Here’s what I love about this video, brief as it is: Pike and Spock just telling Uhura how talented she is and how lucky the Enterprise is to have her, even just as a cadet. The positivity for her is both welcome and satisfying, as is the potential positivity of Strange New Worlds itself, especially coming after the darker, more conflicted Trek tales of Discovery and Picard. What I love/have always loved about the franchise—and I am one of those aforementioned meager fans—is The Original Series and its utopian view of the future. That’s been out of vogue for a long while in Star Trek, as both of the current TV series have examined the cracks in the facade of the Federation, and examined the dark parts that facade has been hiding.

While there’s a certain… relevance nowadays to stories that confront the idea that things might be shittier than anyone realized, I think that leaves a lot of room for some kind of inspirational, aspirational fiction story, and something akin to The Original Series would do the trick nicely. I can’t imagine Strange New Worlds won’t have its dark moments, of course, but if everyone on the Enterprise wants to take a few moments each episode to talk about how much they all appreciate each other, that’d be fine by me.

Star Trek: Strange New Worlds stars Anson Mount as Captain Pike, Rebecca Romjin as Number One, Ethan Peck as Spock, Jess Bush as Nurse Chapel, and of course Gooding as Uhura. It premieres May 5 on Paramount+.


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Foto’s van andré hazes imitator rené van beeten. De stem van rené komt volgens velen griezelig dicht bij andré hazes wat hem de meest realistische andre hazes imitator maakt.