Friday, November 29, 2019

Star Trek: Haven

Episode: "Haven"
Series: Star Trek: The Next Generation
Season 1, Episode 11
Original Air Date: November 30, 1987

Image result for tng haven
via Memory Alpha

Surprise!  Deanna Troi is to be married.  Her mother, her betrothed and her future in-laws come aboard the Enterprise for the festivities.  None of her colleagues had any idea this arranged marriage was coming and it's instantly clear she's long been dreading it herself.  Good half-Betazoid that she is, Deanna expresses willingness to set aside her own career to meet the obligation.  It helps that Wyatt, her intended, is awfully dreamy.  Unfortunately, he's in love with some girl out of a cheesy music video.

"Haven" gets mixed reviews but it is important long-term for several reasons:
  1. It's a good development episode for Deanna.  For the first time, we get to meet one of the TNG principals' families.  The only family we met with the originals was Spock's and that didn't happen until Season 2.  We learn of her difficult relationship with her mother and her personal dilemma of meeting the contradictory expectations of her chosen career and her culture - not a sci-fi contrivance.  Real people, especially women, face that dilemma every day.
  2. The introduction of an important recurring character: Lwaxana Troi, Deanna's eccentric and overbearing mother.  Lwaxana is performed by our old friend, Majel Barrett, wife of Gene Roddenberry and a Star Trek veteran from the very beginning (see here).  Also introduced is her attendant, the enormous and mostly silent Mr. Homn (Carel Struycken).  As with Q, I find Lwaxana annoying - too much like people I've actually known.  But just as with Q, life is never dull when she's around.
  3. Development of the Troi-Riker relationship, to this point the closest thing to genuine office romance among the TNG principals (the Tasha-Data tryst clearly a one-off).  We know from the first episode that there's a history but details are scarce.  They still are but we see the emotional landscape, ultimately more important.  There was sex.  There are genuine feelings still, likely stronger on his side than hers.  There was a career/relationship choice for him, too, once upon a time and he chose the job.  Being just friends is a challenge - again more for him than for her.  Long-term, it's admirable that they're able to set it all aside in their working relationship.
Always appreciated, genuine comedy:




Acting Notes

Robert Knepper (Wyatt) was born July 8, 1959 in Fremont, Ohio.  He went to Northwestern for college but dropped out to pursue a full-time acting career in New York.  While he does have some film credits, most of his high-profile work has been on television, especially the role of T-Bag on Prison Break.

Image result for robert knepper young
via Wikipedia

Full disclosure... in 2017, five different women came forward with allegations of sexual assault against Knepper.  The incidents cited spanned several decades.  Knepper denied the accusations and nothing has been proven.  I am not going to imply judgment one way or another.  However, this is a reflection of an important reality for TNG, especially as we get towards the end of Season 1: television is a very tough industry for women.  It was in the late '80s and it still is.  Maybe the #MeToo movement has improved the situation or at least brought more awareness.  Regardless, there have long been men willing to take advantage of a perceived difference in status for their own sexual gain.  It's disgusting and it's real.  There are other ways women are marginalized, of course.  Sexual assault is one of the uglier means.

Wednesday, November 27, 2019

On the Coffee Table: The Fade Out, Act Two

Title: The Fade Out, Act Two
Writer: Ed Brubaker
Artist: Sean Phillips

Image result for fade out act two
via Amazon
The Brubaker/Phillips 1940s era film industry-based comic noir continues (see my thoughts on Act One here).  This is the second of three books, collecting issues 5-8 of the original series.  The murder mystery introduced in book one proceeds relatively slowly here in favor of much needed development for Charlie, our protagonist.  He falls in love with Maya, the blonde starlet who has risen to take the place of Valeria, the murder victim.  The portrayal of the naivety of new romance is quite convincing.  A blackmail subplot is emerging as well.

I'm waiting for the twist.  Charlie's suspicions have yet to move beyond the obvious and there has to be a twist at some point.  I'm looking forward to Act Three.

