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#she's probably my favourite cardassian she was fun
evviejo · 5 months
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STAR TREK: THE NEXT GENERATION - S6E20 The Chase
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thethirdromana · 2 years
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Kira's hairstyles throughout Deep Space Nine, rated
All screengrabs from Trekcore, all opinions from me.
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As seen in season 1, episode 1: The Emissary.
A poor start with what I think might be the worst haircut on the list? Nana Visitor is all of 36 years old in this photo and she has the haircut of a granny. It also makes her face look very square, which it is not. 0/10.
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As seen in season 2, episode 2: The Circle.
This is the first of the definitive Kira hairstyles and it definitely gets points for that, and many more for its butch energy. This is practical, this is kickass, this is a woman who can fight off a Cardassian invasion then put up some shelves without breaking a sweat. 7/10.
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Also as seen in season 2, episode 2: The Circle.
I know this is basic of me but I really love the pixie cut. And I love the way that Kira is relaxing in a monastery at this point, in beautiful surroundings, and her whole look from her hair to her clothes has softened in response. 10/10.
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As seen in season 2, episode 8: Necessary Evil.
I'm so conflicted about this one. On the one hand, I really like how it's been styled, especially in comparison to Dax's version of the same hairstyle, which looks uncomfortably stiff. On the other hand, Kira with long hair just doesn't seem right. 5/10.
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As seen in season 3, episode 15: Destiny.
Another definitive Kira hairstyle, and probably the one that's most overtly masculine; this is a classic 1950s man's hairstyle, though somehow the overall effect is more femme than the brushed-back version. Mostly this is a hairstyle that doesn't take attention away from her face. 8/10.
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As seen in season 4, episode 4: Indiscretion.
I'm not sure this is Kira's most flattering haircut, but I like the way that as she gradually becomes less angry and abrasive, and I suppose starts to work through some of her trauma from the Occupation, her hairstyles also become softer to match. 7/10 for character development.
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As seen in season 7, episode 4: Take Me Out to the Holosuite.
This is my FAVOURITE of the longer-term Kira haircuts. Not just because it's pretty, but because the asymmetrical shape means that the whole effect is to draw your attention to her Bajoran earring. Her confidence and her pride shine through. 9/10.
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As seen in season 7, episode 25: What You Leave Behind.
A serious hairstyle for a serious time. We've lost the fun full asymmetry of season 6 and early season 7 (which were also quite serious times, but never mind that). This is a surprisingly shapeless hairstyle for Kira. 4/10.
Because I was sad to end on a disappointing hairstyle, here's a bonus Nana Visitor:
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This is the very cool hairstyle Kira went for post-canon, and you can't persuade me otherwise.
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clementine-kesh · 8 months
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It's such a struggle to be a Phlox fucker, I'm not even kidding. It's not the lack of hot Phlox appreciation or the other people thinking it's a bit or even the hypocrisy of Quark and Garak being treated as sex symbols (I mean yes they're hot too but you know what I mean) while Phlox is just treated as some funny guy. All of that sucks but it's not what's hardest for me. No, it's the shipping.
I have been trying really hard to find someone to consistently pair him up with in my mind - I have already given up on finding a ship there's actually considerable content for, if you go to Phlox' ao3 tag and go to filter by relationship literally none of the options even involve him which is fucked up if you ask me - but there's always some kind of snag.
(Note from future me when I was finishing writing the rest of this message: I don't touch on every possibility, only ones I think could evolve into any kind of relationship rather than a quick one off shag (thinking of Trip here) so there's not even that many but I wrote way too much, especially on candidate #3)
The first I saw suggested was Archer which, fair enough I guess, but at that point I had not yet met Shran or knew about Shrancher and now that I do it's not like I stopped with the Phlox x Archer but it's just no longer a priority. And yes, you can totally make Archer having two alien boyfriends work, especially since both Denobulans and Andorians are poly by default, but while I haven't seen Shran and Phlox interact yet (and thus could be totally off) I just don't feel like they'd vibe enough to even hang out casually tbh. Again, I do still ship this but pretty low key.
The next option I wanna talk about is T'Pol and I think that at least initially, she's the most "realistic" option and if the show had been twice as long they probably would've been at least teased at some point (in part ofc since it was the 00s and so heterosexuality was the only option but y'know) and the whole "only two non-human crew members" thing adds something that vibes with me, too, but there's just no way you could ever make them work in the long run because Vulcans are just PAINFULLY monogamous and I simply don't think she's willing to break with that. Phlox would off-handedly mention one of his wives and T'Pol would be absolutely seething. This is not a long term ship.
Then possibly my favourite so far is Tobin Dax. Technically it's only beta canon that Tobin was around during Ent (in the alpha timeline Lela died in 2226 (thus presumably when Tobin was joined) which is over 60 years after the end of Ent and there's no alpha info on what he was doing before but in the beta timeline Tobin was definitely already joined by the 2160s and probably quite a bit before) so unless you wanna go with unjoined Tobin (whom we have zero alpha info and as far as I can tell little to no beta info on) you gotta go beta timeline which I know so little about that it's hard for me to daydream about. But at least Phlox and Tobin are said to have met in beta canon tho I don't know if there's scenes of their interactions. I can probably forget about any non me made content too since beta Tobin is already "commonly" (considering it's all beta) shipped with Iloja of Prim who, fun fact, is actually given as Jadzia's favourite Cardassian writer in alpha canon. Anyway, point is I just don't know enough about (beta) Tobin or beta canon in general to generate anything here.
(And I would consider other Dax hosts as well but unless you count the (alpha timeline) three years between Lela's joining and Ent ending there's not much opportunity for this without time travel. I should mention two things here, one: I don't think Lela is one of the Daxes that I'd ship with Phlox and two: I am not strictly opposed to time travel for the sole purpose of PhloxDax and I can defo imagine him with Jadzia, Curzon, maybe Torias and possibly Emony, but it's an extra level of complication that I frankly can't be bothered with if I'm the only one doing it.)
(Also, just for completeness' sake: in the beta timeline we know Phlox was alive at least until the 2260s which would put him parallel with Dax until at least Audrid tho it's very feasible he made it until after her death in 2284, the two subsequent hosts (who as you know didn't make it long) and Curzon's 2285 (again, beta timeline, it's '86 in alpha) joining. There's different lifespans given for Denobulans (about 300y in beta tho, according to memory beta) but even by the shortest I found (which said 170 to 280) it's very much possible since Phlox was born in the 2080s (beta)/generally sometime late 21st century (alpha). But that's just additional info.)
In summary, I may have to read Uncertain Logic (last Rise of the Federation novel to feature Tobin and the one that, based on my research, is most likely to show him interact with Phlox) but it would be difficult as I can no longer read long texts after getting off my ADD meds (which mess with my antidepressants) and thus literally haven't finished even half of a book in about a decade. As I said, the struggle is real. I swear to you I don't set out with the intention of writing a dissertation in your askbox each time, it just happens. I'm sorry.
Oh, also, if you have more suggestions (or better yet: content) for Phlox ships I'd be very eager to listen! Thank you so much for your time!
-Levi
i respect the grindset so much more people should be phloxfuckers tbh. he’s got that jovial mad scientist vibe and is in an open marriage with his three wives like?? the best phlox ship i have for you is ages ago i made a post that included a joke about neelix using a temporal anomaly to moonlight as the chef on the nx-01 and beginning a torrid love affair with phlox which i still stand by. it happened to me. also i know next to nothing about beta canon but conceptually the idea of pairing phlox with one of the dax hosts is very fun
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cicaklah · 7 months
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Question 4 and 8 (interpret how you will) for the Star Trek ask
From: infant-rind
4. favourite alien species
its either the romulans or the cardassians, which is actually in itself a lie, it IS the cardassians, I will never not be cardassian trash, the most fleshed out alien species alongside the bajorans thanks to ds9, but the bajorans are interesting, the cardassians are sarcastic failed imperialists who refuse to go away, every cardassian is different in the best way and they all interact, their society feels the most developed, as a failed-state military dictatorship, it is the least planet of the hats star trek race, while also being SUPER iconic looks-wise. Also Garak is my favourite trek character and Dukat my favourite villain, and not only are they the species there are slurs about, there are two of them (cardis and spoonheads).
that said i DO like romulans. they're vulcans with personalities and horrendous government, another failed-state military dictatorship, whats not to like????
8. Which captain would you most want to serve under?
lets workshop this in real time because my singing teacher hasn't turned up for my lesson:
kirk - great age of exploration, regressive in terms of what came after, the sexism makes this a no. I like the uniforms but I don't really have the legs for the miniskirts. if they have a space historian they probably have a space economist, so I might get to elope with a space allegory of some historical economist, which honestly would suck as econs are not known for being hotties, though I'm sure me and space keynes would be very happy together.
picard - this is probably the boring answer, since you'd be on the flagship in a time of moderate peace, you'd definitely survive wolf 359, and likely survive the dominion war since the enterprise wasn't involved, cool missions, nice ship, awkward uniforms for a lot of it though.
sisko - it would be an honour, ds9 is my favourite and he seems a good boss who makes good decisions. this is definitely the correct answer. better uniforms. more option to wear terrible 24th century civvies. Likely to be the kind of place lieutenant cicak, space economist would end up working lbr, economics is more of a starbase job.
janeway - i would not want to be lost in the delta quadrant with limited replicators, also she makes absolute batshit decisions. Probably my favourite 24th century uniform though.
archer - he seems pretty fair but I'm not going to choose 22nd century over the 23rd or 24th. Also how do you fucking pee in a jumpsuit.
aos kirk - i'd be blinded by the lensflares AND the horny, sign me up. Uniforms okay. no need for an economist because this world hasn't been thought out enough, but that's okay.
georgiou - she seems such a nice captain I think it would be amazing to serve under her, as long as I got out before binary stars. uniforms aesthetic but jumpsuits are a no.
lorca - statistically you gotta serve under a bad captain of the week at some point, and at least he's only really around for maximum six months. Also he's hot and amoral and makes really terrible decisions AND at some point we'd end up in the mirror universe and we'd have to wear THAT uniform. but it would be better than the jumpsuit
pike (disco variant) - he's so good at being captain even when the disco is a trashfire of epic proportions, 23rd century me would have requested a transfer to the enterprise asap
saru - absolutely not, saru is a terrible captain.
burnham - I would be terrified to serve under her but I'd also have made some bad decisions in my life to be 1000 years in the future. The uniform does get better? but also it still sucks.
rios - complex, I love la sirena but rios doesn't have crew. captain rios of the stargazer??? I choose not to accept picard s2 as canon.
freeman - cerritos actually would be excellent, I would HAPPILY serve under freeman. good uniforms. chill ship. dominion war over. pre-romulan crisis. fun times, important work that's not too important, canonically statistically the horniest ship in the fleet.
pike (snw variant) - OH CAPTAIN MY CAPTAIN what a time to be alive. Amazing uniforms. Minimal sexism. back to back hotties. Good command decisions. Musical episode. Exploring!!! period of peace following brutal klingon war. enormous quarters. sign me up.
shaw - you know what, I WOULD serve under shaw, shaw is a good captain who got absolutely clusterfucked by picard, riker, baby picard, and seven, the titan-a seems like a nice ship, and I'm old enough I wouldn't get borg semened.
seven - ditch baby picard and I'm there. even if the enterprise-f is fuck ugly. the uniforms are good, turn the lights on, lets have some fun.
tldr: sisko, pike (snw), freeman, shaw, picard (tng), lorca
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tostoa · 1 year
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👁️💢🍰💐🌌🎭🍼👖❤️ FOR ANY OF THEM WAJHGFDFG
AHHH THANK YOU SO MUCH AXIS <33 This one’s long so it’s going under the cut but I had sm fun with these I really hope you like them :)) (and the other one I did a few days ago!)
