me to take off your head?

DATA: Yes, sir. Is something wrong, sir?

RIKER: Well, Data, would you be all right?

DATA: My memory core and neural nets are self-contained. I would be fine, sir.

RIKER: Well, like you said, our choices are very limited.

(Data walks forward into the energy currents, he stops as he gets lit up like a Christmas tree  and he falls forward) 


RIKER: Data? Data! Data.

DATA: A remarkable experience, Commander.

RIKER: Are you all right? Did the shielding work?

DATA: Apparently so, sir. My neural nets are still fully operational. You may begin by opening the ventral access panel located two centimetres beneath my right ear.

Picard and the kids need to get out of turbo lift before it crashes.  Picard says he needs to stay behind because of his bum leg.  

The kids do not like this plan.

MARISSA: We have to climb up the shaft.

PATTERSON: I want to stay here with you, Captain.

PICARD: Patterson, you're an officer. You have to obey orders.

PATTERSON: I don't want to be an officer any more. I want to stay here with you.

JAY GORDON: If the captain stays here, we won't make it. We'll all die.

PICARD: We don't have time to argue. You must go now.

MARISSA: The crew has decided to stick together. We all go or we all stay.

PICARD: All right. I'll try. But I want you to know this is mutiny.

Back in the cargo bay, the plasma fire is getting closer to the "why are things this dangerous on a star ship anyway" cargo.

One way to put out a fire is to deprive it of oxygen.

Hey, we're in outer space, right?

LaForge and Crusher don't really like this plan.

Meanwhile in Ten Forward....

Let's summarize:

  • Keiko is pregnant.
  • The ship has been beset by a disaster.

What do you think is going to happen? 

KEIKO: Oh, oh, oh. I'm having contractions.

Of course she is! 

WORF: I believe that is not uncommon in the late months of pregnancy.

KEIKO: No, I mean contractions. I'm going into labour.

WORF: You cannot. This this is not a good time, Keiko.

KEIKO: It's not open for debate. Like it or not, this baby is coming.

Worf does not like where THIS is heading.

Things are getting tense on the bridge.

RO: We should separate the saucer now, and put as much distance as possible between us and the drive section.

O'BRIEN: Excuse me, sir, but that's damn cold blooded. What about the people down there?

RO: There's no evidence that anyone is still alive in the drive section.

O'BRIEN: No evidence they're dead, either. If you were trapped down there, would you like us to just cut you loose and leave?

RO: No, of course not. But I also wouldn't expect the bridge crew to risk the safety of the ship and hundreds of lives in a futile effort to rescue me.

TROI: You said there was no way to stabilise the containment field from the Bridge. Could it be done from Engineering?

O'BRIEN: Yes, but my readings indicate there's no power down there. They don't even have monitors to tell them there's a problem.

TROI: Could we divert energy from the Bridge to those monitors?

O'BRIEN: Yes, sir.

RO: I'll say it again. There is no reason to believe that anyone is alive in Engineering. We're wasting time even talking about this. We have to separate the ship now.

TROI: I believe there are still people alive down there and I'm going to give them every chance. Assuming they're alive, they'll be hoping there's someone up here who can help them. So we'll help them. Chief, divert the necessary power to Engineering.

O'BRIEN: Aye, sir.

RO: I remind you, Counsellor, that power coupling could overheat at any moment. By not separating the ship now, you may be responsible for all our deaths.

TROI: Thank you, Ensign. Proceed.

I do declare but I think Troi is getting the hang of this being in charge thing. 

Picard and the kids extricate themselves from the turbo lift and climb up the shaft.  Just before the turbo lift gives way.

Picard is climbing with only one good leg, both arms doing all the heavy lifting, his good leg providing a modicum of balance, the busted leg just dangling.

Damn! Jean-Luc is one bad mother-fu---

Hey, there are kids present! 

And they need to focus on climbing up this shaft. 

Picard suggests a climbing song.  

Frere Jacques, Frere Jacques, dormez vous? 

Dormez vous?

Sonnez les matines, sonnez les matines, 

Ding ding dong, ding ding dong.

Frere Jacques, frere Jacques, dormez vous? 

Dormez vous? 

Sonnez les matines, sonnez les matines. 

Ding ding dong, ding ding dong. 

Frere Jacques, frere Jacques, 

dormez vous? Dormez vous? 

Sonnez les matines, sonnez les matines. 

Ding ding dong, ding ding dong. 

Frere Jacques, frere Jacques

Let's check in with Lt. Worf, OB-GYN! 

WORF: Your contractions are now only thirty seconds apart. Dilation has gone to seven centimetres since the onset of labour. That did not take long.

KEIKO: That's easy for you to say.

WORF: You are doing very well. I am sure the child will arrive soon.

KEIKO: Worf, have you ever done this before? Delivered a baby?

WORF: Yes!

<pause>

WORF: No. I have taken the Starfleet Emergency Medical Course. In a computerised simulation, I assisted in the delivery of a human baby.

KEIKO: Sometimes it doesn't go by the book, Worf.

WORF: I am sure everything will be fine.

Funny, Worf doesn't sound all that sure.

Elsewhere....

Crusher and LaForge do their thing with opening the cargo bay doors to put out the fire and not get sucked into space.  

On the bridge, the ship nearly explodes. 

O'Brien and Ro do some technobabble and buy some time.

TROI: What happened?

