Star Trek Retro Review: "The Big Good-Bye" (TNG) | Holodeck Episodes

Поділитися
Вставка
  • Опубліковано 24 кві 2024
  • ▶Join this channel to get access to perks:
    ua-cam.com/users/steveshivesjoin
    ▶Patreon: / steveshives
    ▶PayPal: www.paypal.me/SteveShives
    ▶Venmo: venmo.com/thatguysteveshives
    ▶Twitter: / steve_shives
    ▶Facebook: / thatguysteveshives
    ▶Instagram: / steve.shives
    Listen to the Late Seating podcast:
    ▶RSS: / sounds.rss
    ▶Soundcloud: / late-seating
    Listen to The Ensign's Log podcast:
    ▶RSS: / sounds.rss
    ▶Soundcloud: / the-ensigns-log-podcast
    #startrek #review #startrekthenextgeneration
  • Розваги

КОМЕНТАРІ • 269

  • @frankm.2850
    @frankm.2850 12 днів тому +69

    The fact that Patrick Stewart, a Shakespearean actor, absolutely nails the shit out of the haradan greeting as if it was no different than a soliloquy from Macbeth is just *chef’s kiss*

    • @hagbardceline7118
      @hagbardceline7118 12 днів тому +8

      I'd be interested to see how many takes there was. Also from the angle he's shot at, it could be read off a cue card

  • @patrickdodds7162
    @patrickdodds7162 12 днів тому +88

    Fun Fact: In the episode, "11001001", The Bynars fixed the problems that the Jaradan probe caused the holodeck in "TBG"with a throwaway line. (I so dearly miss SUBTLE call backs in continuity in Trek. I miss it so much fucking much much.)

    • @kaitlyn__L
      @kaitlyn__L 12 днів тому +18

      Although funnily enough, that was originally going to be the _cause_ of their problems here, before the episode order got reworked. So it's a subtle callback _and_ a clever script-fix to accommodate last-minute production issues :)

    • @AdamKlein77
      @AdamKlein77 12 днів тому +2

      Dammit, now I have to watch [01]{8,8} again

    • @michaelhall2709
      @michaelhall2709 12 днів тому +1

      As I mentioned above, that was actually a much better episode than this one.

    • @indianastones6032
      @indianastones6032 11 днів тому +5

      Its the small things like that, which truly make star trek great!

  • @Cmdr1962
    @Cmdr1962 12 днів тому +49

    Gates was born to wear 40s fashion.

    • @talon262
      @talon262 12 днів тому +12

      Well, having been a choreographer and dancer before she became an actor, she definitely had the gams for it.

  • @empirejeff
    @empirejeff 12 днів тому +76

    Picard called a senior Bridge staff meeting to talk about the holodeck. What a good captain 😊

    • @miguelvelez7221
      @miguelvelez7221 12 днів тому +18

      😂 It really has a lot of "Dude... I just got the DLC, you guys gotta come over and play!" energy.

    • @TK42100
      @TK42100 11 днів тому +5

      I still crack up at Worf saying “Auto…mobiles?”

  • @frankm.2850
    @frankm.2850 12 днів тому +23

    “I’d say it’s a good thing she paid upfront but YOU LOST THE MONEY. “ 😆

  • @DrewLSsix
    @DrewLSsix 12 днів тому +47

    So... do holodeck programs have scene transitions? Like do you have to ride in the cop car, get booked, sit in a cell for a few hours THEN get the next meaningful scene in the story when you are interrogated by the hostile corrupt detectives?

    • @CoyoteSeven
      @CoyoteSeven 12 днів тому +12

      From what we've been shown of how the holodeck works, the story will plod along in real time unless you specifically tell the computer to jump forward to a certain time index or scene or chapter or whatever.

    • @lunatickoala
      @lunatickoala 12 днів тому +7

      Probably depends on whoever made the program and current trends. Over time the number of transitions probably decreases. In older movies, if characters needed to travel there was often a scene showing that but over time there was less and less of that. The Indiana Jones movies include those specifically as an homage to those old movies.

    • @kaitlyn__L
      @kaitlyn__L 12 днів тому +19

      In Bashir's holo-program Garak doesn't know how they got to Bashir's Hong Kong pad on the other side of the planet, so I guess there was fast-travel. Else he'd know how first-class jet travel was like in the 60s 😅
      Oh yeah! Tom Paris criticised Tuvok for too much realism when their holding cell experience plays out in real time. That's pretty direct confirmation that that is _not_ the norm in holodeck narratives. But also 100% possible.

    • @douglaswolfen7820
      @douglaswolfen7820 12 днів тому +5

      I think there would have to be time skips. They're just an essential story-telling tool. Every other form of storytelling has them after all
      But it's a good question, because they'd probably be considered a little more jarring in holodeck stories than they are in other media, so maybe holodeck stories are often written to have fewer time skips? Less waiting around?

    • @calebleland8390
      @calebleland8390 12 днів тому +1

      ​@@CoyoteSevenI always assumed that, especially when you look at the holodeck scene in First Contact. Picard just tells the computer to skip several chapters and the scene automatically changes. But one can presume that, without that prompt, you would be stuck waiting for an eternity to get to a particular scene.