👁️ EYE - what colour are their eyes? do people notice their eyes? is there anything special about them (shows emotion easily, literally magical...)? [Mirou]
Mirou’s eyes are a very vibrant green, I imagine they’re fairly noticeable to people 👍 I imagine she always has her eyes like half closed but that’s because she has eyesight problems
(I love just making stuff up on the top of my head that I’ve just never mentioned before and makes no sense)
💢 ANGER - what are some habits they have that will take some getting used to? [Dalrill]
Sorry guys I am a stupid cardassian tail truther (I have never drawn Dalrill with a tail but be aware that I believe in it) though I imagine Dalrills tail is a little weird and has like a lizard/lion tail mix don’t know how to describe it to you lmao.
But I imagine whenever she’s particularly upset or pissed off her tail just whips things around her, it’s just sort of a reaction she has like a facial expression lmao.
🍰 CAKE SLICE - favourite cake flavour? are they specific about types of cakes? [guy]
I think Guy probably eats plain vanilla cake with no frosting, but the cake would have like powdered sugar on it and that’s it.
People have seen him eating cake and gone oh why are you eating plain bread? And he’s like wdym? this is my birthday cake?
💐 BOUQUET - create a bouqet for them! what do those flowers mean? are any of the flowers their particular favourite? [bel]
Okay so I don’t know too much about all of the meanings, but I’m going off of nice looking flowers that I think bel would enjoy or just fits him. So 👍👍
Here’s my list: Daisies, Blue hydrangeas, Dahlias and then white wisteria.
Think all of that would look cute together :))
🌌 MILKY WAY - what was the inspiration behind your oc? what was the first thing you decided about them? [frelvar]
I don’t think there was any particular inspiration in my head, besides like how Ferengis and Vulcans are like some of my favourite Star Trek species. Frelvar was similar to maybe Dr reyga in my head, but like that was mostly just for the fact that he was half ferengi and his main focus wasn’t profit.
The first thing I decided about frelvar, was how his parents would be more than him. I imagined how they’d view him joining starfleet first before anything else.
🎭 MASKS - do they act differently around certain people? what's different between the way they act around friends, family, strangers, etc.?  [Minye] 
I think in public and In her bar she tries to give off this air of like exciting person with confusing advice you can come gossip to, but with closer friends and immediate family I imagine she’s a lot more soft spoken and calmer.
like you’d imagine hanging out with her by yourselves would be more like I don’t know going out to clubs (which probably happens on occasion, it’s not like she’d turn it down) but she honestly just enjoys like sitting in the same room as someone.
🍼 BABY BOTTLE - what are their thoughts on children? [Jagre]
Jagre loves kids man, he’s a great babysitter. We’ve already talked about how he’s going to have like a one week kid, and I think that after that point whenever has to take care of someone else’s kid he sort of remembers his own and like feels a little sad.
👖 JEANS - what is their go-to outfit? [Libitina]
Well the main outfit would probably be her uniform lol. But actually for like her casual wear I like imagine either like colourful dresses/skirts or like overly patterned jumpsuits.
Mostly because I think she would look really amazing in both of those.
❤️ RED HEART - their love language(s)? [Frelvar]
It’s definitely touch but like not hugging them or like cuddling. It’s like poking them in the face a bunch or like tapping their fingers against somebody else’s. Just repetitive touches for people he likes <33
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wlwkiranerys · 3 years
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Send a character: Kira Neyrs >:3c
thank you <3 glad she’s my first ask <3
Sexuality Headcanon:
as if my icon hasnt made it clear, she’s a lesbian, i just the way so much of her story reads like her going through comphet..they’re just a lesbian <3
Gender Headcanon:
nonbinary. uses she/they pronouns
 A ship I have with said character:
jadzia <3 kira’s relationship with jadzia is so compelling to me as y’all can probably tell, just the way that her relationship with jadzia is so much more compelling than any actual relationship she has and how they’re seen being friendly and enjoying time togtether, it’s all just very good. also love how they often in canon spend time in the holodecks, its just code for them going on dates <3
A BROTP I have with said character:
Don’t think I could ever be over her relationship with Sisko. It’s so interesting and complicated and how they both grow to respect and trust each other, valuing each other’s views and just growing into such a strong friendship. And how at first Sisko being the chosen of the Prophets makes it hard for Kira to just treat him like a normal captain but they grow past that..it’s so good
A NOTP I have with said character:
all their relationships in the show but odo especially. they were friends and i just think their relationship was bad, i didn’t enjoy it taking over kira’s character for the last seasons especially. [ i will not mention that one terrible kira ship bcuz i think any good person wouldnt ship her with him <3 ]
A random headcanon: 
i know in the episode where the Bajorans try and go back to how they lived before and they sucked at sculpting, but I love the idea that after that she actually come back to it and tries it again. Overtime I like to think they find it relaxing, something to put their mind at ease and gives her some creative output, and I also enjoy the idea that she still isn’t that great at it but has fun nonetheless :) Also enjoy the thought that she is the type to spend hours arguing with Bajorans over certain religious texts, she lot of personal thoughts about it and will share it if she has the chance to <3. (the jewishness of it all.)
General Opinion over said character: she is my favourite Trek character for a reason, and one of my favourite characters in anything. I love how their anger is validated by the narrative, that their anger at what she had gone through, what her people her gone through, is acknowledged and respected. I love that she doesn’t want to be angry, that she has a lot of qualms with what she had to do in order to fight the Cardassians, that she is allowed to have such nuanced feelings over who she was and what she had to. They went through so much to fight for her people, and the narrative gives her room to have such complex thoughts about it, being proud of what she had done but also hating that she had committed so much violence that she doesn’t know who they are without it, she feels lost for the first season because all she knew was that, fighting to protect her people and i love how she learns that she isnt just the violence she had committed, she’s so much more than that. I love that she’s allowed such complex feelings that don’t condemn what she had done but also show how much it affected her. I love how they care for people, how everything she has done was out of caring, out of wanting to help protect Bajor. I love that she is allowed to be strong, angry, messy, kind, and I love that they are both a fighter and religious. just love that though she’s a tough character, someone who has been through so much and survived it, and they’re also religious and proud of it?? That is rarely ever in the same character and I love that about her. I just.. I love her so much..my fav trek character ever and always <3 send me a character and i’ll do this: ask meme
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curator-on-ao3 · 4 years
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When @mia-cooper posted her fic questions, I read them over a few times and thought, “Yikes. That’s a lot to think through.” 
But, I did.
1. Best fic(s) you read all year, and why?
The runawaymetaphor oeuvre is sharp-edged satin. I’ve also read most of missparker’s works multiple times (start from the early stuff and work your way forward). And, of course, MiaCooper, the one who is asking the questions though she has so many answers.
Oh, and I didn’t want to mention individual stories for fear of missing an important one, but old fics deserve love and Deeds Done in Darkness is probably old enough to get drunk off its own excellence.
2. Best fic(s) you published all year, and why?
I don’t know. I love them in different ways. I’ve deleted a few I decided I didn’t like and am tempted to delete others, but I haven’t yet.
3. Favourite opening line(s) in a fic you published in 2019:
(Gah. Next question.)
4. Favourite closing line(s):
Telling them would ruin both stories, but my favorites are from The Halo Effect and Feels like Flying: A Modern AU of Threshold.
5. The fic that was best received, and your favourite comment(s) on it:
By hits and kudos, my top fic was Bad Ensign, a credit to the wonderful writers who expanded the Bad Ensign universe. So, my favorite comment includes the fics that made the original better, and begins, “OMG! I am studying for a huge certification exam next week and this fic (the whole series really) made my week and really gave me the motivation to study so I could reward myself with reading the fics.”
By bookmarks, my top fics were a tie between The Halo Effect and The Dismissed Protocol. 
I can’t choose a favorite comment on The Halo Effect. The story was so unexpectedly well-received that I wept numerous times reading the kind things people said (though much love to PoorQueequeg, who writes beautifully raw comments that I devour, and to @arcadia1995, who will try new things and tell me what she thinks).
My favorite comment on The Dismissed Protocol was: “I really enjoyed this story. It’s very intelligently written and well characterized. Crusher and Janeway together are a fabulous pair and you framed the ethical issues very well. I am still torn as to how I feel about the protocol but that’s because you framed the Dismissed Protocol in a very evenhanded way and that’s hard to do with such an emotional and private issue. Well done.” 
Also, when @caladeniablue​ started her comment on Shepherded Through the Looking Glass with, “This is a Tom-worthy ride of a story,” I nearly cried.
6. The fic you wish had gotten more love:
I knew when I wrote War Torn that it wouldn’t be incredibly popular. A Kathryn Janeway and Miles O’Brien buddy story during the Cardassian War? But, such is life and tying together a lot of loose canon (get it?) was rewarding, as was bringing to life the man I believe Captain Benjamin Maxwell to be.
7. How many fandoms you wrote for in 2019, and which inspired you most:
I really only wrote for Star Trek Voyager, but pulled in other Trek shows to get characters I wanted (Beverly Crusher, Miles O’Brien, etc). Voyager inspires me because we think we know these characters but we don’t. We have only seen them in a unique situation and their lives were different before and after their seven years in the Delta Quadrant. So, who are they really? It’s hard to say.
8. Your favourite pairing(s) to write for:
Ummmm. I enjoy Janeway/Paris. I’m the only one who has written Janeway/Barclay (and my favorite comments on those tend toward “well, that was a ship I didn’t know I needed” and, “huh, whaddya know, I ship it”). Janeway/Johnson makes me sad, but it’s important. It was a fun one-shot to write Gretchen Janeway/Owen Paris and, surprisingly, there were no other fics for them on AO3. (Also something I did not expect -- my A Long Journey’s Night was one of only three Kathryn Janeway & Kathryn Janeway stories in the archive.) But, in my heart of hearts, I believe what would be most likely is Janeway/OC, which is why I tucked that into the otherwise Janeway/Chakotay-heavy Section 31 story, Secrets, Secrets are No Fun.
9. What you’re writing now/next:
I’m working on another Janeway/Paris but I would like to shift into something else.
10. Writing goals for 2020 (word count? new fandoms/pairings? anything?):
I don’t know. Just to keep improving the craft.
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antimatterpod · 4 years
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Transcript - 45. Affable Evil and the Chaos Agents
You can listen to this episode here!
[theme music]
Liz:  Welcome to Antimatter Pod, a Star Trek podcast where we discuss fashion, feminism, subtext and subspace, hosted by Anika and Liz. Today we're joined again by Jules to discuss our favorite villains in Star Trek.
And, Jules, which villain made us think of you?
Jules:  [laughs]
Anika:  That's not a nice way to put it!
Jules:  Apparently just -- well, you know what? I've made my peace with it. You just DMd me and were like, "Hey, what does it say that I immediately think of you when I hear the name "Dukat"? I'm like, oh, okay. Well, you know, I've made peace with it. It's all right.
Liz:  Yeah. Yeah. And your mother may be disappointed in you, but I think it's great.
Jules:  Deeply. Deeply. I love making fun of him! That, she appreciates.
Liz:  Yeah, you're not one of those Dukat fans who's like, "The Occupation was great, and Dukat did nothing wrong, ever, in his entire life."
Jules:  No, he did everything wrong. Always. Forever. Every single thing.
Liz:  So when I suggested this episode, I kind of wanted to draw a distinction between villains as individuals who are, in some way, opposed to the goals and ethics of the main characters, versus, like, whole alien races, who are just enemies of the Federation, or Bajor, or whatever. So, like, Weyoun could be a villain, but not the Dominion as a whole, because that's just sort of faceless.
