Star Trek

Star Trek TNG S04E07-09 Reunion, Future Imperfect, Final Mission – “Star Trek: Inception?” | First Time Reaction – To Baldly Go Podcast (Ep. 060)

First-Time Watch – Star Trek: The Next Generation, Season 4, Episodes 7-9

This week on The To Baldly Go Podcast, Aaron and Nate continue their release-order journey through Star Trek with three episodes that force members of the Enterprise crew to confront family, false realities, and the consequences of their decisions.

Worf learns that one past relationship came with a lasting responsibility. Riker wakes up inside a future that appears too perfect to be true. Wesley prepares to leave the Enterprise, provided he and Picard can survive one final mission together.

This week, we get:

  • Accepting the consequences of our decisions

  • Star Trek: Inception?

  • Three very different versions of family and responsibility

We covered:

  • Reunion

  • Future Imperfect

  • Final Mission

Reunion

K’Ehleyr is back—and she has brought little Worf with her.

The Klingon Empire is preparing to choose its next leader, and Picard has been selected to oversee the succession. K’Ehleyr’s investigation soon connects the political conflict to Worf’s discommendation and the actions of the Duras family.

The episode moves with little wasted time. It expands Klingon culture, revisits Worf’s history, and gives his choices consequences that cannot be erased when the credits roll. It also shows how much more depth and breadth The Next Generation can now bring to its stories compared with The Original Series.

Things we discussed:

  • IMDb should bury the lede

  • Wanting to revisit The Emissary

  • K’Ehleyr’s return—and Worf’s unexpected son

  • The strength and pacing of the episode

  • The continuing expansion of Klingon society

  • Of course, it is Duras

  • Picard is not mad; he is disappointed—and mad

  • Whether the bat’leth is a decent weapon

Future Imperfect

Following an accident on an away mission, Riker awakens sixteen years later. He is now captain of the Enterprise, has a son, and is helping negotiate peace with the Romulans. There is only one problem: he remembers none of it.

The episode builds its mystery with clear thought and planning. Riker notices small inconsistencies, questions the people around him, and begins pulling apart the reality constructed for him. Details and returning characters that might once have passed us by now become important clues.

It is a great episode with a dumb ending.

Things we discussed:

  • Whether the Romulans are Inceptioning Riker

  • Picking up on details we might have missed earlier in the series

  • The return of one-off characters from Season 1

  • How Riker recognizes that something is wrong

  • The careful construction of the mystery

  • A strong episode undermined by its final reveal

Final Mission

Wesley joins Picard on a diplomatic mission before leaving the Enterprise for Starfleet Academy. Their routine trip turns into a survival situation when their shuttle crashes on a desert moon and Picard is injured.

There are good moments between Wesley and Picard, but many of them depend on weak setups. Aaron and Nate came away with different reactions to the episode, even though their final ratings were not far apart.

The episode is presented as a farewell for Wesley, inviting comparisons with the show’s handling of Tasha Yar’s departure. It also gives us plenty of opportunities to nitpick the danger posed by the “sun,” the decisions made aboard the Enterprise, and the mechanics of the episode’s central puzzle.

Things we discussed:

  • Is this really Wesley’s final mission?

  • Where Beverly was during the bridge scenes

  • Good character moments built on weak setups

  • Aaron and Nate’s differing reactions

  • Wesley’s sendoff compared with Tasha Yar’s

  • Protection from the “sun”

  • A return to our Code of Honor discussion

  • Wil Wheaton’s apparent departure from the series

Final Thoughts

These three episodes explore different kinds of responsibility.

Worf must accept that his relationship with K’Ehleyr created obligations he cannot ignore. Riker must reject a comfortable life when he realizes it is built on deception. Wesley must prove that he is ready to move beyond the Enterprise, even when the episode surrounding his departure does not give him the strongest material.

Reunion is the standout of the group, delivering an important chapter in Worf’s story with strong pacing and lasting consequences. Future Imperfect builds an effective mystery before stumbling at the finish. Final Mission contains meaningful moments for Wesley and Picard, but struggles to earn them.

Where we are on our Trek:

Last week we covered:

Next week we will continue with:

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.

Star Trek TNG S04E04-06 Suddenly Human, Remember Me, Legacy – “Futuristic Enterprise Racquetball” | First Time Reaction – To Baldly Go Podcast (Ep. 059)

First-Time Watch – Star Trek: The Next Generation Season 4, Episodes 4-6

This week on The To Baldly Go Podcast, we continue our release-order watchthrough with the next three episodes of Star Trek: The Next Generation Season 4: Suddenly Human, Remember Me, and Legacy.

This week, we get:

  • Different cultures, children making decisions, and abuse

  • The importance of appreciating people when they are still around

  • A not-very-good episode, so we talk about other stuff

We covered:

  • Suddenly Human

  • Remember Me

  • Legacy

“Suddenly Human” – Different Cultures, Difficult Decisions, and Futuristic Enterprise Racquetball

Things we discussed:

  • Futuristic Enterprise Raquetball

  • I bought a Jurassic Park mug at Universal

  • Too clever with the title

  • Nate hates this episode?