  • @patrickdodds7162
    @patrickdodds7162 12 днів тому +36

    *"Manners, madam, are never a waste of time. Civility, gentleman, always civility. Get that stiff outta here..."* -- TNG (and Trek in general)' s most underrated line. This episode earned it's Peabody for that alone.

    • @wedgemccloud
      @wedgemccloud 12 днів тому +2

      Right up there with "Manners maketh man." and "Rules… without them, we live with the animals."

    • @alanpennie
      @alanpennie 8 днів тому +1

      That looks like another nod to Sydney Greenstreet.

  • @torenatkinson1986
    @torenatkinson1986 12 днів тому +39

    I have to mention "Cyrus Redblock" actor Lawrence Tierney. Along with a long list of golden age noir roles, he played the gangster boss in Reservoir Dogs, Elaine's father on Seinfeld, and voiced Don Brodka on the Simpsons. That's right, Don Brodka.

    • @michaelhall2709
      @michaelhall2709 12 днів тому +2

      And he was great in RESERVOIR DOGS, though apparently everyone involved with the film hated working with him.

  • @miyahollands6136
    @miyahollands6136 12 днів тому +13

    the deectives are playing good cop, bad cop. Picard responds "There are 4 lights!"

  • @jpotter2086
    @jpotter2086 12 днів тому +14

    So '80s ... episode treats military professionals troubleshooting a holodeck like a suburban family trying to program a VCR. Bookworm kid to the rescue!

  • @MichaelHaneline
    @MichaelHaneline 12 днів тому +15

    $100 in 1946 is the equivalent of about $1700 today.

  • @allanolley4874
    @allanolley4874 12 днів тому +30

    Dick Miller is the epitome of the grizzled no nonsense working man (or at least was in the 80s & 90s) and so well cast as the new vendor (and from what I remember his role in the DS9 episodes were they travel back to 2024).
    One dissonant note I remember about this episode is that Picard seemed awfully ignorant of the actual content of the Dixon Hill novels for someone who was supposed to have read them at least a little. Overall yeah I remember it relatively fondly.
    I'm kind of sad we didn't get to here Steve do at least one line of a full on noir voice over dialogue "It was raining in the city..." Maybe one day...

    • @kevinkeeney9418
      @kevinkeeney9418 12 днів тому +8

      I always assumed it's been awhile. Like, I have fond memories of the Hardy Boys books from my youth, but I only read them once, and I would be hard pressed to remember specific plot elements if I were to step into Chet's role in a virtual recreation.

    • @torenatkinson1986
      @torenatkinson1986 12 днів тому +6

      There's a 1.5 hour documentary "That Guy: Dick Miller"

    • @allanolley4874
      @allanolley4874 12 днів тому +1

      @@torenatkinson1986 Wow thanks. I just watched it. Star Trek content is provided by both Ira Behr and Robert Picardo (although he is there because of the Burbs). They do mention the Deep Space 9 episode but not this TNG episode. Still interesting stuff.

    • @thing_under_the_stairs
      @thing_under_the_stairs 11 днів тому +1

      @@kevinkeeney9418 Exactly! Or like how I've probably read every book that Agatha Christie ever wrote, but it's been years since I've read any of them, and if I was dropped into a holodeck program of a specific Agatha Christie mystery, I would most likely have no idea which one I was in, unless it was one of the most memorable, like if I happened to notice that we were on the Orient Express...

    • @decepticonpecock
      @decepticonpecock 10 днів тому +2

      What if he's a fake fan who's only ever played the holonovel adaptations and never actually read the text.

  • @peopleseethis
    @peopleseethis 12 днів тому +25

    I'm sure it's just because they hadn't decided the "rules" for the holodeck yet being the first episode of its kind, but how did the holodeck put real lipstick on a hologram woman so that it could leave the holodeck and be seen by Crusher? The dudes disappeared when they walked out.

    • @laikapupkino1767
      @laikapupkino1767 12 днів тому +12

      It was Revlon long-lasting holodeck lipstick. Available in holodecks, holosuites and holonovels across the galaxy...

    • @TrumbullComic
      @TrumbullComic 12 днів тому +7

      I'm wondering why the bullet in Whalen's stomach didn't instantly disappear as soon as he was carried out of the holodeck.

    • @CoyoteSeven
      @CoyoteSeven 12 днів тому +8

      That sort of thing happened often with those holodeck episodes. Like when Moriarty drew an outline of the Enterprise on a piece of paper and Data was able to exit the holodeck with it. But then in that other episode with Moriarty they were trying to transport a holographic chair out of the holodeck? Consistency!

    • @bailey64
      @bailey64 12 днів тому +8

      Holodecks (mostly in the first season) also used replicator/teleporter tech to physically produce some elements (like water if some one gets wet, since it's easier than somehow simulating the clothes they are wearing being wet), so it likely just manufactured the lipstick as it was applied to Picard's face. Making whole people is clearly beyond what the holodeck can make physically (much to Moriarty's frustration).

