Star Trek TNG S03E07-09 The Enemy, The Price, The Vengeance Factor – “The Fiftieth!!!” | First Time Reaction – To Baldly Go Podcast (Ep. 051)

This week on To Baldly Go, we continue our first-time watch of Star Trek: The Next Generation Season 3 with episodes 7 through 9:

  • The Enemy

  • The Price

  • The Vengeance Factor

This week, we get:

  • Worf going against expectations

  • The ethics of the empath

  • Personal connections to Star Trek

The Enemy

“The Enemy” feels like a great example of what Star Trek can be when the formula is executed well. You have a dangerous planet, a stranded officer, an enemy soldier, escalating political tension, and a medical crisis that forces everyone to confront their assumptions.

We talk about the emotional responses from the characters, the way the episode plays with expectations, and especially Worf’s refusal to save a Romulan life. It is a striking character moment because it does not go where the usual Star Trek moral structure might lead us to expect.

We also get into Romulans in Federation space, the idea of disability among Romulans, the deeper lore around Station Salem One, and how our ratings of the episode shifted as we talked through it. Plus, we find our way to Babylon 5 connections and Picard’s chorus.

The Price

The Ferengi are back in “The Price,” and unfortunately, this one does not really work for us.

This episode gives Troi a central role, a high-stakes negotiation over a wormhole, and a romantic subplot that raises some uncomfortable questions. We spend a lot of time talking about the ethics of empathic abilities, Troi’s moral dilemma, and the creepier parts of the episode.

There are interesting ideas here, especially around negotiation, manipulation, and emotional vulnerability, but we are not sure how this episode could have been shaped into something that fully worked. Sometimes Star Trek takes a big swing. Sometimes it hits. Sometimes it gives us this.

The Vengeance Factor

“The Vengeance Factor” feels like it is operating on a slightly bigger scale than some other episodes, with political factions, old rivalries, a murder mystery, and a larger conversation about revenge.

We talk about Riker, Yuta, and the episode’s use of personal attraction as part of the mystery. We also compare Worf’s feelings about Romulans in “The Enemy” with Yuta’s inherited mission of vengeance here. Both stories deal with old wounds, but they lead to very different places.

This one also gives us a chance to talk about tribalism, cycles of violence, and the idea that we are all the villain in somebody’s story. Nate also has a personal connection to this episode, we struggle to think of an episode title, and we ask the important question: is there a default speed when setting a course?

Also: Brull and Wesley. That happened.

Final Thoughts

Overall, this was a bunch of generally solid episodes. “The Enemy” stands out as the strongest of the three, “The Price” gives us plenty to discuss even if we do not love it, and “The Vengeance Factor” brings in some bigger ideas about revenge, identity, and inherited conflict.

As always, remember – Never give up!  Never surrender!

Listen to this episode of the To Baldly Go Podcast wherever you get your podcasts.

Where we are on our Trek:

Last week we covered:

Next week we will continue with:

  • TBG Episode 052 - Star Trek TNG S03E10-12 The Defector, The Hunted, The High Ground | First Time Reaction

If you want to see my journey from the very beginning, start here:

Also, be sure to check out Nate’s and my other podcast – The In Lap with Aaron and Nate – to listen to us discuss all things Formula 1 on race weekends, wherever you listen to your podcasts.