Anika:  Mm.
Jules:  Interesting.
Liz:  And I love Weyoun as a villain,  he's sort of the middle management of villainy.
Jules:  Yes.
Liz:  But I would have trouble calling the Borg villains, they're more of a force of nature.
Anika:  That makes sense to me.
Jules:  Yeah. That makes sense.
Liz:  Like, coming off season 1 of Star Trek: Picard, I have trouble thinking of the Romulans, ever, as villains, so much as deeply misguided individuals with a terrible government.
Anika:  [laughs] Correct.
Jules:  I mean, you know, I think I emailed you a little after the -- what was it, the Qowat Milat were first introduced, and was like, you know, honestly, I've never quite been into Romulans because, when it comes to races who are enemies of the Federation, have totalitarian governments and extremely powerful intelligence machines, and a moderately successful dissident movement internally, the Cardassians will always come first in my heart.
Liz:  Absolutely.
Anika:  I think that's fair, but I think that explains why I don't care about the Cardassians as much?
Jules:  Yeah. No, exactly!
Anika:  Because my heart already belonged to the Romulans.
Jules:  Exactly, you know? You're either a Romulan person or you're a Cardassian person. There's two types of people in the world.
Liz:  But that doesn't mean that I don't find Cardassians interesting -- they're almost my favourite part of Deep Space 9. And the whole thing where Garak worked on Romulus as a gardener in the Cardassian embassy -- that's great! I love it when these two forces work together, and it actually turns out to be a real disaster.
Jules:  Yes! That might have to be what we--
Anika:  And my favourite villain is, of course, a Cardassian.
Liz:  Yes.
Jules:  Yeah!
Liz:  So -- yeah, I didn't really want to get into "the Klingons!" I find the Klingons really boring as villains? I love them mainly as foils for Worf, or characters in their own right?
Jules:  Yeah.
Liz:  I love Worf, I just don't think the Klingons deserve him.
Jules:  Aw. Yeah.
Anika:  Well, I mean, the TOS Klingons are just painful. Don't watch those. You have to really be in the right place of, like, okay, this is going to be racist, and stereotypical, and awful. Okay, now I can just enjoy it as a piece of theatre. And that's okay.
Liz:  And if you're in the  mood for Shakespearian actors wearing brownface, the Kazon are right there.
Anika and Jules: [laughs]
Anika:  The Kazon are no one's favourite. Can we just put that out there? No one sticks up for the Kazon.
Liz:  No. No. I -- honestly, going through my season 2 Voyager rewatch, I realised that they had a lot of potential, and it could have been realised had the writers been less … racist?
Anika:  Horrible?
Liz:  Yeah. Yeah.
Anika:  I mean, there is that whole episode where it turns out that they're the Bajorans of the Delta Quadrant, and it was like, oh, this is bad, guys.
Jules:  Oh no.
Liz:  Oh yeah.
Anika:  This is really bad!
Liz:  "Wow, these people freed themselves from slavery thirty years ago, and now they're really dysfunctional and aimless, and desperate to survive?"
Anika:  I forgot it was thirty years!
Liz:  "That definitely makes them bad guys!"
Anika:  Oh my gosh, so bad.
Jules:  [groans]
Liz:  I think, honestly, in some ways, the biggest villains on Voyager were the writers.
Jules:  [laughs] See, also, Picard?
Liz:  Y-yeah. Yeah. So what makes a character succeed or fail as a villain?
Jules:  Oh, interesting question.
Anika:  That's a very interesting question. I think this is where I have to bring up that I did favourite villains in my Star Wars podcast, and it was extremely difficult for me.
Liz:  Because you don't believe that half the characters are really villainous?
Anika:  Yeah. So we were supposed to pick, you know, three to talk about. I could only come up with two. And we also -- first, we were, like, okay, how are we going to define this? And I came up with this great definition: a villain is someone who acts in opposition to the heroes. And then I did not use that as my basis at all. I added that they had to also be, like, completely villainous, and have no redeeming qualities as people. And that was the only they could be villains in my book, and that's why there are only two of them. And Darth Vader wasn't one of them.
Liz:  I was gonna say, that's Palpatine and Count Dooku.
Jules:  So you distinguish between villain and antagonist.
Anika:  Um -- I guess? Yeah, I think that's word for word what I eventually said. But I just had to put that out there, that -- this was easier for me, because I had my favourite villain, and even though I totally believe that she has redeeming qualities, I also believe that she is a Tarkin-esque type who's really good at being a villain, and enjoys being a villain. And so--
Jules:  She does.
Anika:  --it was like -- I don't know. The Star Trek universe, it was easier. Even the villains that you guys put on the list, I could come up with reasons why they were villains, and they were good to talk about, and I was, like, into it. Whereas--
Liz:  I think the difference is that, with Star Wars, we know that most of these villains were abused children, and their behaviour is a reflection of that. And so, without endorsing, say, burning down a village, to pick a random example, it's possible to put them in context. Whereas, you know, Gul Dukat probably had a really hard childhood, but he's still a douchebag.
Jules:  Well, yeah.
Anika:  Well, the thing is that he goes through a whole redemption arc, and decides not to be redeemed.
Liz:  Yes!
Anika:  There you go!
Jules:  Honestly, that's -- even then, though, is it? Like redemption arc is probably -- even I'm like -- as someone who loves the character, even I'm like, redemption is … he becomes slightly less--
Anika:  To be fair.
Jules:  For a while, he looks like maybe he might become a little bit less terrible.
Anika:  I guess it's more like, he was offered the opportunity.
Jules:  Yeah.
Anika:  He's offered the opportunity to go on a redemption arc, and chooses not to.
Jules:  To do better. Yeah. And, I mean, I guess, for me, what I find interesting is that he totally does not realise he's a villain.
Liz:  No!
Jules:  I mean, that's what I -- honestly, I mentioned this on my blog, which is -- I was looking back and realising, okay, my favourite types of villains are generally, like, what TV Tropes calls "affable evil", where they don't, like, go out of their way to twirl their moustache. And generally, they're not gonna be jerks just because they're evil. They're generally often really nice people in a lot of ways, until you get in the way of their goal, at which point, they will do anything.
Liz:  Yeah, yeah.
Jules:  So, affable evil. Often, they have no idea they're the villain. They genuinely believe they're the hero of the piece, and they're probably completely obsessed with and possibly horny for the actual hero of the piece. And I was like, you know? The formative age at which I was watching Deep Space 9 may explain this.
Liz and Anika: [laugh]
Liz:  It's such a good description of both Dukat and Lorca. And it kind of--
Jules:  Yes!
Liz:  --comes down to my thing, where my favourite type of villain is the one who really, truly believes that they're the hero. And yes, they're doing terrible things, but the ultimate goal is worth it. Even if the ultimate goal is, say, the long-term repression and ultimate destruction of the Bajoran culture, or taking the Terran Empire and making it even worse.
Jules:  Making the Empire great again?
Liz:  Yeah! And it's really -- I think the sort of villain who thinks they're the chosen one, and is sort of a legend in their own lunchbox, but is also a bit ridiculous? You know, Lorca is almost introduced telling dad jokes, and Dukat has this amazing, ridiculous obsession with Kira and Sisko, and would absolutely bone them both. And -- yeah, I find that sort of character really entertaining. I don't even necessarily want a redemption arc for that sort of villain, I just want to see them doing their thing, and being really shocked and amazed to learn that they're not succeeding just because of the magical power of their own charisma.
Jules:  Yes. Yeah. Exactly. I mean, honestly, partly, for me, it's that I almost always -- redemption arcs very rarely, if ever, work for me. Like, the only one I can think of that I've really been, like, yes, this works for me, is Prince Zuko from Avatar.
Liz:  He is only really a villain for two episodes, and then Jason Isaacs comes in, and we see him put in his place as a scared, victimised teenager. And that's the point where you realise, oh, there is more to this character than being a stroppy bad guy, and--
Jules:  He lived in a really messed up culture, and was completely -- yeah. Yeah.
Liz:  And -- to talk about Avatar for a moment -- I am very much on the Azula redemption train, but I would never even consider a redemption arc for, say, Ozai, because he doesn't want it. He thinks he's doing the right thing. He thinks he's entitled to take over the world and literally burn it down, and take his shirt off in the process because he's just that gorgeous.
Jules:  You know?
Anika:  So the character I chose as my favourite villain in Star Wars, after all of this, was Ben Mendelsohn's character in Rogue One? Orson Krennec?
Liz:  Yeah!
Jules:  Oh!
Anika:  Which I think is exactly the type of person that you're talking about. And where I never wanted to see him redeemed, because he doesn't -- yeah, he absolutely doesn't know he's a villain. He thinks that he's doing everything correctly, and should get all of the acclaim, and is just angry at the world for not giving it to him.
Liz:  Yeah!
Anika:  And that's fun to watch.
Liz:  Again, like Weyoun, he's the middle management of evil. And even some Weyouns can sort of -- I don't want to say redeem themselves? But he chooses to follow Odo instead of the rest of the Founders.
The other reason I don't really love having the Dominion as "a villain" is because there's so much genetic manipulation of everyone but the Founders that -- you know, how much does free will really tie into it? It's no fun hissing at a villain who has no choice.
Jules:  Yeah. Honestly, a lot of the seventh and later sixth seasons of DS9, I'm like -- honestly, on my blog, I'm like, you know, you could make a drinking game out of my use of the phrase "missed opportunity" for the show.
Liz:  Oh yeah!
Jules:  But I'm really -- I feel like you could have stretched the Dominion War arc out by at least another season, and really given a lot more characters the opportunity to come into their own. You know, including Ezri, and that's a whole other story, but -- yeah. I'm just, like -- I mean, I was thinking about this earlier, as well, about, you know, you have entire races who are villains, versus, like, individual characters. And where do you kind of draw the line there, of sort of generic villains who are -- they're from this race, so they must be evil. Which is the Ferengi, actually, for all of Next Gen.
Anika:  Yeah. Right.
Liz:  And what a great subtext that is!
Jules:  Oof! Yes. As I've mentioned.
Liz:  That's kind of why I don't really have many favourite villains from Voyager, because the nature of the series means we don't really get to dig in deep with any cultures. So we only see a handful of individuals. And they're usually hostile, and usually they have good reasons for being hostile, but we don't get to see beyond that.
Anika:  Right.
Jules:  It's sort of [like the] Original Series in that regard, really.
Liz:  Yeah, yeah!
Anika:  Yeah.
Liz:  I feel like the closest TOS comes to a returning villain, aside from "the Klingon Empire" is Harry Mudd. And he's no one's favourite anything.
Jules:  He's Harry Mudd's favourite!
Liz:  It's true, it's true, and my friend Aristofranes wrote that excellent fic where he and Lorca go on a heist.
Jules and Anika: [laughs]
Jules:  I like mirror!Mudd, in the comics--
Liz:  He's such a nice man!
Jules:  The mostly forgettable, like, we'll forget the last few pages of it, tie-in comic in the mirror universe.
Liz:  You know, as with so much of Discovery, I just stopped paying attention after they killed Cornwell.
Jules:  Yeah. Fair! That seems reasonable.
Anika:  Yep.
Jules:  I mean, the mirror universe, though, speaking of that -- I guess we can get to Lorca from that, some more, but mirror -- I feel like, again, missed opportunities, but mirror!Kira, who I feel like was introduced as a -- basically DS9, the first mirror universe episode was pretty serious. And then the rest of them got -- they just went ridiculously campy. And initially, though, I'm like, oh, when she's first introduced to mirror!Kira, I'm like, the Intendant is Dukat, basically.
Liz:  Yeah!