Tuesday, November 26, 2019

Squid Mixes: Hunter Variations

 
Last week's Hunter's Cocktail was highly successful in that my wife asked for the same a few days later.  I'm always happy to take requests, though I had in mind a couple of variations.  One was out of necessity.  I only had rye enough for one drink so the second would have to be bourbon.  Also, I wanted to include Angostura bitters this time.

A rye, bourbon side-by-side comparison is always meaningful.  My wife definitely preferred the rye and chose that one as hers.  The bourbon felt bigger, more bitter perhaps.  I went with one dash of the bitters for each and didn't really taste it - might try two next time.  It might also be interesting to toy with the whiskey/brandy proportions so as to bring out more cherry flavor.  I don't mind the whiskey taking prominence but it might distinguish the drink more from others with a stronger cherry flavor.

Now the question: does altering the ingredients change the name of the drink?  In this case, I would say no.  Looking online, I found Hunter Cocktail recipes with bourbon and with bitters, though interestingly orange rather than Angostura - something else to bear in mind for next time.

It did make me wonder, though, is there a word for a bitter hunter, one who didn't come back with anything to show for his/her efforts?  I couldn't find such a term.  Does anyone know of one?


Squid on the Vine

La Masseria, Puglia Primitivo 2017
My rating: 8.2
Jammy nose
Opens sweet, then bitter.
Sweet aftertaste

Monday, November 25, 2019

On the Coffee Table: Witch Week

Title: Witch Week
Author: Diane Wynne Jones
Image result for witch week diana wynne jones
via Amazon

Witch Week is either the third or fourth book of Jones's The Chronicles of Chrestomanci series, depending whom you ask.  All of the books are connected through a single character, Chrestomanci, more a title than a character actually - one assumed by various people throughout history.  Otherwise, each novel is stand-alone so the order really doesn't matter.  Jones suggested one order, various publishers a different one.  It is my fantasy-loving daughter's favorite book series and generally a satisfying one for me, too.

Witch Week takes place at a fictional boarding school in a world where, unlike other dimensions we visit throughout the series, magic is outlawed.  The story's two main characters, Nan and Charles, discover separately that they are, in fact, witches with considerable powers.  They must hide the fact as witches, once revealed, face arrest and burning at the stake.  Alas, neither can resist testing their newly found talents.

J. K. Rowling had to have read this book before creating Hogwarts.  Influence from earlier fantasy writers is inevitable, of course.  This is the first time I've seen obvious links with Jones's work: boarding school setting, adolescent social struggles, tensions between the magical and the mudane.  Charles, like Harry Potter, wears distinctive glasses.  Like Harry, Charles and Nan are both orphans.  There's even some of the goofiness that Rowling incorporates: at one point, characters can't find brooms to ride so they must settle for a mop and a hoe.  From what I've seen of her writing so far, Jones never quite matches Rowling's world-building but her characters are well fleshed out and her language a touch more sophisticated. 

Friday, November 22, 2019

Star Trek: Hide and Q

Episode: "Hide and Q"
Series: Star Trek: The Next Generation
Season 1, Episode 10
Original Air Date: November 23, 1987
Q is back!  This time, he gives Riker Q-powers as a "gift" but really more of a moral test.  The "What will you do with the powers of a god?" question veers closer to Star Wars territory than Star Trek usually trends.  In true Trek fashion, Riker learns about the limits of seemingly limitless power, particularly when it comes to giving people exactly what he imagines they want.

I have to admit it.  I don't like Q.  Yes, I can acknowledge John de Lancie is a thoroughly gifted actor and Q stories provide wonderful verbal sparring opportunities for Picard.  But the character is off-putting for me.  He is a cat toying too long with his mouse before he finally breaks its neck.  I know there are better Q stories to come but I have no problem listing other recurring characters I prefer.

The story pokes at a question I plan to devote much thought to as I embark on this latest re-watch: what's the deal with Will Riker?  For me, he is TNG's most puzzling character.  It's not that I don't like him.  I do.  It's not that I don't like the actor, though Frakes is definitely the one who follows the Shatner Scenery Chewing principles of acting most closely.  He's also the first actor who made me think of "handsome" as a verb.  Gaze upon me as I handsome proudly.  Henry Cavill handsomes, too.  But I'm going off point...