  • More limitations of network TV and nuanced discussion

  • Kids can be annoying

  • Adults versus kids making lasting decisions

  • Internal series inconsistencies

  • Picard and crew sometimes get it wrong

  • Athenians and Spartans

“Remember Me” – What Is the Nature of the Universe?

Things we discussed:

  • Figuring it out when you’re supposed to figure it out

  • Well-executed episode

  • “What is the nature of the universe?”

  • Worry, anxiety, confusion, clarity

  • Enjoyable episode

  • Star Trek: The Original Series intro lyrics

  • More depth than TOS

“Legacy” – A Weak Episode, Bad Poker, and Card Tricks

Things we discussed:

  • Very weak episode

  • Lost focus while watching, in multiple spots

  • Worst episode we’ve seen in a while

  • Poker follies take me out of the episode - what people who don’t know poker think poker is

  • Deep poker discussion with some 2-7 triple draw

  • Card trick videos on YouTube

  • Penn and Teller

  • Surpassing TOS in total episodes

Final Thoughts

Suddenly Human gives us a messy discussion about culture, trauma, abuse, children, and authority. Remember Me is the clear standout of the week, with a strong Beverly Crusher story and a mystery that unfolds at the right pace. Legacy does not work well for us, but it does send the conversation into poker, card tricks, and the kind of side discussion that sometimes happens when the episode itself is not giving us much to hold onto.

Listen to this episode of The To Baldly Go Podcast as we continue watching Star Trek in release order for the first time.

Where we are on our Trek:

Last week we covered:

Next week we will continue with:

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.

Star Trek TNG S03E25-26 Transfigurations, The Best of Both Worlds – “X-Men did it better” | First Time Reaction – To Baldly Go Podcast (Ep. 057)

First-Time Watch – Star Trek: The Next Generation, Season 3, Episodes 25-26

This week on The To Baldly Go Podcast, Abbie is back as we close out Season 3 of Star Trek: The Next Generation with “Transfigurations” and “The Best of Both Worlds.”

After a season full of stronger storytelling, better performances, and more confident worldbuilding, we end on an episode that gives us a surprisingly rich discussion and another that feels like it may be one of the defining moments of the entire franchise.

This week, we get:

  • Better conversation than the episode

  • Near perfection

  • Greater than the sum of its parts

We covered:

  • How society reacts to evolution

  • Why X-Men may have done this idea better

  • A follow-up to last week’s Sarek discussion

  • The starship dating scene

  • 10 Forward and other lounge spaces aboard the Enterprise

  • Why awkward Geordi episodes are getting old

  • How to handle another group’s customs when you are in their house

  • Difficult decisions for a captain

  • A perfectly executed slow-burn Borg episode

  • Whether “The Best of Both Worlds” is a turning point for the franchise

  • Why Picard did not surrender the Enterprise

  • Shelby’s role and whether she was actually wrong

  • The number of crew lost

  • A TV Guide top-100 episode of television

  • Our rough attempt at Season 3 trivia

Transfigurations:

“Transfigurations” gives us a mysterious patient with no memory, strange abilities, and a society that fears what he represents. The episode raises interesting questions about evolution, identity, and how a culture reacts when some of its people begin to change into something new.

We come to the conclusion that X-Men did it better.

But even if the episode itself does not fully live up to the ideas it raises, the conversation gives us a lot to work with. We talk about how societies respond to change, how outsiders should behave when another group’s customs do not match their own values, and what a captain should do when respecting another culture may also mean allowing harm.

We also follow up on last week’s Sarek discussion, spend time on the social lives on the Enterprise, and explore 10 Forward and the other lounge spaces aboard the ship. And yes, we talk about Geordi. Again. The awkward Geordi romance episodes are starting to feel a little tired, and this one does not do much to reverse that trend.

In the end, our conversation may be deeper than the episode itself, but that still makes for a worthwhile stop on the journey.

The Best of Both Worlds:

Then we get “The Best of Both Worlds,” and everything changes.

This is a perfectly executed slow burn of an episode, building dread piece by piece until the Enterprise is facing one of the most dangerous threats we have seen so far. The Borg feel terrifying, inevitable, and unlike anything else in Star Trek up to this point.

We talk about whether this episode represents a true turning point for the franchise, not just for The Next Generation. The stakes feel bigger, the storytelling feels sharper, and the episode trusts the audience to sit with tension in a way that feels different from almost anything we have watched so far.

We also discuss the Terran System, the number of crew lost, and the command decisions facing Riker. Shelby creates friction, but we do not think she is necessarily wrong. She pushes hard, sometimes too hard, but she also understands the seriousness of the threat.

And, shockingly, Picard did not surrender the Enterprise.

By the end of the episode, Aaron genuinely does not know how they are going to get out of this. That alone says a lot about how effective the cliffhanger is. It is no surprise this episode has been recognized as one of the greats, including being named a top-100 episode of television by TV Guide.