Jules:  And I'm like, this is -- it adds a whole other layer of creepiness and grossness on top of their relationship, that every time, now, Kira looks at him, she not only has, you know, the leader of the -- the mastermind of the Occupation in her lifetime, but also gets to see, "Oh, there but for the grace of the Prophets go I," basically, of, "How little would it have taken for me to become this person?" And, yeah, I'm just like, they're -- yeah, mirror universe and Lorca got me thinking of that. I'm like, oof, you know, talk about your missed opportunities there with the mirror universe, for villains and -- yeah.
Liz:  And seeing how circumstances shape a person, and that, for all that Michael sort of bucks Federation society in a lot of ways, she is still very much of the Federation, the same way her counterpart appears to have been of the Terran Empire.
Jules:  Yeah.
Liz:  I have a lot of feelings about the mirror universe, because I've always been a fan of it, and I really disliked what DS9 wound up doing with it after that first episode.
Jules:  It was a shame.
Anika:  Yup.
Liz:  Yeah. So I was so glad when Discovery made it scary again.
Anika:  It's serious.
Liz:  Yes! And I find it interesting when people say that there is no possibility of redeeming Philippa Georgiou because she's basically Dukat, and in certain fanboy circles, this leads to an argument about who is worse, and they're very keen on defending Dukat. [huge sigh]
Jules:  Noooooooo.
Anika:  Of course they are.
Jules:  No.
Liz:  And, I have to say, as someone who enjoys a good redemption arc, I don't know if that's really what we're getting with Georgiou, or if she is just channelling her ruthlessness--
Jules:  I hope not, honestly?
Liz:  --in different directions.
Jules:  Yeah. And honestly, I feel like that's more interesting to me. And I can see, actually, the Dukat comparison in some regards, in that she is, you know -- even more than he was, actually, because he was just some bureaucrat, really, he was not the head of the government, and she was. But also -- and we've talked about this a little -- it was intentional on the writers' part that the main difference, they said, between Georgiou and Lorca was that Georgiou listened to Michael when she said -- like, Michael told him all throughout that, "I am still Federation at heart." And he was like, "Yeah, okay, fine, whatever."
Liz:  "Sure you are, honey."
Jules:  And Georgiou listened to her, and was like, "Okay, fine." And that was the main difference between them, that Georgiou actually listened to her where Lorca did not. And I'm like, that's not really -- that doesn't feel like an accident, that it's a woman of colour who's saying that, and listened to the other woman of colour, and the white man kind of says, "Yeah, sure."
Anika:  Talks over them.
Jules:  Yeah, exactly. And I'm like, you know? Yeah.
Anika:  He's shown not to listen to either of them.
Jules:  Yeah, exactly.
Liz:  One of the consistent things about Lorca is that all of his relationships with women are ultimately manipulative and dismissive, and it starts with Michael, and Landry, and Cornwell, and then more Michael, and Philippa. He is not Respect Women Guy.
So, yeah, I don't know that Philippa would even want to be quote-unquote "redeemed". But I think she is open to having more flexibility in her priorities? And I think part of her does enjoy being the bad advice bear of the Federation.
Jules:  Yeah.
Liz:  But also being safe.
Jules:  Yeah!
Anika:  I was gonna say, I see her story as more of a survival story than a redemption arc. Like, she has had to be on guard her entire life. And the higher up in rank she got, the worse it became, and the more people were after her. And then the two people closest to her betrayed her. And now this is sort of, like, this -- it's a second chance to live the life she wanted to live.
Liz:  Yeah.
Jules:  You know, as you're saying this, you know what the best DS9 comparison would be to Georgiou? It's Garak, I feel like.
Liz:  I was -- yeah!
Anika:  Yes! And I don't think that he is a "hero", quote-unquote.
Jules:  No.
Anika:  He's much more -- he's maybe not a villain, but he's much more anti-hero, dark side, than he is--
Jules:  I mean, honestly, there's this wonderful essay -- but basically it characterises -- and in retrospect, that's exactly what it is -- the dynamic as everyone else kind of dragging Garak toward decency. In terms of his quite-unquote "redemption arc". It's everyone else being, like, "Okay, well, we're gonna treat you like one of us, even though you're not," and he's just constantly, like, "No. No." And kind of testing the boundaries. And they're like, "Okay, well, you can do that all you want, but we're still gonna treat you like one of us." And eventually, sort of, in spite of himself, he ends up having a redemption arc, or something close to one, something approaching one, maybe?
Anika:  He starts making better choices.
Jules:  Mm hmm.
Liz:  Yeah, no, that's perfect. And, like Georgiou, he's a chaos agent. He pokes and pulls to see what happens some of the time, and sometimes what happens is, he winds up torturing Odo! But no hard feelings, they're gonna have lunch next week.
Jules:  Well, you know what, honestly, Odo -- because Odo's a collaborator. I mean, that's a whole other story. But, yeah.
Liz:  Odo is the worst dot Tumblr dot com. But also, I like that they wind up friends because Odo was tortured by Garak -- because it's so alien, and they are aliens. I wouldn't buy it if they were both human characters, if even one of them was a human character, but they're not! And so it tells us something about them, and who and what they are, and that's cool.
Jules:  Yeah. Honestly, yeah. And I really like -- and it sets them up, like, that episode explicitly sets them up as parallels of each other. I mean, the end of the episode is Garak talking to Odo, and you never actually see Odo as they're saying, "We should have breakfast together more often." It's Garak in the ruins of his shop, and you only see Odo in the mirror, as a reflection in the mirror. I'm like, wow. That's one of those things where I'm like, oh, bless you, Star Trek, that's so on the nose, and I love it.
Liz:  Right! It's like, in Picard, when the camera shows him with the Locutus face superimposed. That is not subtle, but I love it.
Anika:  [laughs]
Jules:  I love it! It was -- yeah. No. We could do a whole episode just on that, the non-subtle moments that we love.
Anika and Liz: [laugh]
Liz:  I think that character-dragged-kicking-and-screaming-into-becoming-a-better-person is the arc that I really, really wanted for Seska, and I just blogged "Basics" part 2, and so I'm freshly angry all over again, after twenty-four years, about how she was killed off, and how her whole arc went. Because it made no sense whatsoever. And she was such a great character! And unlike most of the female villains in Star Trek, she wasn't sexualised, even when she's doing ridiculous MRA-fantasy things--
Anika:  Sexy stuff.
Liz:  --like stealing Chakotay's DNA and impregnating herself with it.
Anika:  Ugh.
Liz:  Like, she was such a great foil for both Chakotay and Janeway, the same way Dukat matches both Kira and Sisko. Just -- missed opportunities.
Anika:  So I watched "Worst Case Scenario", because I wanted to end on a high note going into this. Not on "Basics" part 2. But in "Worst Case Scenario", it's proven that Seska, you know, had Tuvok's game before Tuvok was afraid of her. And it's just so good! And a year after she's died, she's still causing problems on the ship and could blow it up.
Jules:  God, yes.
Anika:  And almost does, you know, almost succeeds. And that's just, you know, it was like, that was a better send-off for the character I wanted her to be.
Jules:  Absolutely.
Anika:  I think that--
Liz:  But I'm--
Anika:  Go ahead.
Liz:  Oh, I'm just -- when I think about Seska staying on board, and, you know, messing with Janeway's head, and Chakotay's -- and then Seven of Nine's! Like, there were so many potential good stories here.
Jules:  Lord.
Anika:  Like, you know "The Voyager Conspiracy", when Seven of Nine starts doing all of these algorithms in her head, and realises everybody--
Liz:  Yeah?
Anika:  So, imagine the version of that story where, halfway through, she goes and lets Seska out of her quarters that she's been, like, imprisoned in the entire time. It would be so good!
Jules:  Good Lord, yes.
Liz:  I'm just thinking about that episode, and realising what a perfect match Seven and Raffi are. Just give me a minute here.
Anika:  Awwww!
Jules:  Yes!
Liz:  Oh! They can set up a conspiracy wall in their quarters, it'll be so nice.
Jules:  With Elnor just kind of hanging around outside, like, "What do you need, Mom? Moms?"
Liz and Anika: [laugh and sigh happily]
Liz:  Anyway.
Anika:  I've considered Seska for too many hours of my life, and so I can explain all of her terrible choices that she makes, and how she traps herself in her own horrible ending because of all the terrible choices that she makes. And how it all comes down to -- even though we're not calling the Cardassian race a villain -- being raised within the Cardassian race, and the Cardassian culture, is definitely responsible for everything that Seska does.
She is both -- like, she can't respect Janeway because she's pure Federation, but also because she's a woman, and she also is afraid of Janeway for those reasons.
Liz:  That's interesting.
Anika:  And so she runs away to the Kazon, somewhere where she understands the rules of the game, because they're very patriarchal, and they're very -- you know, and she knows how to manipulate people within that place. And she doesn't know how to do it on Voyager.
Jules:  You know, it's interesting that you bring that up, because what I've noticed, and what's really interesting to me, on DS9, is that, yes, Cardassian society seems to have these very strict gender roles. Men are good at military, and honestly, emotional stuff, it seems like. There's famous Cardassian architects, and artists, and stuff, and their military readers. And women are good at science, and engineering, and in some ways it's just like, okay, got it, it's an inverse of western human stereotypes.
Liz:  But still a patriarchy!
Jules:  But the Obsidian Order is largely both. We see a lot of men--
Anika:  yes, it's true.
Jules:  --We see a lot of women. Like, a lot of -- fairly mixed gender, actually. Like, it's not -- there's some women, there's some men. I find that interesting, especially watching, like, Picard, where it's like, you've got the -- the Tal Shiar were introduced to it in a Troi episode.
Liz:  Right, they were very feminist.
Anika:  Yes, they definitely are.
Jules:  Yeah, the Tal Shiar, let alone the Zhat Vash, we learn about later, and the Qowat Milat, who seem to be largely, if not entirely, female. I find it very interesting that the Obsidian Order, then, seems to be fairly mixed gender, and oddballs of all genders, maybe.
Liz:  It's sort of the place where, in a repressive society, your weirdos and outliers have an outlet, but are also watched very closely.
Jules:  Which is very much the early history of the CIA, honestly.
Liz:  Yeah!
Jules:  Like, if you look at the OSS, the predecessor to the CIA, it was very much, like, weirdos, circus acrobats, and people who could do weird puzzles, and it was just -- it was all sorts of weirdos. Yeah, to some extent, it's like, well, you know what? They can come up with crazy stuff, let's have them working for us, and this way we can keep an eye on them as well.
Liz:  Right! Yes.
Anika:  Yes.
Liz:  I find that really interesting, and contrasting the Tal Shiar against the Obsidian Order is sort of my new hobby.
Jules:  Yes. Oh, there's plenty of that. Honestly, I'm like -- I'm going off track a little here, but I get a little annoyed by everyone, Chabon included, saying, like, "Well, we couldn't really fit DS9 into Picard."
Liz:  I know!
Jules:  I'm like, uh, you know, if nothing else, I'd like to know about how the Founders -- or how the Tal Shiar survived the battle of the Omarian Nebula, which is said to be the equivalent of Wolf 359 for them. I would love to know about Subcommander T'Rul. DS9 did a lot with the Romulans, and excuse me, you know who the one person, at least one person in the Federation wasn't totally lauding Picard as a hero after "Best of Both Worlds" was, it was Sisko! I'm like, uh, you know, I feel like there's stuff there!
Anika:  I think that it would have been less disingenuous for them to just say, "We chose not to, maybe next season," or something. Rather than, "We couldn't fit it in." It just seems like, "Oh, we really, really wanted to, we tried." I mean, that sounds just like the cat and Elnor. You didn't try hard enough if it didn't get into the show!
Jules:  Yes!
Anika:  So stop whinging and--
Jules:  Bring in DS9--
Anika:  --just admit that you didn't do it.