RO: Exactly what I said might happen. The power coupling overheated and the entire containment field almost collapsed. O'Brien's fixed it temporarily, but this could happen again at any moment, and next time we might not be able to stop it. You can't let wishful thinking guide your decision, Counsellor. It's time to leave.

TROI: We will separate the ship when I decide that it's time, and not before. Is that clear, Ensign?

RO: Yes. Perfectly.

Damn, you go, girl! 

Riker is in Engineering with Data's head which is hooked up to some panels. 


Well, that's one way to get a head in Starfleet!

Bwa-ha-ha-ha-ha-ha-ha! 

Er, sorry about that.   

RIKER: Data, the containment field strength is down to eighteen percent. Can you stabilise it?

DATA: No, sir. I do not have access to the containment field. You will have to establish a new link. Locate the ODN conduit, sir.

(Riker probes the exposed circuits in Data's head.)

RIKER: Got it.

DATA: Yes, sir. You must now change the input matrix in my secondary optical port and then connect the ODN conduit.

(his right eye closes)

DATA: That is not the correct port, sir.

RIKER: Sorry.

DATA: You must hurry, Commander. The containment field has dropped to sixteen percent.

RIKER: I'm trying. You need a bigger head.

DATA: The field continues to drop, sir. Collapse is imminent.

RIKER: Try it now.

DATA: I have a connection, sir. I am now stabilising the containment field.

And the good news is seen on the bridge.  

O'BRIEN: Sir, the field strength is stabilising. Eighteen percent, twenty, twenty five.

RO: I guess they got our message. I was wrong, Counsellor.

TROI: You could have easily been right.

A turbolift door opens, and Picard hauls himself onto the deck like a seal hauling itself onto land, followed by the children. They sit panting.  

They are Frere Jacqued out! 

Now back to Ten-Forward, it's  the moment we've all been waiting for! 

WORF: Congratulations. You are fully dilated to ten centimetres. You may now give birth.

KEIKO: That's what I've been doing.

WORF: Bearing down is the next stage. It should start at full dilation. Why has it not begun?

KEIKO: I don't know. I don't think it's up to me. It happens when it happens.

WORF: The computer simulation was not like this. That delivery was very orderly.

KEIKO (snarling at Worf): Well, I'm sorry!

WORF: Did you feel an uncontrollable urge to push?

(screams with a nod)

WORF: Good. You are bearing down. Now you must push with each contraction and I must urge you gently but firmly to push harder. Push, Keiko. Push hard. Push, Keiko. Push. Push.

KEIKO: I am pushing!  (she is so pissed off at Worf right now) 

WORF: The baby is emerging head first. One more contraction.

KEIKO: Okay.

WORF: That's good. Push. Push. Hard. I have the baby. I will smack the child to induce breathing.

(waaa!)

WORF: Now I will cut the umbilical cord. Blanket. I believe she looks like Chief O'Brien.

(he hands the baby to Keiko)

KEIKO: Hello. You were wonderful, Worf. I couldn't have done it without you. Hello.

And we move forward in time and to the bridge.  

PICARD (VO): Captain's log, supplemental. We are en route to Starbase sixty seven, to undergo repairs. Life aboard the Enterprise is slowly returning to normal.

Except for Lieutenant Monroe.

Who is dead.

(Troi leads the children onto the Bridge)

TROI: Now just wait here.

RIKER: You just can't stay away from the big chair, can you?

TROI: I don't think I'm cut out to be Captain. First officer, maybe. I understand there aren't many qualifications.

RIKER: Captain Picard to the Bridge, please.

(Picard enters)

PICARD: Hello. It's good to see you again. What brings you to the Bridge?

MARISSA: In appreciation for the way you helped us get out of the turboshaft, and the way you helped us not be scared, we want to present to you this commemorative plaque. Give it to him.

(Jay Gordon hands it over. It reads - to Captain Picard, in appreciation for the way you helped us get out of the turboshaft and the way you helped us not be scared. Jay Gordon Graas, Paterson Supra, Marissa Flores)



PICARD: Thank you. Thank you very much.

PATTERSON: I made the back piece.

PICARD: And a wonderful job you did of it, too. Well, later this afternoon, we're going to finish the tour I promised you, starting with the battle bridge. I'll see you at fourteen hundred hours. You have the Bridge, Number One.

RIKER + MARISSA: Aye, sir.

And we're out! 

I really like this episode. It gives everyone something to do.

And something to do outside of everyone's comfort zone.

Riker, not LaForge, has to tinker with Data's positronic head.

Data is only a head.

Troi has to rise to the occassion to be in command.  

O'Brien usually left alone to tinker with something has to step up to provide counsel to Troi.  

Picard has to deal with children. 

I don't know what Crusher is thinking but LaForge is NOT cut out for Gilbert & Sullivan operettas.

And the big sequence everyone remembers from this episode: Worf delivers Keiko's baby!

"You may now give birth!" 

Sometimes when Andrea and I are watching a TV show with a scene of someone giving birth, one of us will quote Worf.

"You may now give birth!" 

It's never not going to be funny.  

And that is that for this week's Star Trekking.

Thanks again to  Chrissie's Transcripts Site for her handy-dandy transcipts of all things Star Trek and Doctor Who.

Next time, we advance up to season 6 of Star Trek: The Next Generation.  It's a time of some changes as the Star Trek universe is set to expand.  

And our spotlight falls on the return of an old advesary.  


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