We also attempt some Season 3 trivia, with mixed results.

Final Thoughts:

Season 3 feels like a major step forward for Star Trek: The Next Generation. The stories are stronger, the performances are more consistent, and the show feels more confident about what it wants to be.

Even the episodes that do not fully work often give us something meaningful to discuss, and the best episodes are now reaching heights we had not seen from this series before.

A rising tide lifts all ships, and Season 3 may be the season where The Next Generation truly becomes The Next Generation.

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:

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.

Star Trek TNG S03E22-24 The Most Toys, Sarek, Ménage à Troi – “We don't talk about Spock” | First Time Reaction – To Baldly Go Podcast (Ep. 056)

This week on The To Baldly Go Podcast, Aaron and Nate continue their release-order watchthrough with three more episodes of Star Trek: The Next Generation: "The Most Toys," "Sarek," and "Ménage à Troi."

This week, we get:

  • Evil, terrifying characters

  • Allegory

  • Shakespeare

We covered:

  • The Most Toys

  • Sarek

  • Ménage à Troi

The Most Toys

"The Most Toys" gives us a Data-centered episode that feels like part of the well-oiled machine Season 3 has become. Data is left for dead, which creates an interesting tension problem because, as viewers, we know he is probably going to be safe. Even so, the episode finds its strength in the exploration of loss, adjustment, and the way real-life experience can shape how a story impacts us.

We also spend time discussing Kivas Fajo as a truly evil character, whether Data might be one of the most terrifying people on the Enterprise, and the uncomfortable question of what Data was prepared to do at the end of the episode. Also, Data lied.

Sarek

"Sarek" is a great episode and another reminder that The Next Generation is now clearly its own show while still remaining connected to The Original Series. Patrick Stewart delivers a remarkable performance as Sarek’s mind, and the episode gives us a lot to talk about when it comes to aging, dignity, emotional control, and how we respond when people we admire begin to decline.

We also discuss whether "Sarek" works as an allegory for Alzheimer’s or dementia, and the strange writing rule that apparently prevented the episode from directly referencing Spock.

Ménage à Troi

"Ménage à Troi" is one of those episodes where the title does not exactly inspire confidence. Still, Lwaxana Troi continues to grow on Aaron as a character, Shakespeare becomes a major part of the episode, and the Ferengi return to cause trouble in the way only the Ferengi can.

After the heavier conversations in "The Most Toys" and "Sarek," this episode gives us a very different kind of Star Trek discussion.

Final Thoughts

This set of episodes gives us evil collectors, aging Vulcans, emotional allegory, Shakespeare, Ferengi nonsense, and one very important question:

Do we talk about Spock?

Listen now to To Baldly Go Podcast Episode 056 as we continue our first-time journey through Star Trek: The Next Generation.

Where we are on our Trek:

Last week we covered:

Next week we will continue with:

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.

Star Trek TNG S02E19-22 Manhunt, The Emissary, Peak Performance, Shades of Gray – “Aaron Hates Star Trek” | First Time Reaction – To Baldly Go Podcast (Ep. 048)

First-Time Watch – Star Trek: The Next Generation Season 02, Episodes 19-22

Welcome to another episode of the To Baldly Go Podcast, in which I – a newbie to the Star Trek universe – am watching through Star Trek from the beginning, in release order, and discussing with some of my long-time Trekkie friends.

This week, we get:

  • Betazoid chaos and awkward comedy

  • Klingon worldbuilding and Worf character depth

  • Strategy, competition, and AI comparisons

  • A season finale that is very obviously a clip show

We covered:

  • Manhunt

  • The Emissary

  • Peak Performance

  • Shades of Gray

“Manhunt” – Lwaxana returns

“Manhunt” is a silly episode, but it works more often than it does not. Lwaxana Troi arrives on the Enterprise and immediately brings her usual brand of chaos, discomfort, and oversized personality, which gives the episode a weird energy that somehow lands.

That gave us plenty to talk about, including whether Lwaxana is basically the ultimate Boomer and some of the more unusual Betazoid details the episode introduces. It is broad and awkward, but memorable in exactly the way a Lwaxana episode probably should be.

“The Emissary” – Worf gets a major spotlight

“The Emissary” gives Worf one of his strongest showcases yet, and in the process expands Klingon worldbuilding in a meaningful way. The episode digs into honor, duty, heritage, and identity, while also giving Worf a relationship dynamic that reveals more about him than we usually get to see.

We spent a lot of time talking about Klingon codes of honor and about how K’Ehleyr really completes Worf as a character. We also got into Aaron’s confusion between this episode and the Deep Space Nine premiere, along with one more reminder that ChatGPT does not always save the day.

“Peak Performance” – Know your opponent

“Peak Performance” led to one of the biggest discussion rabbit holes of the week. On the episode level, it is about war games, command decisions, and Data working through failure. On the podcast level, it turned into a conversation about strategy, competition, and the nature of winning.