    • @wentencel
      @wentencel 12 днів тому +1

      Holodeck got me pregnant again

  • @Kleion_RFB
    @Kleion_RFB 12 днів тому +12

    I don't generally notice things like continuity issues, and it's not like it's a big deal, but this episode does have one of the few that I noticed myself. Wesley is working outside of the Holodeck with a few technicians, they get the doors open, and then Cyrus Redblock and Not Peter Lorre walk out into a completely empty hallway, with Wesley (and the technicians) apparently having cleaned up and run off without even waiting to see that his mom is ok. Given that this was his whole motivation for coming down to look at the Holodeck in the first place, it's a really apparent one.

  • @uroviiv
    @uroviiv 12 днів тому +9

    I know it doesn't really matter, but I always wondered at the in universe origins of the holodeck safety. Did Starfleet's engineers just never figure out how to make blanks and finally went 'screw it, there's clearly no better solution than using real guns in our public entertainment system. Let's just add a safety and hope nothing ever messes with it,'? And if not, what situation were they anticipating that would need a lethal holodeck? Besides, I guess, gunning down Borg with a twentieth century machine gun.

  • @edwarren8541
    @edwarren8541 11 днів тому +3

    I worked with the actor who played the good cop. He complained "Whenever I get cast for TV, I am always a cop. Then, my agent told me I got a role on the new show of Star Trek. I thought, "This is great! I'll get to play an alien, or a scientist, or someone on the ship. I got the script. What was I playing? A cop."

  • @kemmdog4444
    @kemmdog4444 12 днів тому +9

    I guess Bah-weep-Graaaaagnah wheep ni ni bong isn’t going to cut it with those aliens.

  • @TrumbullComic
    @TrumbullComic 12 днів тому +12

    Yeah, it's a good idea to make Picard's goodbye to his friend McNary the final scene of the episode, since it's the emotional heart of the story. I bet they could've managed it if they'd just had Picard make his greeting to the Jarada from the holodeck. Then we could've gotten a last bit of comedy with McNary giving Picard some side eye as his buddy Dixon Hill suddenly starts speaking in gibberish. Then BAM! Hit us with the big goodbye, leave us with the final question of whether or not McNary's wife and child are going to be there when he gets home, fade to black. That'd be a good film noir ending.

    • @michaelhall2709
      @michaelhall2709 12 днів тому +1

      Not bad. That would at least have tied the A and B plots together, which the episode as aired utterly fails to do.

  • @snakebitcat
    @snakebitcat 12 днів тому +6

    I thought the reason why it had fewer coffee stains was because everyone on the Enterprise drank tea, Earl Grey, hot.

  • @miguelvelez7221
    @miguelvelez7221 12 днів тому +8

    OMG... I never realized the Redblock/Greenstreet connection.

  • @animistchannel
    @animistchannel 12 днів тому +5

    "Oh no, I'm evenescing! I'm going under!" Really? Literate and corny. You're king of the internet today, good work :)

  • @ChesterRico
    @ChesterRico 12 днів тому +5

    A Daredevil reference? Damn, I miss that show.

  • @sirB0nes
    @sirB0nes 12 днів тому +5

    The episode title is a nice bit of film noir pastiche as well, combining "The Big Sleep" with "The Long Goodbye," both novels by Raymond Chandler (and eventually movies) that featured his recurrent detective character Phillip Marlowe.

  • @johnboren8928
    @johnboren8928 11 днів тому +4

    The continuity issue about Picard not having any money despite being giver $100 earlier could have been resolved by him giving the vendor a $100 bill and having the vendor get angry because there was no way he would have been able to give change for a hundred, and throwing the paper at him.

  • @FailSonOfAnarchy
    @FailSonOfAnarchy 12 днів тому +4

    Redblock is played by Lawrence Tierney, a tough guy actor from a bunch of noir films in the 40's. He even played John Dillinger in 1945.

  • @McFlingleson
    @McFlingleson 10 днів тому +2

    You know, it always kind of seemed to me like the Federation should just quietly avoid the aliens who demand Captain Picard do the ceremonial greeting. They always sounded like the kind of people who are just more of a headache than they're worth.

  • @OpinionsNoOneCaresAbout
    @OpinionsNoOneCaresAbout 11 днів тому +3

    You could disappear if the computer crashes? See, that's the problem. The scientists were so preoccupied with whether or not they could, they didn't stop to think if they SHOULD.
    That's gonna come back to bite them again when "Elementary, Dear Data" comes along.

  • @patrickdodds7162
    @patrickdodds7162 12 днів тому +4

    Ooh! Ooh! This episode mentions the London Kings which would later be referenced on DS9 as Buck Bokai's team--which would also be referenced in VOY's "One Small Step"! (This episode rules!)

  • @alanpennie
    @alanpennie 8 днів тому +1

    I suspect The Maltese Falcon gets parodied so often because it's such a good example of the *have a guy come through a door with a gun in hand* style of mystery writing.