Jules:  Oh, come on, Siddig and Robinson would totally be into some kind of arc where you finally have Garak and Bashir get together.
Anika:  Absolutely!
Liz:  Right!
Jules:  And, you know, Laris and Zhaban totally know Garak. Come on.
Anika:  Exactly! There's so many little ways that you could have had this sort of domestic idea of seeing Deep Space 9 people, and yet, totally with the plot of spies and disenfranchised people. It's like, hello! That's what Deep Space 9 is about!
Jules:  Come on. Yeah.
Liz:  We could have literally visited the station, and seen how it looks, you know, twenty, thirty years later, and -- are there more Federation elements in its design? Are there more Bajoran elements in its design? How is Bajor changed by being part of the Federation?
Jules:  They literally were like, "Let's take Agnes to DS … 12." I'm like, there was just enough of a pause. And I'm like, screw you. Screw you! Especially after they had a couple -- they had, like, two different lines connecting Rios to Deep Space 9. And then a third, that I was like -- no, they had one -- yeah, they had a bunch of different lines connecting Rios to DS9. And I was like, you're just teasing me at this point. I'm mad. I'm mad about it. And I'm like, oh! Like, I get it, on the one hand, okay, DS9 is very self-contained compared to some other Treks. But also--
Liz:  It is, but if you're going to bring back a Voyager character as obscure as Icheb, then you can do more than just shout out "Mr Quark of Ferenginar".
Jules:  Yeah. Exactly. And I love Quark. Honestly, [he's] like [an] anti-villain, in some regards.
Liz:  That reminds me! When I was in grade nine, we had a thing in English class, where it was like, "Name a villain in television or books!" And one of the three Nicoles in my class mentioned Quark. And I was like, (a) that is OUTRAGEOUS, Quark is NOT a villain, he is … Quark! These days I'd call him an antagonist, I don't think I knew that word then. Maybe I learned it in that lesson.
But the other thing was that this particular Nicole was very, very cool, and I was like, "How does someone that cool know about Star Trek? I wish I had the courage to talk to her. I really like her purple hair, and we go to the same church, maybe we shave some stuff in common." Never actually spoke to her.
Jules:  If you're out there somewhere, listening, Nicole, come on, get in touch and explain the mystery of how you know that!
Liz:  And also, I really liked how your purple hair faded into silver, it was very cool. Yeah, Quark is not a villain, but at the same time, he does truly egregious things, and kind of gets away with them.
Jules:  Yeah.
Liz:  I'm thinking, not just of that time he sold weapons to a terrorist organisation, but stuff like, uh, making a pornographic holosuite program based on Kira.
Jules:  Yeah! Which is--
Anika:  He's definitely involved in more than one murder plot.
Jules:  Yeah. And it's -- I mean, I've gone into this rant so many times personally, and on my blog, and everywhere. I'm just, like, if Quark is a collaborator, which Kira says at one point, she's like, "I don't trust you because you're a collaborator." I'm like, if Quark is a collaborator--
Liz:  So is Odo.
Jules:  --why isn't Odo? And why aren't we treating Odo with the same amount of suspicion that we're treating Quark?
Liz:  Right.
Jules:  And I'm just, like, you know? And Quark, honestly, a lot of this is down to Armin Shimmerman's performance. Because he really just elevates this character--
Anika:  Oh, absolutely.
Jules:  --who could have been just -- yeah, just such a caricature, and so one-note and ridiculous, and manages to kind of -- yeah, give him a lot of depth.
Anika:  All three of the Ferengi are kind of amazing, in that you go into Deep Space 9 thinking the Ferengi are a one-note joke at best--
Liz:  And a pretty offensive joke, at that.
Anika:  --and offensive, and racist, and antisemitic, and horrible at worst. But all three of them raise those characters to something amazing. You can start rooting for them, even if you acknowledge that they -- especially Quark is on the wrong side on more than one occasion.
Jules:  Yeah. And yet--
Anika:  He's someone that you root for, and that you care about, and you become invested in.
Liz:  And through them, you know, all of the other Ferengi that they deal with become more interesting. Ishka, the Nagus, Brunt.
Anika:  Yeah, absolutely.
Jules:  Yeah. I'm like, honestly, we could do a sequel to your Mother's Day episode just talking about Ishka, I feel like.
Liz:  Ohhhhhhhh. The thing with Quark's villainy is that I just kind of wish there had been, like, a jail set, and occasionally Quark is in prison, and there's a subplot about him … I don't know, trying to turn a profit smuggling contraband, or sneaking access to the guards' replicator which produces better rations. Something like that. And it's one of those things where I think Babylon 5 looked at what Deep Space 9 was doing and went, "Yeah, nah." Because that one had a whole arc about a character -- a regular -- doing something terrible and then spending half a season in prison for it.
Jules:  I mean, that is kind of what they did with Garak? They just skipped over the prison part, and suddenly he shows up. He attempts to commit genocide and gets, you know, six months in prison.
Liz:  Oh, that zany Garak!
Jules:  Whoops!
Liz:  They did it with Kasidy, too--
Anika:  I was going to say, Kasidy--
Liz:  --with her involvement in the Maquis.
Anika:  Kasidy had to go to prison.
Jules:  Kasidy -- I don't know. See, Kasidy, I'm kind of like, ugh, she wasn't smuggling weapons, she was smuggling, like, medical supplies. And she kind of knew it was the Maquis, but she was like -- it was sort of like an "I'm not asking a lot of questions" situation, and it was medical supplies, I dunno. Honestly, I'm like, I get why, and I don't object to the arc of having Sisko's girlfriend -- but also, I'm like, ehhhh, I don't consider that really villainous.
Liz:  You feel like she needs a better lawyer, and also it's kind of weird how black women get much heavier sentences when white men do much worse things?
Jules:  Yeah, isn't it weird.
Liz:  Yeah, it's so strange.
Anika:  So weird.
Jules:  Garak gets six months for attempted genocide, and Kasidy gets at least that for smuggling medical supplies to ex-Federation colonies that might be associated with the Maquis.
Anika:  And also, the Maquis are not exactly unsympathetic.
Jules:  I mean, that's sort of the point of those episodes.
Liz:  Yeah! This is why I don't really buy the argument that Star Trek -- that Deep Space 9 is the only non-racist Star Trek.
Jules:  Yyyyyyyyyyeah.
Liz:  Like, it had its issues as much as anyone else, if not more so, purely because of the opportunity of having more people of colour.
Jules:  And it did pretty well in a lot of regards.
Liz:  Oh yeah!
Jules:  Especially compared to other Star Treks. But that's not the same as being free of all issues.
Liz:  It's still an all-male and nearly all-white writing room. And I'm pretty sure the only man of colour in there was Naren Shankar, who is Indian-American, not African-American, and so has different experiences. No shade on Shankar, I like him, but--
Jules:  Oh no. God, yeah. The Expanse is, like, the only sci-fi series my dad admits to liking.
Anika:  Awww!
Liz:  It's just so good!
Jules:  I'm like, Mom! And my mom has watched Star Trek from the beginning. I'm like, Mom, you married a man who doesn't like science fiction. She's like--
Liz:  I love The Expanse, but I could never do a podcast about it, because it's so good.
Jules:  Yeah. No, absolutely.
Liz:  We couldn't have this conversation about The Expanse.
Jules:  No, yeah, absolutely.
Anika:  Sorry, now I'm just trying to come up with topic ideas for The Expanse.
Liz:  [laughs]
Anika:  Sorry!
Jules:  Yes!
Liz:  Okay, I do think that its treatment of Naomi is not as good as the books, and particularly in that season where she disagrees with everyone, and they treat her like sit for most of the season?
Jules:  Agreed.
Liz:  That was terrible, and also subtextually bad. And I don't like the decision to combine the characters of Drummer and -- oh shoot. Michio Pa. Because I love Michio and I love Drummer, but Michio's role in the books is going to diverge pretty heavily from Drummer's. Anyway. That's The Expanse.
Anika:  Julie Mao deserved better.
Liz:  Yeah. Julie Mao always deserves better.
Jules:  Oh yeah. Yeah. I mean, in fairness, I feel like that's one of the points of the books.
Liz: Yeah, particularly the later books, but the first one is such a straight-up fridging that it's just depressing.
Jules:  Yeah. No, that's what I enjoy about them, though, that later they're like, yeah…
Liz:  Oh yeah, I love seeing the writers grow and improve, and their characters becoming more diverse and more complicated. And I think -- I have never seen men write an abusive relationship from the woman's point of view as well as they wrote Naomi and what's his face. The guy who needs a punch. Like, that -- seeing these guys level up is absolutely remarkable.
Jules:  Yes.
Liz:  Back to Star Trek.
Jules:  I mean, Shankar got his start on Star Trek.
Liz:  Right, it's totally on topic.
Jules:  It's a reasonable transition.
Liz:  I was going to say that, until Narissa came along, I would have said that Star Trek was mostly past sexualising its female villains? Like, there's Georgiou, but I wouldn't say she's objectified.
Jules:  Yeah, no. She's gorgeous and sexy, but it's sort of incidental.
Liz:  Yeah, even the scene where she sleeps with the two sex workers, and we see her in her uncomfortable-looking leather corset, like, it didn't feel exploitative. Whereas Narissa -- I feel like--
Jules:  Yeah.
Liz:  --the writing for Narissa and Narek really dropped the ball. We could have seen them as people sooner, and we didn't.
Jules:  And what frustrates me, especially with Narissa -- and honestly, there's an episode of DS9 where I feel the same way about this, where I'm like, this is a great episode that explores the complexity of this, and it should have happened sooner. But, like, when we find out with Narissa that her aunt, the woman who raised them--
Anika:  Ramdha.
Jules:  --was -- that Ramdha, that her Auntie Ramdha, was assimilated, and was also initially going to be part of the Zhat Vash, and didn't, or maybe did survive the Admonition, it's not totally clear that she totally made it through unscathed -- I'm like, you know, this is really interesting, what you're doing with her here, with Narissa, and it should have happened a lot earlier.
Anika:  Yeah. So I recently -- I didn't rewatch the series, but I was watching all of the episodes in order to get clips for my vids. And it's the episode after -- so I guess it's like the fourth episode, the episode after the cell scene with Ramdha and Soji happens, where Ramdha tries to kill herself and Soji saves her, and then she's in a coma for the rest of the series.
So the next episode, Soji is with Ramdha in a scene that very much parallels the later scene with Narissa. And Narek surprises her there, and she's like, "Are you following me?" And he says, "No."
And I was like, oh my God, I believe him! He's just checking on his aunt!
Jules:  Awwww!
Anika:  And I wish I had known that! I wish that their stuff was introduced before that, so that it wasn't like this afterthought. You know, going back, I have this realisation, because now I'm just like, oh! So, yeah.
Jules:  You know, it comes back, I think, to Chabon not being a television writer, first and foremost. Because I could see that being the kind of thing you sort of hint at over a hundred pages or so.
Liz:  Yeah.
Jules:  And then rereading, and being like, oh, yeah, I see what you're doing there.
Anika:  Right.
Jules:  But on a TV show, you don't have the room to kind of hint at that here and there, and then come back to it later, when you actually get a scene with these characters -- one of these characters, even -- and Ramdha, and be, like, oh, I see. Yes.
Liz:  It's the same with Narek's throwaway line in the very final episode, that he's a Zhat Vash washout. It would have been really nice to know that, like, episodes and episodes ago.
Jules:  Yeah.
Anika:  I was saying that, like, Narek and Narissa both finally get actual characterisation in the very end of the plot, and I feel like -- I still feel like it's partially some kind of -- they were trying to trick us into hating them, and then were like, "Oh, don't hate them!" And it's like, no, you're just -- this is not good storycraft.