That meant talking about knowing your opponent, multiple victory conditions, and the way games can change depending on how success is defined. We also pulled in comparisons to Deep Blue, AlphaGo, and AI versus humans in games, along with discussion about chess timers, changing the rules, and whether that counts as cheating or just exposes poorly defined boundaries. Somehow, Aaron Pierce from 24 also made his way into the conversation.

“Shades of Gray” – The clip show finale

Then we get to “Shades of Gray,” the Season 2 finale and one of the most notorious episodes of The Next Generation. The premise is weak, the framework is thin, and the budget-saving nature of the episode is impossible to miss.

Even so, it gave us a fair amount to talk about. My own watching experience basically turned into a running internal monologue of “Tasha? Beard? Clip show???” and that became part of the fun. We also talked about whether clip shows are always bad, why I do not automatically hate them, and why this particular one still feels like it is built on an especially flimsy excuse.

Season 2 wrap-up

We also spent some time wrapping up Season 2 as a whole. For all its inconsistency, unevenness, and weird swings, it still feels greater than the sum of its parts. There is more depth here than I found in The Original Series, and you can feel TNG getting closer to the version of itself people really love.

Abbie had to duck out of the discussion, but not before giving Season 2 a 10, which is certainly a strong vote of confidence. We also talked about the idea that sometimes less is more and how this season shows real growth even when it stumbles.

If you’re watching along with us, next time we’ll be covering Star Trek TNG S03E01-03: Evolution, The Ensigns of Command, and The Survivors.

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:

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.

Star Trek TNG S02E16-18 Q Who?, Samaritan Snare, Up the Long Ladder – “Nobody Asked Your Opinion” | First Time Reaction – To Baldly Go Podcast (Ep. 046)

First-Time Watch – Star Trek: The Next Generation Season 02, Episodes 16-18

Welcome to another episode of the To Baldly Go Podcast, in which I – a newbie to the Star Trek universe – am watching through Star Trek from the beginning, in release order, and discussing with some of my long-time Trekkie friends.

This week, we get:

  • A new big bad

  • Federation road trip

  • “I think I’m a clone now”

We covered:

  • Q, Who?

  • Samaritan Snare

  • Up the Long Ladder

“Q, Who?” – The universe is dark and full of terrors

The Enterprise is flung across the galaxy by the mischievous Q, forcing Picard and crew into a terrifying first encounter with the Borg. What begins as another of Q’s tests quickly becomes a fight for survival, as the Borg prove unlike any enemy the Federation has faced—relentless, unknowable, and utterly indifferent.

As the Enterprise suffers devastating losses, Picard is forced to confront the limits of Federation confidence and his own assumptions about exploration. The crew escapes only through Q’s intervention, leaving behind a chilling realization: the galaxy is far more dangerous than they imagined.

Things we discussed:

  • I was able to enjoy this episode not knowing the Borg were coming in now

  • Was Q misused?

  • Saying "Thank you" to smart devices

  • What do cold opens add to a story?

  • Consensus

  • Star Trek's Doug Judy

  • What is Q's relationship with Picard?

A very different feel than other antagonists or villains to this point.

“Samaritan Snare” – Picard and Wesley go on a trip

While Captain Picard travels to undergo a risky medical procedure, Geordi La Forge and Wesley Crusher are stranded with a group of deceptively simple aliens known as the Pakled. Initially appearing harmless, the Pakleds reveal a cunning and dangerous side as they manipulate Geordi into helping them acquire advanced technology.

Meanwhile, Picard opens up to Wesley in a rare moment of vulnerability, sharing the story of his artificial heart and the reckless youth that led to it. The parallel storylines explore themes of perception—how easily intelligence and capability can be misunderstood.

Things we discussed:

  • Wesley drawing out a great performance from Patrick Stewart

  • Nate defending Wesley

  • MST3K and RiffTrax

  • Samaritan story

Seriously – how great is Patrick Stewart?

“Up the Long Ladder” – Clones and autonomy

The Enterprise encounters two lost human colonies with drastically different ways of life—one a group of Irish settlers living simply, the other a sterile, highly controlled society dependent on cloning to survive. When the cloning colony begins abducting crew members to sustain themselves, tensions escalate quickly.

Caught between preserving life and respecting autonomy, Picard must navigate a moral dilemma involving identity, reproduction, and what it means to be human. The resolution forces both colonies to confront uncomfortable truths about survival and change.

Things we discussed:

  • Problematical elements

  • Clones

  • Original Series feel, but not as well-executed

  • HIPAA in the 24th century

  • Getting onto a spaceship in anti-technology protest

As the great Weird Al said, “Isn’t it strange?  Feels like I’m lookin’ in the mirror.”

Final Thoughts

This week, we learned:

  • A new, constantly looming threat

  • Picard was wild in his youth

  • There is an irony in leaving your society in an anti-technology protest, and doing so by getting onto a spaceship

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:

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.

