Thanks for including the 'Real Time' wrap-up in each review. When TNG first launched, I assumed that the ST brand would ensure that the show would have a very healthy budget and every care would be taken with the writing team and script development. Instead it was a scramble in almost every respect to keep the episodes coming. So your real world background info is appreciated and gives the production team credit for managing as best they could under the circumstances.
@@MatthewSilasSedgwick I was able to deduce you were referring to "A Review To A Kill" - I am going to check that content out this weekend. So far I have loved everything you have done, so I am excited about that!
'Data's Day' really showed how far the show had come. Both that and this episode are different perspectives on the Enterprise crew and the ship's routine. I think '11001001' isn't as garishly wtf as some of the 1st season ('Justice', 'Angel One', 'Code Of Honour'), so its luke-warmness is vaguely welcome after the freezing or boiling badness of those other episodes.
Youre not wrong. I mean you literally nailed it. Its.def not as bad as those three. It's just so thin and stretched that it gets boring. I eagerly await datas day out.
Hello Mr CaminoAir. Just thought I would drop you a quick note to give 'The Algorithm' a little engagement boost for our friends over at UE Media! I find it amazing that they did not get rid of the holodecks after the illness last week, and Moriarty almost crashing the ship...
PS: I think the 'dudes in dresses' were sent back to the early 2020s on Earth. Sensors indicate a rapidly increasing population of humans fitting that description during that era. PPS: Your analysis of the subtext of Riker's trombone is spot on. Bill Clinton (Earth President from the late 20th century) played a saxophone for much the same reasons.
I love this show so much more than I like TNG
Thanks brother! I appreciate that. Makes being stuck up here in space being chased by a crazy woman worth it.
Same!
Thanks for including the 'Real Time' wrap-up in each review. When TNG first launched, I assumed that the ST brand would ensure that the show would have a very healthy budget and every care would be taken with the writing team and script development. Instead it was a scramble in almost every respect to keep the episodes coming. So your real world background info is appreciated and gives the production team credit for managing as best they could under the circumstances.
The structure of this show is so different from ARtaK that I had to find a way to break character and add it in.
@@MatthewSilasSedgwick I was able to deduce you were referring to "A Review To A Kill" - I am going to check that content out this weekend. So far I have loved everything you have done, so I am excited about that!
That's the James Bond retrospective podcast that started this channel. Very proud of it.
'Data's Day' really showed how far the show had come. Both that and this episode are different perspectives on the Enterprise crew and the ship's routine. I think '11001001' isn't as garishly wtf as some of the 1st season ('Justice', 'Angel One', 'Code Of Honour'), so its luke-warmness is vaguely welcome after the freezing or boiling badness of those other episodes.
Youre not wrong. I mean you literally nailed it. Its.def not as bad as those three. It's just so thin and stretched that it gets boring. I eagerly await datas day out.
Hello Mr CaminoAir. Just thought I would drop you a quick note to give 'The Algorithm' a little engagement boost for our friends over at UE Media! I find it amazing that they did not get rid of the holodecks after the illness last week, and Moriarty almost crashing the ship...
Moriarty?!?!
@@MatthewSilasSedgwick Uhhh... Did I just pull a Boimler?
PS: I think the 'dudes in dresses' were sent back to the early 2020s on Earth. Sensors indicate a rapidly increasing population of humans fitting that description during that era.
PPS: Your analysis of the subtext of Riker's trombone is spot on. Bill Clinton (Earth President from the late 20th century) played a saxophone for much the same reasons.
Exactly