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|    rec.arts.sf.tv    |    Discussing general television SF    |    136,466 messages    |
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|    Message 134,923 of 136,466    |
|    anim8rfsk to The Doctor    |
|    Re: AI/LLM reviews of STNG - Who watches    |
|    22 Jul 25 13:22:49    |
      [continued from previous message]              > mortal. He even puts his life at risk       > to convince Liko that he is not a god,       > preserving the Mintakansâ rational,       > proto-scientific worldview.       >       > ---       >       > ## â **Strengths**       >       > **â One of TNGâs best Prime Directive       > stories:** This is classic Trek: What       > happens when cultural contamination       > goes wrong? The ethical dilemma       > is clear, believable, and smartly handled.       >       > **â Picardâs finest hour:** This is       > Picard at his absolute Trek best â refusing       > to be worshipped, risking his own life       > to protect a cultureâs freedom       > from superstition. Stewart sells every word.       >       > **â The Mintakans are compelling:** Theyâre       > not a generic primitive people. Theyâre       > proto-Vulcans â rational thinkers on the       > cusp of embracing logic. That makes       > the stakes higher: the birth of religion       > here is a tragic setback to their natural       > development.       >       > **â        Beautifully tight sci-fi       > parable:** The parallels to human       > history â how religions can form       > from misunderstanding       > the unknown â are classic Roddenberry philosophy.       >       > **â Nuria is memorable:** Her scenes with Picard       > in the observation lounge are touching       > and intelligent â a simple but powerful       > exchange between curiosity and compassion.       >       > ---       >       > ## â **Weaknesses**       >       > **â A bit on-the-nose:** Some moments       > hammer the âprimitive people worship       > advanced peopleâ idea a bit heavily â but       > itâs in the spirit of classic Trek moral clarity.       >       > **â Side characters underused:** Apart from       > Nuria and Liko, the other Mintakans blend together.       >       > **â The outpost staff seem weirdly       > incompetent:** They lose their camo,       > break the Prime Directive,       > and get caught very easily â which       > feels a bit convenient to spark the plot.       >       > ---       >       > ## ð **Standout moments**       >       > * Picardâs conversation with Nuria, showing her       > the Enterprise and explaining life and death.       >       > * The final standoff where Picard risks       > getting shot to prove his mortality.       >       > * Troi undercover with the Mintakans,       > gently guiding them away from superstition.       >       > ---       >       > ## ð¨ï¸ **Best line**       >       >> **Picard:** *âIt is the greater arrogance       > to assume that we can interfere       > with the natural development of a people.â*       >       > Perfectly sums up the entire Prime       > Directive philosophy â Trek in a single line.       >       > ---       >       > ## â **Rating: 9/10**       >       > **Verdict:** *Who Watches The Watchers*       > is *quintessential* Star Trek: moral,       > thoughtful, hopeful, and deeply respectful       > of the power of reason over superstition.       > Itâs a story that only Trek would       > tell â and only *The Next Generation* could       > deliver with such quiet conviction.       > One of the best episodes       > of Season 3 â and one of the better       > Prime Directive stories in the franchise.       >                            --       The last thing I want to do is hurt you, but it is still on my list.              --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05        * Origin: you cannot sedate... all the things you hate (1:229/2)    |
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