Liz:  Right.
Anika:  This is not working.
Liz:  And I think setting out to trick your audience is bad writing. You can set out to surprise your audience, but tricking them is not playing fair.
Jules:  I should be able to go back and rewatch, and be, like, oh, okay, I see X, Y and Z clues now.
Anika:  Like in The Good Place. The Good Place does it well.
Liz:  I was going to say, like season 1 of Discovery, when everything Lorca is doing makes sense, and suddenly you see him doing so many things at once, and they're all creepy.
Anika:  That's true.
Jules:  And I remember, initially, I think, Liz, you may have been the one who linked me to, initially, the theory that Lorca was from the mirror universe.
Liz:  Oh, was I?
Jules:  Maybe! I don't know. I heard it somewhere, and I think you were the main person I was talking to about it.
Liz:  Huh!
Jules:  There was this theory that Lorca was from the mirror universe. And I was, like, that's weird. And I guess I kind of see where they're getting it, but I don't know. And this was during the hiatus between the first half and second half of the seasons, and I was like, that is weird, that is reaching, I dunno. And then the first episode of the second half of the first season happened, and I was like, I'm onboard. You know what? Suddenly I see it. And I was totally wrong about his motivations, but even then, at that point, I was like, yep, I see it and I buy it.
Liz:  I remember seeing that theory around, like, from about the mid-point of the first half of the first season. And I didn't really care for it, because I felt like, obviously Ash is a Klingon, and we can't have two imposters, that's ridiculous!
Anika:  [laughs]
Liz:  But also, I felt like Lorca was just a straight-up Starfleet captain who is broken by trauma, and this is like the crew's perspective on that old TOS story of the captain who goes crazy and declares himself a god, or whatever.
Jules:  Which is also -- I mean, you say TOS, but also TNG. I mean, that's basically the plot of -- dammit, what's that episode? The first one with the Cardassians.
Liz:  Yeah!
Jules:  I mean, it's that one. And I've said, that's "Battle at the Binary Stars". "The Wounded"! Like, if someone had intervened.
Liz:  And part of why Lorca works so well as a villain is that all the clues are things that we, as a society, are trained and programmed to overlook and forgive. "Oh, he's manipulative? Oh, he treats women badly? Oh well, he's just, you know, he has a lot of pain."
Jules:  "He's damaged."
Liz:  "He'll get better." Yeah. And I was totally wrong, and I own that.
Jules:  Even us, misandrist as we are!
Liz:  Right!
Jules:  Reasonably misandrist.
Anika:  I think that I really appreciate Lorca's story as a story, and as plot, and as -- I appreciate it. And I love it, I love the fact that Lorca ends up the villain in the end. But I end up not liking Lorca, either as a villain or as not-a-villain? Just end up being like, oh, so he's--
Jules:  I get exactly what you mean.
Anika:  It's this weird thing, where, because I was sort of on his side up unto a point, and then he become a monster -- and completely a monster. He has -- "Oh, if you were hoping for me to now move into my -- I've become better by being in the Federation for six months," that's not gonna happen.
Jules:  Yeah, they basically swap him for Georgiou.
Anika:  Right. Which is great for the story. But for him as a character, I no longer care about him.
Liz:  I just transferred all of my feelings about Lorca to the version of prime!Lorca that exists only in my head. And the good news is that he sort of seems to match up with other people's versions, so I feel like I'm on the right track. And it doesn't look like Discovery's doing anything with that character anymore, so he's mine, now.
Jules:  I mean, this sounds like -- I think you prompted me, and I have so many scenes written, of the fic where prime!Lorca gets dumped on DS9, and he and Kira prime end up kind of together. And I'm like, yes. And, well, the way I'm writing it is that he ends up -- well, at this point in the mirror universe's timeline, Bajor has been conquered by the Terran Empire. And so, presumably, it would not be difficult, out at the edge of Empire space, if they were trying to go into hiding for mirror!Michael, who is associated with the rebellion, and prime!Lorca, who she has realised is not her Lorca, and needs to get to protection because he's relatively innocent, to end up hitting the wormhole.
Liz:  And, whoops, time travel.
Jules:  Exactly!
Anika:  [laughs]
Jules:  And, you know, the Prophets are like, yeah, sure, whatever. Let's dump 'em out anywhere. Anywhere, any time.
Liz:  I feel like the Prophets do a lot of things for the lols. And, actually, coming back to our regular topic, I can't remember who it is, but one of my friends has my theory that the ultimate villains of the Star Trek universe are the Prophets.
Jules:  Oh yeah! I mean, this comes back to -- honestly, I think when we were discussing this episode, Anika, you sent a list of, like, villains in Star Trek.
Anika:  Yeah, a hilarious list.
Jules:  And one of them was God!
Anika:  One of them was God.
Liz:  [laughs]
Anika:  It was great.
Jules:  As a Jew, during Passover, I'm like, yeah. God's a villain.
Liz:  It's Good Friday, I can get behind that. But yeah, the reason that I would argue that the Prophets are the villains -- well, villainous, if not the ultimate villain, is the whole thing with Sarah Sisko, where they just straight up possess and have impregnated this human woman. And, again, the all-male writing room doesn't seem to realise what they've done?
Anika:  No, no, yeah. They absolutely do not.
Jules:  Yes! Although what's interesting -- my roommate, Mindy, who I introduced to Star Trek, and got into it via Discovery, and I was like, if you like Discovery, maybe try DS9 next. And is now super into Star Trek. She was like, "Hey, so," as we were going through DS9 together, she was like, "Hey, so what if -- bear with me here -- what if Sisko's mother was a Prophet?"
Liz and Anika: [laugh]
Jules:  And I was like, "Mindy! Are you Catholic, by any chance?"
Liz: [laughing in Catholic]
Jules:  Yeah, I'm like, of course, the lapsed Catholic in the apartment is like, "Hey, so is Sisko's mom a Prophet?" I was like, yep. Yep. Because God's a jerk!
Liz:  The difference is that the angel asked. Like, the Prophets--
Jules:  That's true!
Liz:  Prophets are not very much into consent.
Jules:  Prophets don't.
Liz:  The irony is that, in Star Trek V, God is a pretty disappointing villain.
Anika:  [laughs] I know.
Jules:  yeah!
Anika:  He really is.
Jules:  Honestly, makes a better character in the Futurama episode where Bender is like, "Unless you're NOT God, but the remains of a computerised probe that collided with God!"
Liz:  I've seen that movie, too.
Jules:  Honestly, that's a great episode. It's one of my favourites of Futurama. It's brilliant.
Liz:  Man, it has been so long since I watched Futurama.
Jules:  It's so good.
Liz:  Can I ask -- Anika, I think it was you who added General Chang to our list, and I'm a bit miffed, because you both had your own villain, Seska and Lorca. And then I was going to choose General Chang, and you STOLE him from me!
Anika:  You SAID that Lorca was your villain!
Liz:  I know.
Anika:  You said, "Jules has Dukat, and you have Seska, and I so I get one too," and then, in parentheses, you put, "Lorca." So I took that to mean--
Liz:  I know, I know--
Jules:  I feel like I haven't talked that much about Dukat, honestly.
Liz:  Lorca is basically Dukat, but prettier.
Jules:  Yeah! I think I remember us saying, at one point, in email, early in the first season of Discovery, I was like, I feel like they're the AU I've written in drafts, that I have in Google Docs, the "female Sisko/Dukat" AU. And you were like, "I got a very Sisko/Dukat vibe off of them, and I wasn't sure whether to say it or not." And I'm like, yes. Yes, that is--
Liz:  I was obviously seeing red flags, and choosing to ignore them!
Jules:  Yep!
Anika:  [laughs]
Jules:  Love it.
Liz:  Whereas General Chang is just red flags all the way down, and completely unignorable.
Anika:  He embraces it!
Liz:  Right! And I know I was saying that I don't really love the Klingons as bad guys, but he thinks he's the hero! And he's the charismatic troll who is twirling in his chair, quoting Shakespeare as he fires on the Enterprises!
Anika:  I only have three notes, and I'm kind of proud of them, so I'm just gonna read them to you guys.
Liz:  Yes?
Jules:  Please!
Anika:  Number one, played by Captain Von Trapp. Number two, close personal relationship with Shakespeare. And number three, extra AF.
Liz:  [laughs] It's true! And I think Star Trek VI is a great movie, and very nearly flawless, but I just cannot imagine it being a fraction as much fun without Christopher Plummer.
Anika:  Oh no! He's the -- everything. The parts of Star Trek VI that I love, I really love. And the parts of Star Trek VI that I don't like, I really don't like. So it's not my favourite. But everything about General Chang, and really, his entire conspiracy -- and all of the Klingons -- is great.
Jules:  That's such a racist name, though.
Liz:  Oh yeah.
Anika:  Yes.
Jules:  I mean, speaking of Star Trek, and its racist villains, I'm like, oh no.
Liz:  It's also the one where the Romulans are just straight-up wearing qipao. So. Yeah.
Jules:  I'm sorry, I interrupted there. But I'm also, like, oh, Star Trek.
Anika:  Oh, no, it's very--
Jules:  Sometimes -- oh, Star Trek. Sometimes you get it right--
Liz:  Truthfully, and this is embarrassing, General Chang has been part of my landscape for so many decades that it has only just now occurred to me that that is super racist.
Jules:  I mean--
Anika:  I think it's just -- it plays off of the Kang and Kor and whatever the other one was.
Jules:  Absolutely.
Anika:  They were going for that, and they didn't notice it was racist, I think is the truth. But there was no one to say, "Hey, guys, bad idea." I mean, it's the same as in Picard, when they kill off all of the black men, and it's like, guys? Why are you doing this? They just don't notice.
Jules:  Exactly.
Anika:  No one is watching with that point of view.
Jules:  That's why you need diversity behind the camera as well as in front of it. Yeah.
Liz:  Exactly. I don't even know who is writing on season 2 of Picard, but I feel like it's mostly the same people, but just less Chabon. So. Oh God.
Jules:  I mean, that could be okay. I guess. I mean, Chabon -- he just -- he needs to learn how to write for TV. He's writing like a novelist, where -- yeah.
Anika:  He's leaving to do his adaptation of his own work, which I think he'll be much better at. Because he won't have to do any of the worldbuilding, it'll just be, you know, "I already know where this story is going, I just have to do it for TV." And he's learned. And so now he can (inaudible) that.
Jules:  Yes.
Anika:  And grow.
Jules:  And so much of Picard, I'm like -- as we said, like with Narissa, my moment where I'm like, wow, you actually brought some humanisation to this character. I mean, for want of a better word than humanisation. Like, you made me believe this character as a person--
Anika:  Nuance.
Jules:  It was way too late. It was good--
Anika:  I mean, not for me. [laughs]
Jules:  --but you should have at least been hinting at it earlier. And I'm like, that's the kind of thing that a novelist could do. You could drop hints earlier and earlier that I wouldn't pick up -- that I might pick up on, but wouldn't pick up on and see spelled out until later. I'm like, mm, yeah.
Liz:  I will say, regarding the villains in Picard, Oh was very one-note, but because she survived, I feel like there's room for her to come back and level up to be a more interesting character, and a better foil for Picard.
Jules:  Oh, absolutely.
Anika:  Yes.
Liz:  They could even, like … meet.
Jules:  Absolutely. That would rule.
Anika:  They could meet. [laughs]
Liz:  Well, it's just -- one of the problems [with Picard is] that we have all these antagonists who -- like, Picard doesn't interact with Oh once.
Jules:  Yeah. Okay, so here's my question: difference between a villain and antagonist. We touched on this a little at the beginning, but villain versus antagonist. What's sort of the difference, at least in the context of Star Trek? Or specifically in the context of Star Trek?