What does Riker add to the broader story?  When I do a mental rundown of TNG's principals, I usually remember him last, sort of like Happy among Snow White's seven dwarfs.  I appreciate his professional relationship with Picard.  He's the last filter of everyone else's input before the boss makes the call.  He's a good friend and confidant.  Everyone needs that, even starship captains.  He's mentor to one, yet protégé to another.  As I've hinted at before, he eventually develops an interesting duty vs. honor dichotomy with Worf which is more like the Spock-McCoy relationship than any other on TNG.  But there's more, and yet somehow sometimes less.  Occasionally, I feel he merely serves as the young man alternative to Picard when the writers want a sexier leading man for a particular story. 

As you can see, I already have some ideas percolating.  But I'm not quite there yet.  Several of the episodes upcoming are meaningful Riker development stories.  And yet, I think it could take a while before I can stick a pin in this guy.


Acting Notes

Image result for young wil wheaton
via Wikipedia

Wil Wheaton (Wesley) was born July 29, 1972 in Burbank, California.  His mother was an actress which perhaps explains why he was encouraged in the business from a young age.  His career on screen began at age eight with the TV movie A Long Way Home.

For me, Wil Wheaton will always be Gordie.  As I have written before (here), Stand by Me has been a deeply important movie to me from the night I first saw it.  I followed the careers of all four lead actors with great interest so I was delighted to see him turn up on the new Star Trek series.  To put it bluntly, there is a large contingent among the devoted who despise the Wesley character.  For many, he is Star Trek's Jar Jar.  Because of my love for the actor, I've never counted myself among the haters.

Of course, Wheaton is well aware of the hostility and resentment.  Frankly, it's hard to hide from it in the Geekverse, a world where Wheaton has established a prominent presence for himself in adulthood.  Obviously, he is more charitable towards those critics who distinguish between the actor and the character and he is also grateful for the many fans who have told him how important Wesley was for them.

There's strong evidence that Wheaton is a genuinely decent guy in real life.  He has been married to his wife since 1999 and helped raise her two sons from a previous relationship.  At age 19, one of the sons asked Wheaton to officially adopt him.  Naturally, he accepted.  At 19... sniff...

Tuesday, November 19, 2019

Squid Mixes: Hunter's Cocktail


A Hunter's Cocktail combines rye and cherry brandy, mixed in the glass plus a cherry garnish.  I got my recipe from The New York Bartender's Guide.  Though I didn't plan it this way, it seems an appropriate choice for the start of deer season here in Vermont.  It is highly unlikely I will ever take up hunting as a hobby but it's a big deal around here, very much a rite of passage for the age group I teach.  

Getting back to the drink, it's nice enough.  If one wanted to make a Manhattan but had no vermouth yet amazingly did have some cherry brandy, it would do in a pinch.  I missed the Angostura bitters, though - no reason one couldn't add it, but then you might have to call the drink something else.  A Cherry Manhattan?

From my walks:

Friday, November 15, 2019

Star Trek: The Battle

Episode: "The Battle"
Series: Star Trek: The Next Generation
Season 1, Episode 9
Original Air Date: November 16, 1987
DaiMon Bok, a Ferengi captain played by Frank Corsentino, offers Captain Picard an extraordinary gift: the USS Stargazer, Picard's old starship.  In time, we learn Bok's true motivation: revenge upon Picard for the death of his son in a famous battle.  Included with the gift is a mind-control device intended to manipulate our poor captain.

As noted before, with all of its early stumbles, TNG still managed to quickly outpace TOS on character development from the beginning.  To be fair, character was never the point of the earlier show (see here).  We learn precious little about the past of even Captain Kirk.  Here, in Episode 9 of the new series, we are granted insights into the heroics of Picard's previous military exploits.  We see his ability to be self-effacing in recounting the tale of his most famous (or infamous, if you ask Bok), career-making moment.  We are able to understand important aspects of his crew's deep admiration for him.

This story is also a big improvement for the Ferengi.  They still don't work as the primary adversaries but we are offered a clear demonstration of their driving motivation: profit.  Eventually, this characterization will allow for a more meaningful narrative role for the Ferengi within the Trek universe.  Also, the sincerity of Kazago's "Good luck, First Officer Riker" sign off late in the story is far more worthy of the "Balance of Terror" legacy than anything in "The Last Outpost."