Star Trek TNG S02E04-06 The Outrageous Okona, Loud as a Whisper, The Schizoid Man – “If I Only Had a Heart” | First Time Reaction – To Baldly Go Podcast (Ep. 042)

First-Time Watch – Star Trek: The Next Generation  Season 02, Episodes 04-06

Welcome to another episode of the To Baldly Go Podcast, in which I – a newbie to the Star Trek universe – am watching through Star Trek from the beginning, in release order, and discussing with some of my long-time Trekkie friends.

This week, we get:

  • Picard jokes about surrendering…but is it a joke?

  • Advantage from disability?

  • Where does our humanity lie?

We covered:

  • The Outrageous Okona

  • Loud as a Whisper

  • The Schizoid Man

“The Outrageous Okona” – Perhaps the joke was not funny

The Enterprise encounters a charming but mysterious rogue named Okona, whose small cargo ship seems to bring trouble wherever he goes. Two alien factions accuse him of theft and kidnapping, each demanding justice.

As Captain Picard investigates, it becomes clear that Okona’s charisma hides a complicated personal mess involving romance, family expectations, and political embarrassment.

Meanwhile, Data explores human humor by trying to learn stand-up comedy from a visiting comedian on the holodeck. The episode mixes a swashbuckling guest character with an early look at Data’s ongoing quest to understand humanity.

Things we discussed:

  • The continuing exploration of Data’s humanity

  • Not as bad as The Child or Code of Honor

  • Forgettable

  • What a non-comic might think stand-up comedy is

  • Timely political references

  • A poorly-written romance novel

  • SeaQuest D.S.V.

  • Worf’s effectiveness

Sometimes an episode just doesn’t work.  Sometimes they swing and miss.  This felt like one of those episodes.

“Loud as a Whisper” – Turning disadvantage into advantage

The Enterprise transports Riva, a renowned mediator known for negotiating peace between warring planets. Riva is deaf and communicates through a trio of telepathic interpreters who express different aspects of his personality.

When tragedy strikes during the mission, Riva must confront the possibility that his ability to mediate has been destroyed. Counselor Troi helps him rediscover another way to communicate, leading to a powerful moment where Riva adapts and continues his mission.

The episode explores communication beyond language and the idea that understanding others often requires more than just hearing words.

Things we discussed:

  • How does an acting ensign get to pilot the fleet’s flagship?

  • Nepotism in the 24th century

  • Geordi’s choice

  • Freud’s separation of the mind

  • Troi’s abilities

  • Geordi and ChatGPT prompts

  • Transporter capabilities

Sometimes we can find strength in our perceived weaknesses.

“The Schizoid Man” – What does it mean to be human?

The Enterprise transports the brilliant but difficult cyberneticist Dr. Ira Graves, whose mind has begun to deteriorate due to a terminal illness. Fascinated with Data’s positronic brain, Graves secretly transfers his consciousness into the android’s body to escape death.

Initially reveling in his newfound immortality, Graves soon begins to exhibit increasingly erratic and domineering behavior while inhabiting Data. As the crew realizes what has happened, Graves must confront the ethical consequences of his actions and the question of whether preserving his mind is worth sacrificing Data’s identity.

The episode explores ego, mortality, and the meaning of personhood.

Things we discussed:

  • Another great Brent Spiner performance

  • What does it mean to be human?

  • The story of the Tin Man from the Wizard of Oz

  • What is consciousness?

Lots of discussion points and questions, fewer answers.

Final Thoughts

This week, we learned:

  • Worf is already more effective than Tasha ever was

  • Prompting people is a lot like prompting AI

  • Seriously – the story of the Tin Woodsman from the original Wizard of Oz novel is one of the most messed up stories ever

We are cruising along through Star Trek: The Next Generation.  These episodes all had a very “Original Series” feel to them, but not like The Naked NowTNG still feels like it’s figuring out what it is, but it is getting closer.

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:

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.

Star Trek TNG S02E01-03 The Child, Where Silence Has Lease, Elementary Dear Data – “Not Very Effective” | First Time Reaction – To Baldly Go Podcast (Ep. 041)

First-Time Watch – Star Trek: TNG Season 02, Episodes 01-03

Welcome to another episode of the To Baldly Go Podcast, in which I – a newbie to the Star Trek universe – am watching through Star Trek from the beginning, in release order, and discussing with some of my long-time Trekkie friends.

This week, we get:

  • New characters and Star Trek grows a beard

  • Word of the day: Effective

  • The unchanging concerns over AI

We covered:

  • The Child

  • Where Silence Has Lease

  • Elementary, Dear Data

“The Child” – Is it worse than Code of Honor?  Not quite…

Deanna Troi is impregnated by space dust that is curious about the human experience.

Things we discussed:

  • The start of Abbie loving these characters

  • Simple changes could have made it seem much less space-rapey

  • Character changes

  • Twilight

  • Debating character growth

  • Riker’s beard

There are better ways to explore the human experience.

“Where Silence Has Lease” – Did we ever make it out of the Matrix?

The Enterprise is trapped in a void with an entity that is exploring the limits of humanity.

