#also I stand by the fact that Boimler has Egg energy
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Mmm, please consider, Lower Decks, but Boimler is a very recently out trans woman, and Mariner is a trans woman who's been out and transitioned for a while, and Beckett 'mentoring' Brad is actually just her being like "Come on girl, we're gonna get you on some E and then I'll show you all of the replicators best sweater patterns because you're about to be cold all the time."
#lower decks#star trek#beckett mariner#brad boimler#st lwd#lwd#was just talking to one of my baby gays about this#she went on E over the summer and now that it's winter she's like 'WHY is everything so coldâ#and as someone whos always had an estrogen based enderon system#I'm just sort of like join the fucking club bitch đ¤ˇââď¸#this is why I'm always in jackets#*endocrine#also I stand by the fact that Boimler has Egg energy
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Star Trek: Lower Decks Season 2 Episode 1 Easter Eggs & References
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This Star Trek: Lower Decks article contains spoilers for Season 2, Episode 1: âStrange Energies.â
The mission of the USS Cerritos is to do the jobs other Starfleet ships canât; following up with all sorts of minutiae and boring outer space logistics, long after the Enterprise or the Defiant has warped out. But whether itâs Lower Decks or Picard or Discovery or Strange New Worlds, the mission of hardcore Trek fans is the same: Pause the screen and see what deep-cut Easter eggs got slipped in this time!
In Season 1, Star Trek: Lower Decks earned the reputation for the most meta-textual Star Trek ever. There are layers and layers of Trekdom within every frame of this series, making it hard to look at one episode and catalog all the references. But if you thought Season 1 went deep into the wells of Trekkie references and Easter eggs, Season 2 is here to make Season 1 look tame. The Season 2 premiere of Lower Decks â âStrange Energiesâ â is one giant Easter egg with a bunch of reproducing tribble-ish Easter eggs inside of it. Unless youâve got ESP powers on the level of Dr. Elizabeth Dehner, thereâs no way you caught all of these.Â
Cardassian ships
The episode has a cold-open on some kind of prison inside of an asteroid field. This is surrounded by two kinds of Cardassian ships, the Galor-class and the smaller Hideki-class scout ships.
âThe Keep Showing Me Lightsâ
Hologram Boimler says the Cardassians âkeep showing me lights.â This line, and the existence of the secret Cardassian facility references the famous Next Generation two-parter, âChain of Command,â in which Picard was kidnapped and tortured by the Cardassians. If you somehow havenât seen that episode, the whole idea is that the Cardassians try to gaslight Picard into thinking there are five lights in front of him when there are only four. Lower Decks referenced âChain of Commandâ in Season 1, too! In Season 1, Episode 7, âMuch Ado About Boimler,â Mariner joked about the Cerritos getting a âBabysitter Jellico-type,â for a subsitute captain, which referenced the temporary captain the Enterprise got in âChain of Command.â Freeman, Shaxs and Ransom whore the all-black special ops outfits in that episode, too, and Tendi did the same in âVeritas.âÂ
Too Many Ships to CountÂ
As Mariner escapes from the Cardassian facility, there are soooo many ships being stored in this particular hanger. Itâs all the ships. Hereâs just a few we caught
A Federation runabout
JemâHadar fighters
A Nemesis-era Romulan warbird
An old school Romulan Bird-of-Prey from TOS
Federation fighter craft (like the ones seen in TNGâs âPreemptive Strike.â)
And many, many more.
Miranda-class USS MacDuff
Mariner steals a Miranda-class Federation starship with the registry NCC-1877, and the name âUSS MacDuff.â Thereâs a lot going on here.
The Miranda-class was first seen in The Wrath of Khan, in the form of the USS Reliant. That film also featured someone stealing a ship like this with ease.
The bridge for this ship is basically identical to the Reliant.
Lower Decks showrunner Mike McMahan said in 2020 that he was inspired by the Reliant for the design of the Cerritos.Â
The name âMacDuffâ might reference the TNG character, Kieran MacDuff, from the episode âConundrum.â In that one, the crew has temporary amnesia and MacDuff manipulates them into fighting a war theyâre not supposed to be involved in.
JenniferÂ
Jennifer is back! Mariner is interrupted during her holographic work-out by Jennifer, an Andorian crewmember from last season. In the Season 1 finale, âNo Small Parts,â Mariner runs through the halls and pushes this character out of the way, saying, âMove Jennifer.â As far as we know, Jennifer is the only Andorian named Jennifer, but you really have to wonder, was this an Andorian name, or a human name?Â
âI know weâre not supposed to have interpersonal conflictâ
Marinerâs dislike of Jennifer is punctuated by her talking to herself saying, âI know weâre not supposed to have interpersonal conflictâŚbut I really hate that Andorian.â This references a long-standing rule from the TNGâera of Trek TV; that Starfleet officers werenât supposed to have petty differences with each other. This rule was apparently implemented by Gene Roddenberry and drove several writers, including Ron Moore and Jeri Taylor, nuts.Â
Slightly new opening-credits
In Season 1, we saw the Cerritos running away from a battle involving a bunch of Borg cubes and Romulan Warbirds. Now, that same battle includes a Pakled ship from the Season 1 finale, a few Klingon Birds-of-Prey, and seemingly, fewer Borg.Â
Fred Tatascioreâs name in the credits?