Alas, "The Battle" is a disastrous episode for Wesley Crusher.  Wil Wheaton points to this story as the one that cemented Wes as a hated character rather than a merely annoying one.  After showing off his know-it-all, save-the-day prowess with his mother and Deanna Troi and receiving an inadequate pat on the head, he slumps against the wall and whines, "You're welcome, ladies.  Adults..."

The trouble with Wesley, for me, is that he pulls me out of the moment and cuts into the credibility of the world.  Even when I know he's going to be there on the bridge in the thick of things, there's always a little voice in my head asking why.  Sure he's smart but he doesn't deserve his honorary promotion and we all know it.  The shame is the lost opportunity: the life of an ordinary teenager aboard the Enterprise could have been genuinely interesting.  It's the wunderkind characterization that doesn't work.  One can imagine not only fans but crew members being resentful: "I bust my hump every day for years and never get within ten feet of the bridge.  Yet Picard hands Crusher's brat kid the steering wheel because he solved a problem once."

Again, it's not the actor's fault.  It's the writers' fault.


Acting Notes

Image result for young brent spiner
via Wikipedia

Brent Spiner (Data) was born February 2, 1949 in Houston, Texas.  As a high school student, he won a national championship in dramatic interpretation as a member of the speech team.  For college, he attended the University of Houston.

Once again, success came first on the stage.  Pre-Trek Broadway credits include Sunday in the Park with George, The Three Musketeers and, one of this blogger's favorite musicals, Big River (see here), based on Mark Twain's Huck Finn.  In fact, there's a deep connection between Big River and Trek, particularly through Spiner's part, that of the Duke.  The original Broadway actor in the role was Rene Auberjonois who would eventually play Odo in Deep Space Nine.

In 1981, Spiner had a starring film role in Rent Control.  Numerous television guest appearances included a recurring role on Night Court as Bob Wheeler.  In addition to Data, Spiner has played the parts of his twin brother Lore and his creator, Arik Soong.

Wednesday, November 13, 2019

On the Coffee Table: Not the Israel My Parents Promised Me

Title: Not the Israel My Parents Promised Me
Writer: Harvey Pekar
Artist: J.T. Waldman
Image result for not the israel my parents promised
via Amazon

Harvey Pekar made a name for himself within the comic book industry as a writer of graphic novel memoirs.  Not the Israel My Parents Promised Me is one of several published after his death in 2010.  It tells of his personal history with Zionism.  Born into a Jewish family in Cleveland, his Communist mother and religiously devoted father both supported the Israeli state, though for different reasons.  Harvey's own attitudes changed a great deal as an adult, eventually developing great sympathy for the Palestinian side of the issue and questioning the moral justification of the Zionist claim. 

The book covers the history of Israel from Abraham, through the diaspora to the present day, an impressive scope for 176 pages.  Interspersed are glimpses of Pekar's own history and then-current life in Cleveland.  Particularly satisfying are the changes in art style from one era to the next: Islamic art for the rise of said empire, medieval style for the European diaspora, Bauhaus for post-WWII, etc.  Full credit to collaborator J.T. Waldman for that. 

The book fits comfortably on a shelf with Joe Sacco's Palestine and Filiu and David B.'s Best of Enemies as top quality graphic novel examinations of the Arab-Israeli conflict.

Tuesday, November 12, 2019

Squid Eats: Hatchet

Image result for hatchet richmond
via Facebook

It is with mixed feelings that we visit Hatchet in Richmond.  It's a perfectly acceptable restaurant but several years ago, it took over the space of what had been our family go-to: Bridge Street Cafe.  Bridge Street closed five years ago and we've only been to the new place twice now.  Mind you, Hatchet is definitely an upgrade in terms of decor, food quality and so forth.  But it's also an upgrade in price, not the easy on the budget choice for after work its predecessor had been.