  • @dkSilo
    @dkSilo 12 днів тому +5

    Loved the references. The quickfire ones and others sprinkled in. Didn't get all of them, but most. My favourite one was to the MCU Kingpin, very on point with the visuals (and crime boss parallel).
    Nice video. Totally didn't remember the weird holodeck stuff that never returns (like vanishing people or holodeck characters able to leave for a few steps before slowly disintrigrating).
    Looking forward to more holodeck stuff.

  • @NihlusKryik
    @NihlusKryik 12 днів тому +3

    Steve, we need a Starfleet Jobs Interview with a ship’s fiction expert

  • @lunatickoala
    @lunatickoala 12 днів тому +4

    Many of the cast and crew also expressed that this was their favorite episode to work on in the first season. Which is essentially a slight on the series because if the best episode and even the best scenes in the episode are the ones that have the least to do with what the series is supposed to be about, then the series is kinda crap. It's like going to a restaurant and the only good thing on the menu is a dessert from the bakery next door.
    TNG era Star Trek was at its best when it broke away from what Roddenberry wanted, when the story wasn't about humans with "evolved sensibilities" preaching about the superiority of the Federation Way to the heathen savages of the galaxy. What do "Q Who", "Yesterday's Enterprise", "The Best of Both Worlds", "Chain of Command" all have in common? There's a lot of eating of humble pie.

  • @SeventhSwell
    @SeventhSwell 12 днів тому +6

    "Wormy Great Value version" is great, since I literally just had to throw out a full package of Great Value sugar that came with worms in it.

    • @thing_under_the_stairs
      @thing_under_the_stairs 11 днів тому +1

      I *knew* there was a reason that I prefer other cheap store brands!

  • @Zoldgameclips
    @Zoldgameclips 12 днів тому +8

    I would have loved to see an episode of TNG exploring how modern humans most often consume media, since it seems like they either have just books, or the holodeck, with no television/movies inbetween; everything's either written on a page, or in full 3D simulation lol.

    • @DrewLSsix
      @DrewLSsix 12 днів тому +1

      We only ever see a tiny sliver of society throughout star trek.

    • @Stephen-Fox
      @Stephen-Fox 12 днів тому +2

      Film and television are implied to not really be a thing anymore in Voyager, where Tom's considered an absolute nerd by the rest of the crew for being into film generally (and 20th century cinema in specific). One of his holodeck programs was a replica of a cinema and everyone else seems to be generally confused as to why you'd want media that's visual rather than written word or a recording of music but not a 3d simulation. Books or video games. No tv, no film... Maybe no stage plays even since the concept of cinema isn't _that_ different to the concept of a stage play.
      Which is _particularly_ weird considering the holodeck is treated as a novelty in TNG's first season, cutting edge tech that the crew are amazed by - set around 7 years before Voyager got stranded. Implying that at some point prior to the invention of the holodeck the written word became not just the dominant form of media but the only form of media. And then, bam. Suddenly videogames also existed again. But 3d ones where you can walk around and get killed if the safeties go wrong.

    • @ExtremeMadnessX
      @ExtremeMadnessX 12 днів тому

      Data in episode when they find frozen people from the 21st century that television wasn't way of entertainment since middle of 21st century. Or something like that...

    • @carolinemcgovern4488
      @carolinemcgovern4488 11 днів тому +4

      I'd love a spinoff of Star Trek but it's focusing on the normal people going about their business living in this society

    • @fisk0
      @fisk0 10 днів тому +1

      At least it's established as still being a thing in the Enterprise and TOS (Discovery) eras - they have regular movie nights on Enterprise and Discovery had that Short Treks episode about the movie Funny Face. So, while both those shows were produced long after TNG, I'd imagine people in the TNG era would still be familiar with the medium, especially considering how recent Holodecks seem to be according to this episode. You can imagine that with time, movies would be outcompeted by holodecks, but it's so new in TNG that most of the characters have little to no experience with them when they're introduced.

  • @BrianRRenfro
    @BrianRRenfro 12 днів тому +2

    I always thought it was hilarious (and that was probably the point) of everyone dressing up and walking around the ship like a fucking Viking or whatever they are playing when they could just have a Holodeck Jumpsuit issued to them and the holodeck could just dress them which could be made weightless and stretchy and feel like it isn't even there if you so wished. Of course, again, I know, it's entertaining to have them walk around dressed as a pirate but still...

  • @lock67ca
    @lock67ca 12 днів тому +3

    Hey, careful there. That rug ties the room together.

  • @wentencel
    @wentencel 12 днів тому +3

    I lost internet connection right after your introductory puns and assumed you were just holding for laughter

  • @freyja4818
    @freyja4818 12 днів тому +11

    It's brought up more in voyager, but I always am confused by the treatment of holodeck programs as novels. In a novel you can't change the story. I feel that the ability to do anything limits the author's influence over themes, messages, and the story itself. It seems like they'd just be creating npc's in the game world, and pointing them in a direction, but there isn't any reason to expect the author's story to play out.

    • @ThePlayTyperGuy
      @ThePlayTyperGuy 12 днів тому +1

      Yes, the holodeck is more like a video game or any other sort of roleplaying exercise. A book is a book. And with the replicators, you’d have a library at your command.