Things we discussed:

  • How primitive Picard and crew are

  • A better exploration of humanity

  • The Expanse comparisons (Abaddon’s Gate)

  • A worse version of Q?

  • An uninspiring villain?

  • Learning all that you need to know

Another Talosian Illusion incident?  Did the Enterprise and crew get out?  Or is everything from this point forward occurring in the Void?

“Elementary, Dear Data” – AI versus humanity

Sherlock Data’s mysteries are too simple, so a new holodeck program is set up which becomes self-aware.

Things we discussed:

  • AI conversations today versus the late-1980s

  • Recitation does not mean understanding

  • Near consensus

  • Exploring Data’s humanity

  • Working with your hands, transcending time

  • Is Data capable of original thought?

  • Sherlock Holmes and copyright issues

The more things change, the more they stay the same.  The conversations surrounding AI have seemingly not changed.  The same conversations were had during The Original Series, Next Generation, and today.

A few other points

  • Gregg has some explaining to do (when he comes back)

  • Star Trek/Star Wars bar trivia

Final Thoughts

This week, we learned:

  • Abbie and I know more about Star Wars than Nate

  • Different effectiveness in stories exploring humanity

  • AI conversations have not meaningfully changed in the past 40 years (60 when we consider the same conversations from TOS)

A generally strong start to the second season (The Child notwithstanding).  Looking forward to more.

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


Star Trek TNG S01E24-26 We’ll Always Have Paris, Conspiracy, The Neutral Zone – “The Biggest Trekkie” | First Time Reaction – To Baldly Go Podcast (Ep. 040)

First-Time Watch – Star Trek: TNG Season 1, Episodes 24-26

Welcome to another episode of the To Baldly Go Podcast, in which I – a newbie to the Star Trek universe – am watching through Star Trek from the beginning, in release order, and discussing with some of my long-time Trekkie friends.

This week, we get:

  • Exceptional mediocrity

  • Practical effects worthy of a Michael Scott production

  • A fight with the Romulans that could have been great

We covered:

  • We’ll Always Have Paris

  • Conspiracy

  • The Neutral Zone

“We’ll Always Have Paris” – At least there’s that much

Sometimes an episode is so great that we don’t take many notes because we can’t get pulled away from it.

Sometimes an episode is so bad that we get pages of notes to discuss how bad it really was.

And then there are episodes like “We’ll Always Have Paris” – which was so exceptionally mediocre, we were all in agreement with almost nothing to say.

Things we discussed:

  • Picard backstory and similarities with Kirk

  • Time implications

  • Nobody cared

  • Writers’ strike impacts

A mediocre, forgettable episode.

“Conspiracy” – Cleanup on Aisle Five!  Threat Level Midnight

Picard brings the Enterprise back to Earth to find answers after the USS Horatio is destroyed, uncovering an alien conspiracy.

Things we discussed:

  • Mystery and intrigue at the Federation

  • Callbacks to prior episodes

  • Worf doesn’t like swimming – or bathing

  • Threat Level Midnight

  • Practical effects reminiscent of the earworms from Wrath of Khan

  • More impacts from the writers’ strike

  • A remaining existential threat?

  • The opposite of zero-trust

We are seeing more callbacks and connections to prior episodes which we didn’t see so much in The Original Series.

“The Neutral Zone” – Romulans?  Nah…

The Enterprise investigates attacks on outposts near the Neutral Zone and a potential new Romulan threat.  While investigating, they find some cryogenically frozen, 20th-century humans from Earth.

Things we discussed:

  • Side stories that detract from the main story

  • Could have been a great opportunity to expand on the Romulans

  • Downside of the writers’ strike again

  • More space for Worf

  • “There’s still much to do.  Still so much to learn.”

What could have been an awesome episode exploring the Romulan threat just fell flat by cramming in story elements that didn’t add up.

Holy crap!  Aaron’s a bigger Trekkie than us!

As the To Baldly Go Podcast’s resident Star Trek fan, I can proudly announce that we have reached the end of Season 1 of Next Generation.

  • Season 1 quiz and Trivia

  • Dealing with internet lag

  • Robin Williams discussion

  • TNG Season 1 wrap up

Final Thoughts

This week, we learned:

  • The writers’ strike hurt the product

  • There’s much more to come

  • You shouldn’t watch Robin Williams on Whose Line is it Anyway? when you are in the hospital after having your appendix removed

  • Through the first season of Star Trek: The Next Generation, I, Aaron, am the biggest Star Trek fan of our little away team.

I have now watched all of The Original Series, The Animated Series, four movies, and the first season of Star Trek: The Next Generation.  I never would have guessed any of that just a handful of years ago.

Where the end of season 1 of The Original Series felt like it had peaked, Next Generation feels like it’s just getting started.  I can’t where it will take us from here.

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


Star Trek TNG S01E21-23 Arsenal of Freedom, Symbiosis, Skin of Evil – “Tarth Vader” | First Time Reaction – To Baldly Go Podcast (Ep. 039)

This week on the To Baldly Go Podcast:

  • Smart devices try to kill us.