Then again, it's been five years and the new place is still there and doing well.  My wife and I went on a recent Friday evening.  We got oysters for an appetizer.  Then I had the Section 119 Fried Chicken Sandwich, Korean BBQ style.  As a side note, I love the increasing popularity of Korean food aesthetics.  Koreans have been restaurant owners in the United States for decades but usually serve Japanese food because it's more popular.  I love Korean food and it's good to see it coming into its own in the United States.

I can't tell what the Section 119 business is about.  US Code 119 is a meals and lodging law.  Section 119 is also a clothing store in New York.  I have no idea what it has to do with fried chicken sandwiches.  The sandwich itself was tasty but enormous.  I had to knife-and-fork it.  Why pretend it's a sandwich if you can't actually eat it with your hands?  The fresh potato chips were excellent.  Good beer list, too - pretty much a requirement in Vermont.  No excuse when so much of the local product is so good.  Great service.  They have managed to maintain the family atmosphere of the previous establishment.

We still miss Bridge Street, much as I still miss the long closed Danny's Spaghetti House in Silver Spring, Maryland from my childhood.  Hatchet is too expensive to replace it.  But it's nice every once in a while.


Squid on the Vine

Château Musar, Musar Jeune 2015
My rating: 9.5
Dark chocolate nose
Cranberry
Starts spicy, fades to bitter
Lingering cherry aftertaste
Astringent
My wine ideal is a Château Musar from many years ago, as described here.  My wife had made sfiha for dinner so pairing Lebanese wine with Lebanese food was only logical.  This 2015 was lovely: big, spicy, exciting.  9.5 is the highest rating I've given so far.  What would I need to push higher?  Maybe a little more jamminess.  Chilean Cabernets and Argentine Malbecs have served well in the past.  Perhaps I should get back to those.  In the meantime, yes, I'll take more of the Musar, please and thank you. 

Clos de la Cerisaie, Anjou Rouge Cabernet Franc 2018
My rating: 7.5
A little sour
Light, fruity nose
Astringent
Starts fruity, finishes bitter
A little spice
This was a wine club wine for November.  As my wife pointed out, the wines have mostly been fine but nothing so amazing that we were dying to go out and buy six more bottles.  That's fine, though it is nice to be wowed from time to time.  This Cabernet was actually a bit disappointing.  The sourness was odd.  Maybe too young and needed to open up a little?  I don't know.  My lowest rating so far.

Monday, November 11, 2019

On the Coffee Table: First Bite

Title: First Bite: How We Learn to Eat
Author: Bee Wilson
Image result for first bite bee wilson
via Goodreads

First Bite explores how we acquire our eating habits, mostly as children but also as adults.  I didn't plan it this way but it's a really good book for me to be reading now as I have been putting a great deal of thought into my own consumption recently.  There's a lot of ground to cover so let's get cracking...

Taste test - My wife is a supertaster.  I am a non-taster.  That doesn't mean I don't taste food.  Rather, it means I am not as sensitive to certain flavors, particularly bitter, as she is.  There's a test you can take and as part of her job, not only did she get to take it but she was also able to bring the tasting strips home for me.  Anatomically, what it means is that she has more taste receptors per surface area on her tongue than I do, much as those who are color blind have fewer cones in their eyes than those who are not.  Simply put, we taste food differently from each other and that explains a lot about our preferences.

Interestingly, what it could mean, at least according to Wilson, is that she should be a pickier eater than I am.  If more food tastes more bitter and bitterness is a turn off for most people, she should be less enthusiastic about a lot of food than she is.  In reality, I am the pickier eater.  In particular, this difference between us has interesting implications regarding wine, an example of a food that likely tastes a lot more bitter to her than it does for me.  Yet, she is definitely more enthusiastic about wine than I.  On the other hand, it does provide insight into our beer preferences.  I like it hoppy, which implies higher bitterness.  She likes the sweeter and more floral varieties, like a gose.

Sibling rivalry - Once past physiology, Wilson covers the many ways in which our families influence our food habits: our parents, certainly, but also, interestingly, our siblings.   My sister and I would drive our parents crazy.  She liked spaghetti and hated pizza.  I loved pizza and hated spaghetti.  She would only eat the flowers of the broccoli.  I would only eat the stalks.  Typical, right?  We both grew out of this fortunately but apparently a lot of people don't, such childish squabbles influencing their tastes for life.  According to Wilson, it has more to do with our rivalry with each other than any sort of deliberate power play with our parents.  My sister and I get along better now in general, too.  Perhaps that's not a coincidence!