    • @shivermeshoes
      @shivermeshoes 12 днів тому +1

      It's a holo-novel, roughly analogous to video games in a story format. Easier than saying 'a holodeck program based on the characters, events and setting of a particular Jane Austin novel'. I'm sure you could set the program so that other characters would stand with blank stares until you said or did the things 'by the book' but the idea of testing out scenarios is much more intriguing. I wonder what would have happened if James Holden never responded to the distress call at the beginning of The Expanse, for instance.

    • @michaelramon2411
      @michaelramon2411 12 днів тому +3

      I suspect that's a result of the time period TNG was written in - video games were still a long way from mainstream, so they use a comparison that both the writers and audience would be more familiar with.

    • @joeeyaura
      @joeeyaura 12 днів тому +4

      i think its a left over word in the future, like how we call mobile phones, phones. when that is the very least they are used for anymore, yes it is a phone but alot more. so it is like a novel, but so much more too

    • @DrewLSsix
      @DrewLSsix 12 днів тому +4

      Never read a choose your own adventure book?

  • @Novakiller
    @Novakiller 12 днів тому +10

    I wonder how that holographic lipstick stayed on Picard‘s face after he left the hollow deck?? 😏🙄

    • @njb1126
      @njb1126 12 днів тому +3

      I believe the common reason is that some material is purely holographic while other matter is replicated.

  • @poozizzle
    @poozizzle 12 днів тому +3

    The greeting at the end is the only part I really remember. It was a jarring way to end an episode

  • @Howlrunner82
    @Howlrunner82 12 днів тому +4

    The Holodeck. When the "personal relaxation light" isn't enough 😂

    • @patrickdodds7162
      @patrickdodds7162 12 днів тому +2

      Kudos for the "11001001" reference! You rule!

  • @renatocorvaro6924
    @renatocorvaro6924 11 днів тому +2

    Alright that Many MacGuffin gag was brilliant

  • @Chris-tf7gi
    @Chris-tf7gi 12 днів тому +2

    Seems I've always agreed with you on how good The Big Goodbye is. Well said on how Picard got a chance to lighten up and how secondary characters even get some depth. Only thing that's always nagged me a tad is it'd be nice if that mystery item were found or identified. If that young lady were not killed early on she could returned to lay a big... kiss on Picard, igniting sparks with Crusher for the future. Barclay wright that program?

  • @fy8798
    @fy8798 12 днів тому +3

    I'd like going to work and the boss calls everyone to a staff meeting to discuss how Amazing Ultima IV on their computer is and we should all play it.

  • @OpinionsNoOneCaresAbout
    @OpinionsNoOneCaresAbout 11 днів тому +1

    I never understood how the holographic lipstick stayed on Picard's face, especially given the ending where Redblock stepped off the holodeck and vanished.

  • @ericgeyer3213
    @ericgeyer3213 12 днів тому +3

    The writers were still breaking holodeck rules in this one. Though Cyrus and Felix eventually disappear, it's not immediately like the book that Picard tosses through the arch to demonstrate to Moriarty why he shouldn't leave. Also, why does the lipstick stay on Picard's face after he leaves? Wasn't it also holographic? Same with the water that Wesley Crusher seems to be able to take off the holodeck in Encounter at Farpoint and Angel One (the latter in snowball form, hitting Picard in the chest), though probably only because it puts him in an embarrassing situation with the Captain both times.

  • @Sidecutter
    @Sidecutter 12 днів тому +8

    "If she had a grocery receipt in her pocket, would these cops be raiding the local Safeway...?"
    Um, yes? 100% yes. That's 100% accurate to what I believe real cops would do.

  • @sethlogee
    @sethlogee 12 днів тому +2

    I can't believe you didn't bring up what was on front page of newspaper captain read at news stand. Hitler on the Moon. 🤣🤣🤣

  • @scottwesty9568
    @scottwesty9568 12 днів тому +2

    Man, with the way you said "A San Francisco street" for a second I thought you said "treat"
    Could have been a great Rice A Roni joke/reference.

  • @stevewithaq
    @stevewithaq 12 днів тому +1

    5:30 - OR - maybe Picard didn't lose the money, but was just running the classic "plead penury to score a free newspaper" routine - a sweet grift if you can pull it off!

  • @CynthiaWarren
    @CynthiaWarren 9 днів тому +1

    I liked this episode. It was fun seeing the cast so confused by things that are ordinary to us, even when the tech is outdated by our standards.
    BTW, a fun idea for future retro review themes: episodes that build main character backstory. You could call it Backstory Development Episodes. You should get a nice string of episodes to review from that.

  • @no_sht_sherlock4663
    @no_sht_sherlock4663 12 днів тому +2

    The fact that the lipstick survived outside the holodeck and the characters didn't, cracks me up

    • @niceguy191
      @niceguy191 11 днів тому +1

      I like how they operate on Wile E Coyote logic and somehow make it into the hallway before dissolving for dramatic effect.