  • Star Trek does an after-school special about drugs.

  • And a main character dies… suddenly.

We’re discussing:

  • TNG S1E21 – Arsenal of Freedom

  • TNG S1E22 – Symbiosis

  • TNG S1E23 – Skin of Evil

Topics include:

  • Thanking Alexa

  • Nate hating Geordi

  • The Prime Directive vs. addiction

  • Evil space pharmaceutical reps

  • Stoicism and sudden loss

  • Armus vs. Jigsaw

  • The 24-treatment for shocking deaths

These and more as first-time reactions meet veteran Trek opinions

038 - The Lost Episode

This week:

  • Home Soil, Coming of Age, Heart of Glory

  • Devil in the Dark, redux?

  • Ugly bags of mostly water

  • What is life?

  • Is Data alive?  Is Data human?

  • Is Data just ChatGPT in a synthetic skin suit?

  • I step away while Abbie and Nate continue the conversation, looking ahead to things I haven’t seen

  • The love of being wrong

  • Observations of ADR and television production

  • Picard’s maturity

  • Distinct storylines that don’t come together

  • Series continuity

  • Worf the Stoic

  • A Gentleman in Moscow

  • I relate to the bad guy – sort of

  • Sometimes life isn’t fair

  • Only competing against yourself

  • Starfleet entrance exams.  What is the test?

  • Worf isn’t yet who Abbie remembers

  • The challenge of Tasha Yar

  • Geordi-vision

  • Nate is the biggest nerd on the podcast

  • Death in the Federation

  • Is TNG better than TOS at this point?

  • Picard, the hot head

037 - 11001001, Too Short a Season, When the Bough Breaks

This week:

  • 11001001, Too Short a Season, When the Bough Breaks

  • Nate concedes a point

  • Season 1 has been underwhelming, but we have the best episode yet

  • More commentary on the medium of network or syndicated TV

  • The holodeck

  • Abbie’s anesthesia dream

  • Deliberate scientific inaccuracies in Star Trek

  • An unrelated story in the Star Trek universe

  • 21st century ozone hole

  • An appropriate use for Wesley

  • What is a society?

  • Stories that would work for other series

  • Nate really hates Code of Honor

  • Looking ahead

035 - Dammit, Wesley!

This week:

  • A tribute to Scott Adams

  • Where No One Has Gone Before, Lonely Among Us, Justice

  • Abbie realizes how annoying Wesley is

  • Similar to The Original Series, but different enough

  • Thoughts and prayers to get home

  • What is the time range of this iteration of the Enterprise?

  • Curiosity

  • Stoic philosophy

  • Self-proclaimed experts and hubris

  • Confidence without arrogance

  • A body-swap episode?  No way!

  • Sherlock Data

  • Sometimes efforts and attempts just don’t work

  • Security fails again

  • Detectives’ Credo and Bayesian analysis

  • Unbelievable!!!!! The Movie rabbit hole (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bIaySADwGp4)

  • A better job telling an ok story

  • Prime Directive

  • Captain’s Calculus

  • Did Picard consider just surrendering the ship?

  • Life is an exercise in exceptions

  • Wesley is smart but naïve

  • The death penalty

  • Broken Window Theory

034 - Never Give Up...Sometimes Surrender

In this episode:

  • The Naked Now, Code of Honor, The Last Outpost

  • I feel like we’ve seen this before

  • An homage?

  • Gregg’s 9s and 10s and his one problem with the series

  • Gregg doesn’t like Wesley

  • Stories are more refined

  • Too early to have a “different characters” episode?

  • Visionary vs executor

  • Aaron’s Data moment

  • Feeling like Original Series episodes

  • Issues with Tasha Yar

  • Even bad Star Trek is still great Star Trek

  • Prime Directive discussion

  • Minimal character development and bad storytelling

  • Terrible ship security

  • The Ferengi

  • TNG villains

  • Picard surrendered the Enterprise

  • TNG vs TOS beginnings

  • Expectations moving forward

  • Swearing in Star Trek

  • Excited for more

033 - Encounter at Farpoint

In this episode:

  • The premiere of Star Trek: The Next Generation – Encounter at Farpoint

  • Joined by my old friend, Gregg

  • Gregg’s background with Star Trek

  • Felt like a pilot episode, but overall good

  • Original Series comparisons

  • Star Trek feel with a much bigger scope

  • A hopeful future with a bleak near-term view

  • Gregg rates a 9 and says it can only go up from here

  • Nate’s old technical manuals

  • Next Generation trailer

  • Target demographics

  • Who is the main character?

  • Differences between the two series

  • Androids and AI

  • My questions or things I hope to see

  • What we are all looking forward to

  • Interesting characters

  • Wesley discussion

  • Nate was the captain of the quiz bowl team in high school

031 - Star Trek III: The Search for Spock

In this episode we discuss:

  • No more Animated Series

  • Enjoying the dialogue more upon second viewing

  • How Abbie remembers Star Trek

  • Two years thinking Spock was dead

  • Leonard Nimoy directs

  • Curse of the odd-numbered Star Trek films

  • Choppy scenes missing the emotional, dramatic effect

  • Another Yeoman Rand-om sighting

  • Sacrificing the Enterprise

  • Krug – the Klingon John Wick?