Wilson also addresses the food "preferences" we generally impose on kids as they enter adolescence and how that breaks down by gender.  Girls eat less protein and boys fewer veggies at the very biological moment when both should be doing the exact opposite.

The power of soup - As I rethink my meals in general, I am in search of foods that will help me feel fuller longer.  Wilson suggests soup.  Apparently the Campbell's commercials are right and the stuff truly is magic!  It's the warm liquid that casts the spell.  Soup doesn't have more calories than other food - in fact, it often has less - but the brain registers the stuff as more filling.  According to Wilson.  I'm not actually sure it's true for me - might be a worthy experiment anyway.

Eating disorders - My high school girlfriend was bulimic.  We had an unusual relationship after we broke up in that we genuinely became friends after the dust settled - good friends.  I learned from her the importance of having one person in your life who isn't afraid to be completely honest with you.  Things were never going to work out for us long term but her friendship has always remained important to me.

About a year after I left for college, I got a letter from her telling me about her eating disorder.  I was shocked.  I always saw her as so stunningly beautiful that I couldn't imagine self image being a self-destructive concept in her life.  A couple years later, she called me from a treatment center, just wanting to hear a friendly voice.  The revelation changed every assumption I ever had about women, body concept and food.  Yes, I know men have eating disorders, too, but bulimia sufferers are overwhelmingly female.  I still feel the shockwaves in my parenting, breathing a sigh of relief when my daughter gave up ballet in favor of music and steering away from sports where one has to make weight or where delayed puberty is prized.  I panic a little whenever her generally healthy habits exhibit any sort of change.  Fortunately or unfortunately, Wilson asserts that parenting has very little to do with it except in cases of abuse or neglect.  In hindsight, I'm grateful my girlfriend wasn't anorexic.  Both the recovery and survival rates are much higher for bulimia.

Wilson goes beyond the usual suspects of anorexia, bulimia and overeating.  Disordered eating comes in many forms, including those who are disastrously picky to the point of starving themselves.  Disorders correlate with other issues: depression, anxiety and, surprisingly to me, autism.

Japan - Looking back over posts, I have written about Japanese cuisine quite a lot.  Whether or not I would claim it as my favorite - Thai food is in close contention - there is no denying the impact Japanese food has had on my life, from birth onward.  Wilson, as many food writers do, presents Japanese food culture as an ideal: low fat, moderate, balanced.  However, she brings a new perspective for me:  Japanese cuisine as known to the world has not existed in its current form for very long.  In fact, during the first half of the 20th century, much of the population lived on the brink of starvation.  Things now seen as staples - ramen, tempura, curry rice - only became popular and accessible after the War.  Sushi and sashimi were delicacies exclusive to the well to do.

Wilson's real point with Japan is that entire cultures can change for the better when there is collective will to do so.  While it may seem we are trapped in our current habits, either individual or societal, there is hope.

Sapere - Speaking of personal habits, there is still a bit of the picky eater in me.  I'm a lot more open than I was as a child but there are still blocks.  Wilson offers Sapere, a tasting program designed in France, naturally, and implemented in Finland, naturally, as standard curriculum in early childhood education.  The goal is to increase the number of things a person is willing to eat.  The process has shown some promise with adults, too.  For me, it might be a good way to tackle beans.  I'm not big on legumes.  One adjustment I should probably make to my own diet is eating less meat, or even occasionally none.  I have no desire to go completely veg but I know I should be more open to veg dishes.  Liking beans more would help.

My apologies.  That was a bit of a notebook dump.  Thanks for sticking with me if you made it to the end.  Obviously, First Bite has given me a lot to think about.  You should read it, too.

Friday, November 8, 2019

Star Trek: Justice

Episode: "Justice"
Series: Star Trek: The Next Generation
Season 1, Episode 8
Original Air Date: November 9, 1987
This week, the Enterprise visit Rubicun III, evaluating its potential as a suitable shore leave planet.  All of the inhabitants, the Edo, are young, fit and clothed in the typical Bill Theiss costumes which seem practically designed for "wardrobe malfunction."  They are also eager and willing to have sex with pretty much anyone who happens by including, of course, our lucky heroes.  In temperament, the Edo remind me of the Eloi from H.G. Wells's classic The Time Machine.