  • @carlapeay208
    @carlapeay208 11 днів тому +1

    This is the federation flagship, with presumably some of the best most highly trained engineers in Starfleet. And the best person to fix a potentially life threatening malfunction on the holodeck is Wesley?

  • @lafara0
    @lafara0 11 днів тому +2

    The "Okay... You don't need to be like that" killed me

  • @breengreg
    @breengreg 12 днів тому +2

    The way Picard gushes about the holodeck is insane. He acts like it’s magic.

  • @MrEriklenn
    @MrEriklenn 11 днів тому +2

    And if anyone asks you "What's the Maltese Falcon?" make sure your response is "it's the stuff that dreams are made of"

  • @jlima01
    @jlima01 6 днів тому

    Interesting piece of trivia.
    The are two times I know of that Major League Baseball’s London Kings are discussed. Here, and in DS9 ‘Past Tense’. Dick Miller is a part of both of these scenes.

  • @koini11
    @koini11 11 днів тому +1

    Re the whole 'if it crashes everyone inside dies thing'. I feel like this was a very common trope of tv and film in the 90s. You couldnt move for plots about immersive but deadly computer games that would fry your brains back then.

    • @koini11
      @koini11 11 днів тому +1

      I say this being unable to think of an example but like people being stuck in quicksand, It seems like a common plot point you never see any more.

  • @joehopfield
    @joehopfield 12 днів тому +1

    That shirt! Also, green *was* my valley...

  • @jan-rs6im
    @jan-rs6im 12 днів тому +2

    and Gates McFadden and Patrick Stewart never looked better than in the vintage outfits

  • @marienbad2
    @marienbad2 10 днів тому

    "You're a pretty hot broad."
    "Is that good?"
    Crusher killing it!

  • @christopherscholl639
    @christopherscholl639 11 днів тому

    When Picard looks out of the window, and apparently his office is on the 2nd or 3rd floor at an interesection, ready to cross the road.

  • @caseyontiveros2776
    @caseyontiveros2776 11 днів тому

    It was nice to see in Discovery S5Ep5 where they just the First Officer ask why something needs to work that one way, and Stamits just says, it does and that's good enough for the First Officer.

  • @cbruce78
    @cbruce78 8 днів тому

    My easy fix for "everyone dies if the holodeck shuts down" would be for Geordi to announce that among the circuits that were fried was the auto-cleaning sterilizer cycle that disintegrates all leftover biological matter after each user leaves the holodeck.
    Hard-cut to Riker avoiding eye contact.

  • @Aezetyr
    @Aezetyr 12 днів тому +3

    12:41 - do not put the holodeck through a carwash.

  • @jayman012386
    @jayman012386 11 днів тому +1

    Steve, Are you going to do "The Royale"? Though not technically a holodeck episode, the planet is a simulation of some sort and allow the TNG crew to do a Ocean's 11-esque episode.

  • @pokepress
    @pokepress 10 днів тому

    For your EDD discussion, here are a few “gamer”/AI things I wanted to mention.
    -When Data bypasses the intended sequence of events in the first outing, it turns out that the speedrunning community actually has a name for that-a sequence break! The fact that the program reacts more or less appropriately to this suggests that the developers anticipated this (or someone else tried it) and programmed in an alternate response.
    -The part where Geordi instructs the computer to formulate an original Sherlock Holmes plot line has some interesting parallels to AI generated content, both from an analysis of how LLMs combine information, and some of the discussions around AI safety. I hope you include those in your discussion. Also, since Data is technically an AI himself, you could consider the interaction between him and the scenarios generated by the computer to be a kind of Generative Adversarial Network.

  • @cheddarssalad1230
    @cheddarssalad1230 12 днів тому +1

    These sort of episodes always makes me wonder why the holodeck doesn’t use hitscan by default. Hitscan, for those that don’t know, is programming tech used in video games that involve gunplay. Most games do not render bullets as physical objects. Instead the game draws an invisible line from the gun to what it is pointed at and if the gun is pointing at something that reacts to bullets the object will react. It hits what it scans.
    Sure, holographic bullets are good in a pinch if the Borg show up but far too risky and completely unnecessary in literally every other possible scenario.

  • @peterversionone
    @peterversionone 12 днів тому +3

    Does anyone else hate we never got to see Miles and Bashir’s holosuite adventures(The Alamo, Battle of Britain, and also basically a Braveheart battle)
    Also, what holodeck episode was it where Picard went 1920’s gangster and shot up everyone with the Tommy Gun

    • @TrumbullComic
      @TrumbullComic 12 днів тому +5

      That was in the movie First Contact.

    • @veronicado1016
      @veronicado1016 12 днів тому +1

      That wasn't an episode. That was the scene from the movie Star Trek First Contact.

    • @CrypticCharm
      @CrypticCharm 12 днів тому +2

      That was Star Trek First Contact...killing the Borg, with a holographic tommy gun!