Liz:  Partially, I think it's just body count? Like, normally I would say that an antagonist is someone who genuinely believes, or at least hopes, that they're doing the right thing -- or, at least, that they're doing the wrong thing for the right reasons. Like, I think of Kylo Ren pre-redemption as an antagonist, not a villain. Whereas I would say Snoke is a villain.
But with Star Trek, like, I would say that Oh is more of an antagonist than a villain, but at the same time, she was pretty keen to commit genocide. So, like, where do you draw the line?
Jules:  Yeah. Although, by her standards--
Anika:  She's--
Jules:  I mean, that's sort of where antagonist versus villain comes in, for me, is that by her standards, it wasn't really genocide.
Anika:  She was saving all those people.
Jules:  Yeah.
Liz:  By her standards, that was less of a genocide than what Kat Cornwell attempted to do on Qo'noS.
Anika:  Right. Because she just didn't even see them as people.
Liz:  Right.
Anika:  And not even in the way that you can say that about anyone who's a bad guy, even on Earth, you know, that they don't see [their victims] as people. But, like, they are literally machines. And so--
Liz:  It's like the equivalent of throwing iPhones in the recycling.
Anika:  So we believe they're people, but -- right.
Liz:  I guess, on the whole, I would say she is more of an antagonist than a villain? And also because she is very powerful but very remote, and she has some one-liners, and some sharp shoulders that basically scream, "Hello, I am evil." But she's not literally twirling her moustache, because she's half-Vulcan, and they have more dignity than that. And I would say Kai Winn is an antagonist, rather than a villain. Because, although she does some fairly terrible things, she also is capable of a certain amount of heroism, and there are times when she has put Bajor above her own ambition.
Jules:  Like when she kills my favourite villain ever? Yes?
Liz:  Right!
Jules:  God bless her, that's why I love her! I'm like, yes!
Anika:  [laughing] "God bless her".
Jules:  She kills Dukat. God bless her. You know why--
Liz:  She's a very complicated antagonist!
Jules:  She is, and I love her.
Liz:  I think that, like Seska, she deserved a better end.
Jules:  Yeah.
Anika:  She definitely deserved a better end. But, I mean, I think that Deep Space 9 deserved a better end is really what the truth is.
Jules:  Yeah. Well. Yeah.
Anika:  Sorry. That's where I land.
Jules:  That's -- yeah.
Anika:  [laughs]
Liz:  My last rewatch, we stopped the episode before Jadzia died, and we have no regrets.
Jules:  That's a good choice.
Liz:  Actually, no, I have one regret, and that's that you can't have Ezri and Jadzia at the same time.
Jules:  Yeah!
Liz:  See, Ezri could have been leading that fleet at the end of Picard.
Jules:  We should had a whole--
Anika:  Yes!
Jules:  Ezri and Worf!
Liz:  Right! I really like the idea of Ezri becoming Worf's first officer!
Jules:  I assumed Worf would lead the fleet!
Liz:  Yeah, same!
Jules:  That the Enterprise would lead the fleet to rescue them, and I was like, that would be amazing, give me Worf. Oh, I love that, now that you mention it, Ezri as Worf's first officer.
Anika:  That would be so good!
Jules:  I'm like, yes!
Liz:  I feel like she'd be an older first officer? But, at the same time, if she's switched at a later stage from counselling to command--
Anika:  And I don't think she would care. She wouldn't care about--
Liz:  Right! She's three hundred and fifty years old!
Anika:  Right! So she doesn't -- like, titles and ranks, that doesn't matter.
Jules:  Who cares, yeah.
Anika:  She's going where she's needed. And Worf definitely needs her as his first officer!
Jules:  Yes! [laughs]
Anika:  It's perfect!
Jules:  I love it!
Liz:  And also, like, I realise it's technically reassociation, but Worf isn't a Trill, so…
Jules:  And also, Worf's not into it at this point.
Liz:  Right! He's moved on. We hope.
Jules:  He's like, okay, we tried that, and it didn't work. So, no.
Anika:  Yeah, like, they just have a great relationship, now. A great--
Jules:  It would be amazing. Now I want that so much. Oh!
Anika:  I know! I'm angry all over again!
Jules:  I'm so mad. Ezri and Julian and Garak have some weird polyamorous relationship going on, and--
Liz:  One hundred percent.
Jules:  Yeah, that's what I want.
Liz:  Yeah. [sigh]
Jules:  Good Lord, yes.
Liz:  I think, as with so much of Star Trek, the version of Picard that exists in our heads is a bit better than the one on the screen.
Jules:  Yeah.
Anika:  Yeah. Well.
Liz:  And that's frustrating, but it's also okay.
Anika:  It's also okay.
Liz:  I guess.
Jules:  I mean, that's where the best fanfic comes from. And these days--
Anika:  I was sort of, you know, when we were talking about Narissa and Narek earlier, and how they don't get any, you know, actual character and everything, and yet they were my favourite from basically episode two? And it's sort of, like, so you can tell the least developed and most chaotic character on the show is going to be my favourite. And that's just the way it is.
Liz:  You have a type.
Anika:  I have a type.
Liz:  Yeah.
Jules:  You have a type! I mean, I--
Liz:  Admiral Clancy walked in, and I fell in love!
Jules and Anika: [laugh]
Jules:  I just -- yeah.
Anika:  I'm okay with it. I know who I am. I know what I like.
Jules:  And, let's be real, today's fanfic writers are tomorrow's bestselling writers, and head staff writers, and -- yeah. I mean -- you know.
Anika:  Absolutely.
Jules:  I was delighted -- yeah, well, I'll leave that for another time, but the golem--
Liz:  No, no! I did want to ask if you had any particular Jewish perspective on that.
Jules:  I was delighted that the golem was introduced as sort of a value-neutral thing? Because I see it as sort of a -- that's a step forward, basically. I often see it in video games, and in other stuff, the golem as a bad thing. It's scary, and it's Frankenstein, and it's a robot. I'm like, no, golem protects us. A golem was introduced to protect the ghetto from the hordes of angry Christians were going to kill us. I'm like, not the golem is--
Liz:  Much like Picard is protecting the synths from the hordes of angry Romulans!
Jules:  I'm like, yeah!
Liz:  I didn't know that!
Jules:  Golem is -- at worst, it's a neutral thing. At best, it's kind of, like, you know, it's our thing to protect us. Which is interesting -- Michael Chabon's breakthrough novel, The Amazing Adventures of Kavalier and Clay, includes a character -- I mean, it's an alternate version of the origin of Superman.
Liz:  Oh!
Jules:  And basically it makes it explicit that Superman is a golem. And, also, he's a child who was put in a basket, in a little probe, and sent out into space, into the river, and Superman is Moses, and also the golem. And, yeah. I mean, I could yell for a long time about -- but, yeah, I appreciated that Picard, at least, presents the golem as a very neutral thing, rather than a negative thing.
Liz:  See, it was negative to me because that kind of transference is a bit squicky to me. It was, you know, introduced as, "This is what Soong has built for himself!" And I hated Soong, so I didn't like it. But I also sensed that I was missing something, and now you've provided that missing piece. So I'm very grateful to have that extra context.
Jules:  There you go! And I'm also, like -- my mom was like, "Oh, they've solved all the problems with Picard, where else is there to go?" I'm like, that's really interesting, though! You still have places to go, like, because this is kind of an artificial body.
Liz:  Yeah!
Jules:  And you still have places to go, especially the Borg. I'm like, uh, from some regards, if you look at it the wrong way, the Borg are the golem gone wrong.
Liz:  That makes me think of "Descent", which I've been doing far too much, lately, for a terrible two-parter, but the whole thing with that two-parter was that Lore was offering the Borg the chance to become fully artificial, and to shed their organic parts.
Anika:  Right.
Liz:  That's really interesting. And I do think that there is more story to tell, not just in terms of Picard having a few extra decades in which to age naturally, but in terms of -- all his friends just watched him die, and now he's here, and he's fine.
Anika:  It's a little weird!
Liz:  Yeah! And I feel like Elnor is going to voice that weirdness very loudly. And if Deanna sees him, will she be able to sense his emotions, and if she can't, will that freak her out? Because I can see that freaking her the fuck out.
Anika:  [laughs]
Liz:  Most importantly, how is Beverly going to react, and where was their relationship before, and where is it going to go now? (I have priorities, and I don't apologise for them.)
Anika:  You've have priorities!
Jules:  You do. Yes. I feel like we've strayed from villains, but I don't care.
Liz:  Well, I just wanted to ask you about the golem thing, because I knew that you would have something to say about it--
Jules:  Oh yes.
Liz:  --and that it would be very intelligent.
Jules:  Oh, thank you! I'm flattered. That is very kind. Given the fights I've gotten into on the internet, and -- thank you! I'm flattered.
Liz:  You're very welcome, but it was only a statement of fact.
Anika:  And don't take fights on the internet too seriously.
Jules:  Thank you!
Anika:  Or too much to heart.
Jules:  Thank you! Villains, though. Yes.
Liz:  I do think that a story suffers without a good antagonist. And they don't necessarily need to be a bad person?
Jules:  Absolutely.
Anika:  Definitely true.
Liz:  Even a force of nature can be an antagonist. But in the western storytelling tradition, it is something that's beneficial to have.
Jules:  I mean, Jurassic Park is my favourite villain -- my favourite -- one of my favourite movies. And it's explicitly stated that nature is the villain there.
Anika:  Right.
Jules:  I sort of hinted at it there with my Freudian slip, but nature--
Liz:  The park is the villain!
Jules:  You can make me believe pretty much anything is a villain if you do it right.
Liz:  Let me introduce you to my cat.
Anika:  Aw! I was just looking at my little cat and saying, "You're not a villain, sweetie! I know everyone thinks you are!"
Jules:  Oh, my cats--
Anika:  My daughter tells me every day that my cat, Sushi (specifically), is a villain. And the only reason I disagree is that she likes me. And so she's never a villain to me, but she is to everyone else.
Liz and Jules: Awwwww!
Liz:  Anyway. Anika, would you like to give us an outro?
Anika:  Is it time? Yes, yes.
Liz:  Yes.
Anika:  Okay. Wait, I need to know, what episode are we watching?
Jules:  Oh God. I don't know. Let's do -- I feel like we might have things to say about "Things Past" in season four. Or season five, I'm sorry, "Things Past".
Liz:  I can't remember which episode that is, so that's exciting. I'm just writing it down.
Jules:  It should have happened earlier. But. Yes.
[outro music]
Anika:  Thank you for listening to Antimatter Pod.
You can find our show notes at antimatterpod.tumblr.com, including links to our social media and credits for our theme music.
You can also follow us on Twitter at @antimatterpod. Sometimes we post cat pictures, and questions for our audience.
If you like us, leave a review on apple podcasts or wherever you consume your podcasts -- the more reviews, the easier it is for new listeners to find us.
And join us in two weeks when we’ll be discussing the Deep Space 9 episode “Things Past”
Liz and Jules: Yay!
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Gush about some of your favorite ships please
Sorry for the long wait, but I think I might be ready for this now. (and before anybody wonders, of course it is in the middle of the night and I should go to bed now! Cause it’s the best time to gush over your ships!)
Okay lets begin with Spirk - man I was raised being a Trekkie and to be honest I never saw the great appeal of Kirk, cause my fucking younger than 10 year old heart already belonged to that vulcan! And I bailed my eyes out when he died! But after Kirk and the crew did everything to bring him back, I was like: Okay Kirk is a good one, okay! Nobody will ever be able to seperate them, only over my dead body. Back then it was more about the friendship but I’ll be dammned if I didn’t become a Spirk shipper some 10 years later when rewatching it. But why stop there, get Bones into the fun, too! Try to provoke that human side of Spock, trigger some unlogical feelings, try to beat him in 3d chess!