Naturally, it's all too good to be true.  The lovefest society is marred by a brutal and essentially arbitrary penal system.  Anyone caught breaking any law is immediately put to death.  Wouldn't you know, practically the instant the away team learns of this, silly ol' Wesley goes and crosses a fence he shouldn't have.

While the story is both hokey and predictable, it presents a good Prime Directive dilemma.  How does Picard weigh obeying policy against protecting his crew?  He also has to manage the obvious and understandable anxieties of the boy's mother, Dr. Crusher, his friend and colleague.

There's also some good development between Picard and Data.  The relevant exchange:

Data: It was probably unwise of us to attempt to place a Human colony in this area. Of course, there are three thousand four other planets in this star cluster in which we could have colonized. The largest – and closest –
Picard: Data! Don't babble.
D: Babble, sir? I'm not aware that I ever "babble", sir. It may be that from time to time I have considerable information to communicate, and you may question the way in which I organize it –
P: Please – organize it into brief answers to my questions. We have very little time. Do they... accept our presence at their planet?
D: Undecided, sir.
P: ...
D: ...
P: Data... please... feel free to volunteer any important information.


Later...


D: You sent for me, sir?
P: Let's have more talk, Data.
D: Yes, sir.
P: Sit down.
D: What level of communication, sir?
P: Any. My apologies for saying that you babbled.
D: But I do, sir.
P: You also see things in a way we do not, but as they truly are. I need help, my friend. 

That, my friends, is strengths-based leadership (see here) and that is how Jean-Luc Picard, at his best, leads the Enterprise.  It is a theme I'll come back to a lot in this exploration of the series: whereas TOS emphasized a more enlightened approach to engaging with the unknown, TNG expands upon that idea with a more enlightened approach to working with each other.  As we shall see, Picard's Enterprise is a great place to work and it all starts with the guy at the top.


Acting Notes

Image result for young marina sirtis
via Wikipedia

Marina Sirtis (Deanna Troi) was born March 29, 1955 in London.  While in secondary school, she secretly auditioned for drama school against her parents' wishes.  Luckily for her, and for us, she was accepted to the Guildhall School of Music and Drama.  After a reasonably successful early career in Britain on stage and television, she dipped her toes in the Hollywood film waters, finding small roles on The Wicked Lady, Death Wish 3 and Blind Date.  She emigrated to the US in 1986 at age 31 and would eventually become a naturalized citizen.

The offer for Star Trek came just in time.  Her visa had run out and she was already packing for a return to the UK.  Roddenberry had asked Sirtis to audition, inspired by the Vasquez character in Aliens to create a Latina character for TNG - apparently undeterred by the fact that Sirtis is Greek, not Latina.  As noted in this post, Sirtis and Denise Crosby initially auditioned for what would be each other's parts.  Macha Hernandez became Tasha Yar and the actresses were switched.

I trust Sirtis's parents are satisfied with the success of her career by now.  

Tuesday, November 5, 2019

Squid Eats: Halyard

Halyard, admittedly, is not much of a restaurant.  It's a brewery with a tasting room in South Burlington and, as this is Vermont, they are legally required to serve food.  Typical of such establishments, they offer the bare minimum: two kinds of popcorn and and two kinds of dumplings.  My friends and I have gone, I believe, three times, and tried all of the food on the menu.  The brew is alcoholic ginger beer - several varieties on tap and included in cocktails. 

All of the food and drink is fine but it's not why we go.  Halyard has large, sturdy tables, small crowds and a patient staff who have no problem with us sticking around for hours playing board games!  We used to go to a mead hall where we and many others would do the same but they closed that space (fortunately soon to reopen in a different location, unfortunately further away).  So we, as a game-playing collective, have been adrift for a few months. 