    • @Stealthwilde
      @Stealthwilde 12 днів тому +3

      Not a holodeck episode, it's a scene from the TNG movie First Contact. Picard lures the Borg invading the ship into the holodeck and turns off the safeties, turns out the borg have never encountered a Chicago typewriter and so haven't adapted to it yet

  • @CCJJ160Channels
    @CCJJ160Channels 12 днів тому +1

    Quick reminder, Nicky “The Nose” is in chapter 13 😉

  • @jeffreyjeziorski1480
    @jeffreyjeziorski1480 11 днів тому +1

    Sidney.......Green street...
    Cyrus.........Red block
    ..........subtle!!.........

  • @wesleyrodgers886
    @wesleyrodgers886 11 днів тому +1

    The big sleep.
    The long goodbye.
    Raymond chandler.
    If anyone's interested

  • @foxallan
    @foxallan 12 днів тому +1

    Mobsters disappear when they exit the Holodeck but the lipstick on Picard's face didn't?

  • @chazblank2717
    @chazblank2717 12 днів тому +2

    I dunno, routine police incompetence and corruption in the 1940’s kinda sounds like period accuracy… those cops would’ve hassled Benny Russel for way less

    • @alanpennie
      @alanpennie 8 днів тому

      As a PI (presumably a former cop himself) DH will know how the game is played.
      The cops will just phone him up to ask him what he's found out and since his client is dead (I suppose he'll need to check they're not lying to him) he's free to talk without any risk of breaking client confidentiality.
      Philip Marlowe spent a lot of time in police stations.

  • @johnchedsey1306
    @johnchedsey1306 12 днів тому +1

    There's a pretty easy explanation as to why "they'll all vanish" was never mentioned again: Wesley was wrong about that. Damn kids being all dramatic.

  • @yensid4294
    @yensid4294 12 днів тому +2

    Some of my favorite eps from ST:TNG are holodeck eps BUT the whole idea of holograms being solid matter always bugged me. Cuz they aren't. And I always wished they'd come up with a different name since they were clearly going for an extremely immersive & interactive form of VR. I still love the Data/Sherlock Holmes/Moriarity storylines so I guess it doesn't matter. The holodeck added some much needed whimsy to the show & it always tickled me how people from an idealistically perfect future wanted to LARP early 20th century mystery- adventure genres the same way people nowadays love to LARP medieval fantasy adventures. A holodeck was a better solution by the writers than time travel or planets just like Earth but with Romans, Gangsters or NotSees as in TOS. Looking forward to more reviews ❤

  • @AceOfSevens
    @AceOfSevens 11 днів тому +1

    Two fun elements: This is basically an episode about how the boss starts playing a new video game, calls a staff meeting to tell everyone about ti & tries to get them to play with him.
    Imagine if when the Xboxes were rolled out to the troops in Iraq so that they could play Halo, the first time they played, the Xbox malfunctioned & the covenants shot a couple people for real, but they kept on with the Xboxes for troops plan. That's basically what this is.

    • @fisk0
      @fisk0 10 днів тому

      I mean, would they really have stopped supplying the troops with them of that happened? Don't forget the US supplied their troops with dowsing rods to find mines/IED's, and killed both troops and civilians by undiscovered munitions and false positives. It took over 20 years before the makers of the ADE 651 were convicted of fraud, and in the meantime they had killed thousands.

  • @michaelhall2709
    @michaelhall2709 12 днів тому +1

    This episode, written by Mel Torme’s son Tracy, actually won a Peabody Award. I always thought it was terribly overrated. The A plot with the alien negotiations had literally nothing to do with the B main plot, the pacing is as sluggish as in most first season TNG episodes, and Redblock’s dissolving comeuppance is as absurd as it is tacky. I totally disagree that it’s the best episode of the first season; I don’t even think it’s the best holodeck episode of the first season, that being the much more inventive (not to mention fun) “11001001.”

  • @kevingriffith6011
    @kevingriffith6011 8 днів тому

    6:07 Picard should really get with the guy who made that holodeck program. You can't just punish your players for having a day job like that! Some people have to go be starship captains and can't just stay logged in 24/7 to make sure your light-and-force-field people don't go get themselves killed!

  • @uvp5000
    @uvp5000 12 днів тому

    I recall this episode having multiple dimensions, adding welcome texture to the series and characters.

  • @user-xv1gj3kx5m
    @user-xv1gj3kx5m 11 днів тому +1

    This was the second episode in the franchise with the most useless position on a Federation starship, a 20th Century historian. 🤣

  • @ezterry
    @ezterry 11 днів тому

    Thanks! Enjoying this and many historic episodes. The Starfleet Jobs skits i think mostly made me notice the channel.

  • @getnohappy
    @getnohappy 12 днів тому

    I'd completely forgotten they lean into the existential horror of the holodeck straight away... that would be ignored until The Doctor in Voyager (I'm not counting Moriarty as that overtly shows the Computer creates a conscious entity because Geordie is bad at AI prompts).

  • @M.McCluskey
    @M.McCluskey 11 днів тому +1

    I love how no one suggests to transport them out?

  • @williamblakehall5566
    @williamblakehall5566 10 днів тому

    I appreciated your list of macguffins, from Rosebud to the NOC list.