Okay bear with me there are three other Star Trek ships I wanna gush about!  I pretty much watched the series in the order they came out, so next was TNG that I saw, and although I loved data to every bit and byte of his android being, I was at a loss for a love interest for him. Okay there is always Geordie I guess or Picard, but TNG never hold a deep appeal for me in that field. So on to DS9. When I saw it as a kid, is was boring shit with all that politics and religion. I was around 18 when I rewatched and then in only the fourth episode I became suddenly aware of how motherfucking much Garak flirted with Julian Bashir! And I fell so deeply in love for their weird dynamic of a young and easily impressible human doctor with a mysterious cardassian spy tailor. I ran around showing scenes with them to people who were not shippers and they agreed, that there was tension. And right there was my first time finding background informations about my ship. It was there! I didn’t just interpret too much!  Andrew Robinson, the actor said himself he thought of Elim Garak as an omnisexual character who had a certain interest in Julian. It was absolutely mindblowing to me (also I started to google what omnisexual meant and found about pansexuality, so this is kinda part of finding my own identity, thanks to the closeted representation of a queer alien in sci-fi show from the 90s)
Okay two more and I’m done with Star Trek. But both are from Voyager. Throughout the series I loved the chemistry between Janeway and Chakotay. The slightly forbidden, the pressure, the loneliness of being captain of a ship so far away she probably would never see her husband again. Tragic shit and so perfect set up.  And then came Seven of Nine and manged to shake things up. Suddenly I was a multi shipper, because I couldn’t decide if she or Chakotay should be with Kathryn. The one was loving, supporting and the other was awkward, learning new things about finding humanity again. One was frowned upon because of their ranks and the other because Seven was still more borg than human in how she behaved. So pretty cold, while also confused a ton of times and Janeway ALWAYS had the time and nerves to explain it to her. Just like the doctor (who speaking between us is also a solid shipping option for Seven!)
Damn I tricked you by forgetting myself, that I did develop a shipping crush on Q x Picard. Damn have you ever seen those two interacting. The cockiness in the room, the mocking tone, the resistance. Have you seen those scenes you could perfectly take out of context and already have a “morning after sex” scenario?
Good now let’s take a deep breath and come to the Harry Potter fandom. Or in my case Severus Snape’s playground to be shipped to literally everybody! If it had Snape in it, I would read Everything during that time. Snarry was my most favourite, followed by Snape x Lucius, Remus, Sirius. But I also was looking into x Hermione, Draco, Lily, James, McGonagall, Dumbledore, Ron, Neville (Oh what a small and angsty ship), Bellatrix, Voldemort, Narcissa, Tonks, hell I even read one with Hagrid! (Okay I admit I didn’t enjoy that). Snape was my shipping bitch. Beside that I was of course loving Sirius x Remus.
Okay we move a tiny bit backwards in my life timeline, because before I started to excessively ship my ship bitch with everybody that was breathing, I had a rare ship in Final Fantasy (VII to be more precisely). Hojo x Vincent. You know just your ordinary crazy, mentally instable old (as in probably 60 years old) mad scientist having his way with a young agent from a special task force who canonly had a love interest in his wife… yeah. You know the totally normal stuff you ship every day!  ¯\_(ツ)_/¯  
I mean I also had the regular Cloud x Sephiroth, Cid x Vincent, Cloud x Tifa, Tifa x Aeris, Reno x Rude or Rufus and so on, but hell yeah I wrote one of my longest fanfictions with most of my OCs for Hojo and Vincent and someone commented on it. That person became my fucking best friend for now over 13 years who went with me through so much shit but is still my shipping partner in crime till now.
Together we discovered the movie Megamind and watched it more than 10 times in one week! We were so instantly on board with Megamind x Roxanne that it nearly hurt. And when we started an rpg, we shipped the fuck out of them, gave Minion a mermaid to love and that was the most perfect and sweet shit. They are just adorable! He’s such a goofball, sick with love only hold back because of his supervillain image.
I also met my second girlfriend via fanfiction comment. I had written a smut one shot about Tarrant Hightopp, the mad Hatter with ‘his’ Alice. That was also the first one I attempted to translate into English. When we met for the first time, we also watched Alice in Wonderland around 10 times together and we were in love with the lovely dynamic. We were frustrated when we found out, there was even a kiss in the script that never made it to the fucking screen! It was outrageous! I started to learn how to write a scottish accent and strew in some scottish words in our rpg to make it more authentic.
(And after that I managed to pull her into the pit of the Harry Potter fandom, hell I even pulled her into the pit of shipping mlm which she didn’t like until Snupin. But our main ship was suddenly Snape with her OC and we wrote a lot. Like between 2-8k word for one single post in our rpg! In the end we had enough to fill two books. We did even cosplay as them.)
Let’s get back to the Final Fantasy fandom a bit and let me gush over the other ships I had over the years. I’m still a huge Squall x Quistis shipper from part 8 and Laguna x Kiros! I also have an eye on Cifer x Fu-Jin (hah one eye, cause she has a an eyepatch, urgh I know that was a bad joke). And while I started as a big Auron x Tidus shipper, it shifted more to Auron x Rikku. I shipped them when I was about 15 (her age) and I thought I wasn’t allowed to do that, so I made a whole fucking AU where she was older and it developed into a totally original story of my own, which I have never ever written down even one page). With X-2 I satisfied myself with Paine x Rikku, they were such cute opposites of each other, I couldn’t resist! Only some years ago I played FF 15 and damn it was a shipping paradise again for me. Like all of the four protagonists are a match for each other! And then Ardyn appeared and made me weak in the knees. So Ardyn x Noctis but also just because those the truly most favorite characters: Ardyn x Ignis. Not exactly the fluffy happy stuff, I can tell you that. Manipulation, angst, abuse it had it all.
I can’t talk about Final Fantasy and leave Kingdom Hearts out, so yeah I started as a typical Sora x Riku (not Rikku from FF 10) fangirl and with part 2 I also feel for Axel x Roxas. I know, I know but at least with Organisation 13 you had a whole bunch of shippable characters. Just make one or two of them your shipping bitch, in my case Xemnas and Xigbar and ship the shit out those guys with everybody you can think of in the organisation.
And when we are already talking about Kingdom Hearts, I just jump into Disney a bit. Like every girls dream was to find their prince, ect and I was like: yeah Mulan and Shan Yu seem to fit nicely… Frollo is a fucking ass creep, but damn that scene in the cathedral when he sniffs Esmeraldas hair… Jasemine you look good in that red slave outfit for Jafar to be honest and dear Adam, you should have stayed a beast for Belle. Happy ruining your childhood. You’re welcome. :D Not that I shiped those during seeing those movies the first time, but you know I rewatch stuff!
Good okay let’s check the watch… good 1 hour later…. I’m not gonna finish this any time soon…. I’m sorry. I just tried to make a list of ships that seem important to me and I would probably write another hour or two. I just hope this satisfies you for the moment ;)
If you or anybody else wants to hear about more video game, movies or series ships and me writing an essay about that shit… feel free to ask I guess LMAO
Good Night dear people (or maybe not I see 15 messages on my dash)
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mollyencrypted · 6 years
Text
Alternate Deep Space Nine Masterpost
[Main list here. If you enjoy this, please consider checking out the rest of the project!]
Julian Bashir and the Law of Conservation of Skeeviness
Subcommander T'Rul
Everyone’s favourite excitable Cardassian scientists might get recurrer status [Okay, probably not, but it was a nice idea whilst it lasted]
More Klingons!
Unity
T'Rul in ‘Way of the Warrior’
Garak/Bashir??? (I originally wanted it but now I have reservations so...)
Tora Ziyal and Jake Sisko
Bashir/Leeta stays and I wish it didn't
Garak doesn't go on a date with Ziyal and she has friends her own age
Come to Quark's, Quark's is fun...
T'Rul in 'Broken Link' (she does stuff now!)
Jadzia Dax in 'Apocalypse Rising'
The Risa terrorist episode doesn't happen and also T'Rul is there
Bajoran!Garak
Ziyal in 'The Ascent' (okay, she doesn't appear in person but still)
If Kirk can go from Cadet on probation to Captain then Garak could absolutely go from Cadet to Commander (at least according to him) (ft. me snarking about the end of Star Trek XI)
Ziyal has reasons to stay on DS9 that don't involve waiting for Garak because that would be really weird and pathetic
T'Rul interacts with other Romulans for the first time in years and Ziyal gets rejected
Garak in 'Doctor Bashir, I Presume?' [ACCIDENTALLY DELETED; ARCHIVED ON WORDPRESS]
So is anything about 'Doctor Bashir, I Presume' different as a result of 'Into Darkness'?
 Fuck Richard Bashir (ft general headcanons)
Boring episode is replaced with the duo formerly known as the Noh-Jay Consortium adapting to its newest member whilst the senior staff are confused about Odo's new girlfriend
The Romulan Star Empire signed a non-aggression pact with the Dominion. T'Rul did no such thing
The further adventures of Jake and Ziyal: Terok Nor edition
Ziyal is alive and fine and still living on the station 
...well, fine if you don't count some serious guilt issues
Julian's feelings for Jadzia became platonic a while ago and nothing has changed that at all (ft. Quark, Garak, and me complaining about Change of Heart)
What happened to Section 31? 
Here's what happened to Section 31
Tora Ziyal in 'The Valiant' (also, the events of STXI actually make that crew even more fanatical) (ft. probable foreshadowing)
'Profit and Lace' is a completely different episode, and Ziyal has an orb experience
Here's a cute headcanon about Ziyal babysitting the O'Brien children
Further ethical quibbling re:Garak/Bashir but at least I'm not deliberately keeping them apart at a time when their continued association would make perfect narrative sense
Ziyal in 'Tears of the Prophets' (ft. Jadzia not being dead)
The Orb of the Emissary episodes are a little different but still mostly happen except Jadzia isn't dead so some of the framing is different and also the composite entity of Ezri Dax never existed
'Afterimage' can't be Ezri Dax's incorporation into the story arc because she's still Ezri Tigan and still on the Destiny so it's a Bashir episode instead and dear God do I wish I didn't have so many ethical hangups with that ship, and T'Rul is probably in a subplot doing something interesting
'Chrysalis' doesn't happen
'It's Only A Paper Moon' is pretty much the same but modified for the KXP's continuity
'Prodigal Daughter' can't happen and the episode that spawned it didn't really make sense anyway so the DS9 crew stayed well away from everything about that arc
'Field of Fire' can't happen because Vulcan was destroyed and Jadzia isn't dead
Just saving myself a little time so I can save myself reiterating that Ezri Dax doesn't exist except in those instances where it is actually relevant to the plot
Worf/Dax is actually healthy and stable in this timeline and Bashir/Dax is not a thing that exists
Damar's actions are addressed, and Garak and Ziyal are Angsty Lizard Siblings
But does Gowron still die without Ezri to give Worf that pep talk? (Contributed by my IRL buddy)
Life after ADS9
I said I'd think about whether or not to make Garashir canon for this 'verse and I kept my promise (spoiler alert: I have)
T'Rul and Worf (spans the entire latter half of the show so there was nowhere neat to fit this)
I think I fucked up but I got either some neat worldbuilding or the opportunity to name characters out of it so it's probably gonna work out fine 
It was the latter so T'Rul gets a first name! Yay retcons!
Garak and T'Rul go for drinks and complain about Weird Federation Crap, and Elim and Tepara talk about the Oralian Way and the teachings of Surak
Have another cute Ziyal headcanon courtesy of Timelines!
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