  • A compelling villain

  • Extra-Kirk

  • What happened to Spock’s body?

  • Star Trek IV trailer

  • Ferngully in space?

  • Time travel done right

  • Trivia

030 - The Animated Series

This week, Nate and I discuss:

  • The Emmy-award winning Star Trek: The Animated Series

  • Stopped rating the episodes

  • Less than the sum of its parts?

  • A bad series

  • Animated Series as punishments

  • Spaceships and aliens

  • Target demographics

  • Shortcomings of TAS

  • No Chekov

  • The great episode of TAS – a top episode for the franchise to this point

  • Political implications of airing certain episodes

  • Is TAS canon?

  • Life support belts

  • Kirk was the Devil’s advocate?

  • Missing charm and disjointed dialogue

  • Unrealized potential

  • What non-Star-Trek fans think Star Trek is

  • Felt like the Gorn fight from Arena

  • TAS trivia

  • Nate’s Star Trek models

  • Star Trek production guide

  • Looking ahead to Next Generation

  • Planning future podcast discussions and watch order

029 - TOS Season 3 and Series Wrap UP

In this episode Abbie, Nate, and I discuss:

  • Final seven episodes of The Original Series

  • Another episode it feels like we’ve seen before

  • Fairy Tale by Stephen King

  • Abbie wanted to DNF episodes

  • Creepy, ick factor

  • Valentine’s Day Star Trek episode

  • Worst episode of The Original Series

  • DC Fontana

  • Qualified ratings – a “Season 3” Seven

  • Mixed messaging

  • Space Lincoln

  • Anti-war, but winning a war at all costs

  • A real, not real Abraham Lincoln speech

  • When do we learn to not fear words?

  • An ok episode, but terrible series finale – but does that say more about today?

  • And just like that, it’s over

  • Better than Nate remembered

  • Greater than the sum of its parts

  • Unprecedented

  • If it was more successful initially, would we be talking about it today?

  • Remembering the good moments and forgetting the negatives

  • Original Series trivia

  • Up next

028 - Racism, Overpopulation, and a Russian History Lesson

This week I am joined by my wife, Abbie, and our friend, Nate, as we discuss:

  • Let that Be Your Last Battlefield, The Mark of Gideon, and That Which Survives

  • The Trouble with Tribbles story

  • Elaan of Troyius recap now that Abbie is back

  • Overt messaging in shows

  • Star Trek without Gene Roddenberry

  • Is a good message enough to carry an episode?

  • A Captain’s responsibility to keep the ship out of enemy hands

  • Great Enterprise security

  • The transporter as a weapon

  • Nuclear codes in history

  • Dr. Strangelove

  • A good message – “Don’t hate”

  • Terrible movies with heavy-handed messaging

  • Watching people watch people on TV

  • Episode context

  • What is the call to action in this episode?

  • Being extra-Spock

  • Spock needs to be more precise

  • Abbie gets attacked by a kitten

  • The Tunguska Event

  • Another callout to The Beginning of Infinity

  • Limits on human knowledge?

  • A victim of the medium at the time?

  • The decline of the series

  • Over Warp 14

  • More multi-culturalism on the Enterprise

  • A game plan to finish The Original Series

  • Planning a Star Trek trivia challenge

  • Looking ahead to The Next Generation

  • Abbie fires some shots at DS9

  • Nate throws down the gauntlet for the best episode ending in all of Star Trek

  • A Star Trek producer spoke in my video production class in college

  • Something about whales

027 - You stupid cow

This week we discuss:

  • The Empath, Elaan of Troyius, and Whom Gods Destroy

  • Star Trek: Saw

  • What do you do if you have limited resources and can’t save everyone?

  • Low-percentage vs no-percentage

  • Intellect alone is not sufficient

  • Kirk acting in slow motion?

  • Book recommendation – Shadow Divers – don’t get the bends!

  • Star Trek’s Helen of Troy?

  • Stories about things that the stories aren’t about

  • Elaan hit first

  • Tony Soprano is a bad person who does bad things

  • Kirk has bad moments but isn’t a bad guy

  • How was non-slapstick violence received in the late-1960s?

  • Old tropes that are uncommon today

  • Power struggles over resources

  • When does the Prime Directive apply?

  • Warp speed, physics, and suspension of disbelief

  • Baggage when watching Star Trek

  • A Spaceballs connection

  • Litmus tests for how much I enjoy an episode

  • Two Kirks and memories of X-men

  • Pirates of the Caribbean and too much of a good thing

  • Ensemble strength

  • Powerful, yet helpless.  Art imitating reality

  • Episodes that are less than the sum of their parts

  • Fan fiction from a simple line

  • The Cochrane Deceleration

  • High-stress turns in space?

  • Planning some competitive trivia