  • @TPPMac1
    @TPPMac1 12 днів тому +1

    Why do I enjoy watching meta-commentary about my media more than the actual media itself?

  • @daelen.cclark
    @daelen.cclark 4 дні тому

    I loved how Star Trek characters geek out about automobiles.

  • @JanRademan
    @JanRademan 11 днів тому +1

    How many doors does the holodeck have? Why isn't Riker, Geordi and the rescue party standing outside when the exit opens?

  • @hadorstapa
    @hadorstapa 12 днів тому +1

    I was always bothered that the panel Wesley is focussed on for fixing the holodeck seems to be next to the holodeck, but is nowhere near the exit when Redblock and stooge try to leave. I guess the words of Picard about it being the passage to his world suggest the writers had in mind some kind of connecting zone between the corridor and the holodeck itself (which would have avoided that business with the snowball.)

  • @user-sq6hs1hz9u
    @user-sq6hs1hz9u 11 днів тому

    The technobabble absolutely slammed the breaks on the pace of an episode, to quote Mr Roddenberry Joe Friday doesn't pull out his 38 and then explain how it works. It was one of the things that always irritated me about TNG. Also those 'safety protocols' were really crap!

  • @pupmorningstar
    @pupmorningstar 12 днів тому

    19:07 - shutting down the holodeck causes real people to cease to exist does come back in a way .. albeit not in TNG but in Steve's most favourite show of them all .. Star Trek: Voyager: Season 1, Episode 11 - Heroes and Demons where Harry Kim is in the Beowulf holonovel.
    There was also the episode in DS9 Our Man Bashir Season 4 Episode 10 as well that was loosely based on this plot.

  • @tonyclemens4213
    @tonyclemens4213 11 днів тому

    Never understood why the holodeck was never recalled. That being said I still want one installed in my house.

  • @Tom_Kowalczuk
    @Tom_Kowalczuk 12 днів тому

    I wonder if writter of 13 Floor got idea for it from this episode?
    Conversation with cop is very simillar on both.

  • @miguelvelez7221
    @miguelvelez7221 12 днів тому +1

    I think this is more interesting than compelling as an episode. It's also a victim of time as "simulated worlds" as a scifi concept is pretty old hat now. So there's some shine off the ole apple.
    Otherwise... Pretty good season one entry. Anytime we get the Trek characters interacting with ither time periods of Earth it's bound to be interesting. Plus all the goid moments like Data throwing himself into his role or Lawrence Tierney throwing HIMSELF into the role he is in.
    This is memorable but not great. Still establishes a lot going forward, not just that the holodeck is a deathtrap that should be banned 😂 but Picard loving historical fiction LIKE THIS shows us the side of the man that liked getting into bar fights.

  • @francoislacombe9071
    @francoislacombe9071 11 днів тому

    In TOS, episodes with planets similar (or identical) to Earth were a cost saving gimmick, allowing the use of existing sets from other shows an movies instead of having to build them from scratch. In TNG, holodeck episodes were used in the same way for the same purpose.

  • @xant8344
    @xant8344 12 днів тому +1

    This video is 75% summary and 25% review

  • @Stephen-Fox
    @Stephen-Fox 12 днів тому +1

    As a random aside, I think my favourite Holodeck episode isn't from Trek. Instead it's Red Dwarf's Back to Reality. Which, ok, hallucination caused by a psychic squid that feeds on despair rather than recreational simulation, but it's more or less the same concept.

  • @frenchfriar
    @frenchfriar 12 днів тому

    I just watched this episode again!
    The bit about Wesley saying the holodeck might erase everybody sort of makes sense, if you consider that instead of deconstructing just the setting, a badly done reset might just make it erase everything present.
    But Beverly not thinking to call in someone from engineering to check out the malfunctioning doorway before she just walks in sort of bothered me.
    She's a bridge officer, it seems like it would be important for her to report a malfunction like that.
    On the other hand, her not thinking to do so implies the ship malfunctions like this all the time, to the point of it not being a noticable problem.

  • @rmac7693
    @rmac7693 12 днів тому +2

    How.....I say again......How.....in the everloving F ...does the lipstick exist outside of the holodeck?
    I believe it's been said that the holodeck uses a combination of holographic tech and matter generation tech like the replicators, which I think has been used to explain why characters leave wet after being splashed or submerged in holographic water. Which i can understand for that type of scenario. But why would the lipstick?
    Well, i suppose it could be a gag to help with immersion for the user.
    But the holodeck would need to use real lipstick to allow it to actually stay on the users face after being kissed, right? It wouldn't make much sense to use energy to project lipstick perfectly on a moving users face, easier to use real lipstick.
    But, now I'm stuck wondering about THAT part. How long before contact does the lipstick generate?
    Is there just essentially a firm light projection in the shape of a person walking around in there....with real lipstick on? There's just a thin layer of lipstick walking around until applied to the user?
    Or is it generated later, like right before any kiss?
    If you end the program right before she kisses you, would a small amount of lipstick fall to the floor as the holocharacter disappeared?
    This is too much.

  • @Redmage913
    @Redmage913 12 днів тому +1

    11:25 The Omega 13???