Equals @ Equals @startrek.website Posts 13Comments 1Joined 2 yr. ago
![daystrominstitute](https://startrek.website/pictrs/image/16077508-6d6c-4aff-b5a4-4f2d66bd8046.png?format=webp&thumbnail=48)
Ethan Peck voices Spock in "Skin A Cat" for the same reason he's the first one to sing in "Subspace Rhapsody": if Spock does something, that makes it Star Trek
![daystrominstitute](https://startrek.website/pictrs/image/16077508-6d6c-4aff-b5a4-4f2d66bd8046.png?format=webp&thumbnail=48)
The Wrath of Khan doesn't seem like a "best Star Trek film" to me -- why do so many people think that it is?
![daystrominstitute](https://startrek.website/pictrs/image/16077508-6d6c-4aff-b5a4-4f2d66bd8046.png?format=webp&thumbnail=48)
What episodes would work well as community theater stage plays?
![daystrominstitute](https://startrek.website/pictrs/image/16077508-6d6c-4aff-b5a4-4f2d66bd8046.png?format=webp&thumbnail=48)
What's a piece of fanon that you suspect the writers believe? OR, What's a piece of fanon that has been recently (ish) canonized?
![daystrominstitute](https://startrek.website/pictrs/image/16077508-6d6c-4aff-b5a4-4f2d66bd8046.png?format=webp&thumbnail=48)
Imagine that Tuvix is the orchid speaking while holding Tuvok and Neelix hostage
I propose that the Enterprise-E became somehow entangled in something it could not be removed from. I have a mental image of the ship somehow stuck in "spatial quicksand" or maybe an infinite timeloop -- some situation where Captain Worf saved the crew and the ship but then was not given the resources needed to extricate the vessel, leaving it to be abandoned in its place.
More heroically, perhaps the Enterprise-E "saved the day" by hooking itself into, say, the mainframe and physical hull of some starbase that suffering from some sort of collapse of software and/or hardware -- saving the station from imminent destruction, but irrevocably welding the ship and station together. Again, perhaps Worf thought he'd be given support from Starfleet to eventually extricate the ship, which would explain why he would later feel justified claiming that the ship's ultimate fate "was not his fault".
![daystrominstitute](https://startrek.website/pictrs/image/16077508-6d6c-4aff-b5a4-4f2d66bd8046.png?format=webp&thumbnail=48)
What is an underexplored corner of Trek lore that merits further exploration?