Although Shaxs died in the Season 1 finale, Fred Tatascioreâs name appears in the opening creditsâŚhmmmâŚwill this ever be explained?Â
Rutherfordâs date with Ensign Barnes
âStrange Energiesâ directly parallels the 2020 Season 1 debut, âSecond Contact,â in several ways. The crew is involved with a second contact mission that goes horribly wrong and Rutherford starts dating Barnes for the âfirstâ time. In the Season 1 finale, Rutherford lost his memory, which is why his relationship with Barnes seems new to him. This is why Mariner says âthat sounds familiar.âÂ
Hating pearsâŚa Doctor Who reference?Â
Tendi is concerned that Rutherford used to hate pears, but now he doesnât. This is possibly incorrect, but this could be a Doctor Who reference. In the Doctor Who episodes âHuman Nature,â âTwice Upon a Time,â and âHell Bent,â the Doctor (both David Tennant and Peter Capaldi) mention hating pears. In fact, in âHuman Nature,â when the Doctorâs memory is erased, he asks Martha Jones to ânever let me eat a pear.âÂ
Sonic power washingÂ
âSonic showersâ have long been a thing in the Star Trek universe, making their debut in Star Trek: The Motion Picture. But, weâve never seen sonic power-washers before!
âEver heard of Gary Mitchellâ
Ransomâs possession is very much a tribute to Gary Mitchellâs god-like powers in the second TOS pilot episode âWhere No Man Has Gone Before.â Dr. Tâanaâs insistence that Kirk beat Gary Mitchell with a âboulderâ is accurate. For whatever reason, the very first canonical Kirk-adventure ever, established that rock beats god-like powers any day of the week. It should also be noted that Mariner referenced Gary Mitchell in the first episode of Season 1, too.
Possible Harlan Ellison reference?
While Ransom is starting to work out, you can briefly hear him say, âThe trick isnât becoming a God. The trick is staying a God.â This could be a reference to the axiom attributed to Harlan Ellison: âThe trick isnât becoming a writer. The trick is staying a writer.â Ellison wrote âThe City on the Edge of Forever,â for TOS. In Star Trek: Picard Season 1, Soji traveled on a ship called the Ellison, which Michael Chabon revealed was an Easter egg meant to reference Harlan Ellison. So, you never know?Â
âThe Trick isnât becoming a god, the Trick is staying a godâ
Harlan Ellison reference?
Ransom on the Mount
Mariner says that Jack is âgoing all Ransom on the Mount.â This almost certainly references a hilarious fan video called âShatner on the Mount,â in which a group called Fall On Your Sword remixed a behind-the-scenes interview with William Shatner (promoting Star Trek V: The Final Frontier) into a hilarious kind of talking-rap song. It has to be seen to be believed.Â
Giant God Head
A giant God head coming out to grab a starship might seem silly, but there are several precedents for this kind of thing in Trek canon. In the TOS episode âWho Mourns For Adonais?â a giant green hand grabs the Enterprise, which is later revealed to be the hand of the god Apollo. In the TNG episode âThe Nth Degree,â the giant head of a Cytherian finds its way onto the Enterprise-D bridge. And, of course, in The Final Frontier, the crew meets âthe God of Sha Ka Reeâ which also, is a giant floating head.Â
My older sister got a symbiontÂ
Barnes and Rutherford joke around that her Trill sister has a symbiont, but she doesnât. This references the idea that not all Trill are joined, which was established in both TNG and Deep Space Nine.
Cetacean ops
Barnes mentions going swimming in âCetacean ops,â a part of the USS Cerritos that weâve never seen, but we have to assume has something to do with sea creatures. This is the second time Lower Decks has referenced Cetacean ops, which itself derives from an overheard line in TNGâs âYesterdayâs Enterprise.â Again, with yet another parallel to its Season 1 debut, âCetacean opsâ was last referenced by Lower Decks in Season 1, Episode 1, âSecond Contact.â
âLDS thingâ
Rutherford incorrectly refers to SMD as âLDS.â This references a few things. First, for most fans, the official abbreviation of Lower Decks is LDS. But, that abbreviation also references a joke from Star Trek IV: The Voyage Home in which Kirk incorrectly refers to the drug âLSDâ as âLDS,â saying that Spock ��did a little bit too much LDS back in the â60s.âÂ
Nightengale WomanÂ
At the end of the episode, Stevens tells Ransom heâs going to read him âNightengale Woman.â This too is a reference to âWhere No Man Has Gone Before,â which Gary Mitchell quotes from the poem âNitengale Woman,â from memory. In Trek canon, the poem was written in 1996 on âthe Canopus Planet.â In real life, the poem was written by Gene Roddenberry, who originally wrote part of the poem to describe flying a plane.Â
Rikerâs jam session
As the final moments of the episode cut back to the USS Titan, Captain Riker says âThis jam session has too many licks and not enough counts.â In jazz, a âlickâ refers to a pattern or musical phrase which is predetermined, but open to interpretation. Usually, a lick could result in a long jazz solo. A âcountâ on the other hand, is more about the beat and form of a piece of music. Rikerâs obsession with jazz began in the TNG episode â11001001.â In the season finale of Lower Decks Season 1, Rikerâs catchphrase for sending the Titan into warp was a jazz count.
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Lower Decks Season 2 airs new episodes on Paramount+ on Thursdays.
The post Star Trek: Lower Decks Season 2 Episode 1 Easter Eggs & References appeared first on Den of Geek.
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