We are a consistent quartet: Mock, Blue Liner and I are joined by a new character to The Squid.  We shall name him Young Buck as he is a decade-plus younger than the rest of us.  He's an old soul, though, so he fits in just fine.  We try to get together every month or so.  Our games from this latest gathering:

Dragonwood (from Mock's collection) - You collect cards which earn you dice which you roll to win other cards, some of which have special powers, some of which have points.  Whoever has the most points at the end of the game wins.  Simple concept, easy to learn, quick, subtle strategy, great artwork - a winning combination.

5-Minute Dungeon (Mock's)  - A marriage of D&D and speed chess.  This one's a cooperative card game.  Your party must defeat a set number of opponents in each round.  Each round lasts five minutes as timed, if one wishes, by a phone app with various voice options.  We liked Spooky and Scottish best.  Incorporating phone apps into tabletop games seems to be the new thing.  This was my first time playing.  It's fun - a bit confusing given the time constraint but definitely fun.  As with Dragonwood, great artwork.

Codenames (mine) - One of my favorites.  It's sort of like $64,000 Question.  A 5x5 array of word cards are laid out.  You give your partner clues as to which cards are meant for your team, while avoiding those of the other team and the one, game-ending bomb card.  There is also a picture version which we don't like as much.  I have the Marvel expansion but that's a tricky one when some people (Mock and Young Buck) know a lot about the comic books while others (Blue Liner and I) know far less.  One can play it is a cooperative game.  I wonder if the Marvel version might work better that way. 

Frag (Young Buck's) - Another of the mainstays in our rotation, best described as a first person shooter game in tabletop form.  I am always keenly aware that my companions enjoy this game a lot more than I do, though I do manage to win occasionally.  Generally speaking, I don't enjoy games as much when success comes so obviously at another's expense.  Ticket to Ride is my ideal: even if you lose, you've still built something and building things is fun.  In Frag, you win by killing each other.  Players regenerate almost immediately so no one is knocked out permanently.  Even so, it doesn't quite sit well.


Happy, Healthy Squid

From my walks:


Friday, November 1, 2019

Star Trek: Lonely Among Us

Episode: "Lonely Among Us"
Series: Star Trek: The Next Generation
Season 1, Episode 7
Original Air Date: November 2, 1987

Image result for tng lonely among us
Antican via Memory Alpha

The Enterprise crew juggles two simultaneous challenges this week.  First, they must transport members of two adversarial races, the Selay and the Anticans, to an interplanetary conference while preventing them from eating each other - no exaggeration.  Second, while passing an energy cloud, our heroes accidentally pick up a stowaway, a non-corporeal entity who takes possession of several members of the crew in turn, ending with Captain Picard.

In this episode, we get a clear signal of an important difference between Captains Kirk and Picard.  In "The Man Trap," TOS's first episode to air, Kirk states that he hates mysteries - highly amusing as so many Trek stories are, at heart, mystery tales.  In "Lonely Among Us," Picard states the very opposite.  He loves them and inspires Data to research Earth's most famous fictional detective, Sherlock Holmes.  Holmes was a prominent motif in the TNG run.

Image result for data sherlock pipe
via Memory Alpha

We also get some insight into the future of food as idealized by Gene Roddenberry and company.  In discussion with the Anticans, Riker tells them "We no longer enslave animals for food purposes," further explaining that what appears to be meat at their meals is produced inorganically by the replicators.  Indeed, Roddenberry himself was a vegetarian and it's interesting to see how that choice influenced his vision for Trek.
  

Acting Notes

Image result for young gates mcfadden
via Wikipedia

Cheryl Gates McFadden (Dr. Crusher) was born in March 2, 1949 in Cuyahoga Falls, Ohio.  She graduated from Brandeis with honors as a theatre major.  

Early on, her choreography work outpaced her acting, wisely hooking up with The Jim Henson Company.  She was choreography director for both Labyrinth and The Muppets Take Manhattan.  She also makes a brief on-screen appearance in the latter film.  She is usually, though not always, credited as Cheryl in choreography and Gates in acting so as to delineate between the two. 

McFadden was pregnant during TNG's fourth season.  The pregnancy was never written into the story.  Crusher always wore a lab coat to conceal it.  Her son James was born in 1991.  Brent Spiner (Data) is the godfather.