#tng conspiracy
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s t a r t r e k t h e n e x t g e n e r a t i o n created by gene roddenberry [conspiracy, s1ep25] 'Some of Starfleet's top command people are changing. This could affect the very core of our organisation. Officers I've known for years are bluffing their way through talk of old times.' - captain walker keel
#star trek#star trek the next generation#the next generation#Gene Roddenberry#tng season 1#the next generation season 1#tng conspiracy#conspiracy#lot: st tng season 1 ep 25/26 (ep 25/178)#patrick stewart#Jonathan Farwell#michael berryman#Ursaline Bryant#jean luc picard#Captain Walker Keel#Captain Rixx#Captain Tryla Scott#The Secret Meeting of Captains on Dytallix B#latest tng posts
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Star Trek: TNG Refresher "Conspiracy" - Star Trek: Picard Season 3. Sam...
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Sometimes I catch myself thinking that a federation citizen may go their entire life never learning a word of a foreign language if they dont want to. Meaning they never have to interact with any alien culture's mother tongue if they don't want to - unless it's a Darmok or "too weird for the translator" thing in general, which seems to be reserved to starfleet high-rank officials to actually deal with. But!!!! no translation is 100% accurate, because a part of culture is language just as much as culture is a part of language. And we do canonically see that something is lost by the universal translators system in the episode where Jack learns dominionese to hear Weyouns untranslated speech and better understand him.
My point is... how do federation citizens know Romulans are rude and sneaky etc if all evidence of Romulans saying something is filtered by a Federation Approved universal translator?????... How will starship captains, in ships meant to explore and make first contact truly interact with a new culture when they're basically using an AI translator, even if it is accurate enough that they can communicate without a war breaking out, the entire aspect of languages interacting when two cultures meet becomes "sanitized", somewhat.
We rarely see them talk to a people about their language so theres no need for the universal translator between them anymore, they just seem to view language variation as a problem to eliminate. And I do not like that, not even one little bit. And I like it less when we know Section 31 exists.
#if I was a fed citizen in star trek I would make an excellent conspiracy theorisy#star trek meta#ds9#tng#star trek tng#romulans
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they should date
#V#V TV#V The Series#V 1984#The Littlest Dragon#TNG#Conspiracy#(she's eating a mouse#he's reingesting one of his young)#Danny watches V The Series
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Star Trek: The Next Generation, 124 (May 9, 1988) - “Conspiracy”
Teleplay by: Tracy Tormé Story by: Robert Sabaroff Directed by: Cliff Bole
The Breakdown
The Enterprise is en route to Pacifica for… it doesn’t matter, because Picard gets a top secret late-night-call from his old buddy Captain Walker Keel, of the starship Horatio. Keel implores Picard to cancel his appointment with Pacifica, because he has some piping hot tea (earl grey, presumably) that he can only spill in person, but it’s gotta be now …and also, don’t tell anyone why. Since Picard probably hasn’t had anyone to gossip with since his hairline met his forehead, he orders the Enterprise to “fuck our meeting with Pacifica, and take me to a nearby abandoned mining outpost instead,” much to the crew’s bemusement.
Upon arriving to their new destination, the crew find three other ships have also arrived, with three designated representatives already waiting on the mining-planet’s surface, so Picard beams down before Riker can admonish him about breaching protocol. On the surface Picard is greeted by Keel and the other two ship’s Captains, who are all pointing phasers at his head, and asking him a bunch of MFA questions (which Picard obviously crushes; the dude is nothing if not savvy). Since Picard has proven he’s not an imposter, Keel proceeds to explain that he suspects a vast Conspiracy within Starfleet, that may have permeated even the highest levels of command. Apparently Starfleet has been restructured in vaguely suspicious ways, and also Keel’s first officer and doctor have been acting super-sus. Picard remains unconvinced, but agrees to keep his eyes peeled, and leaves their clandestine rendezvous so he can get back to following orders like an upstanding person.
Of course, wouldn’t you know it, just as we’re getting back on track to the Pacifica story we all came here for, an even more interesting tragedy strikes; The Horatio has been destroyed, claiming the lives of Keel and his entire crew! That alone is enough for Picard to suspect that something is amiss, but when Data pours through all of the Starfleet command files at super-android-speed and finds that things do indeed appear quite suspicious, that clinches it. After bringing his key staff up-to-speed, Picard resolves to bail on Pacifica altogether [sorry Pacifica, sucks to suck. Maybe try being part of the main plot next time], and return to starfleet command to get to the bottom of things once and for all!
Upon arriving to earth, Picard is greeted by three Admirals we’ve never met before, which historically means they can’t be trusted. Fortunately however, Admiral Quinn is amongst them (along with his snivelling-sycophant-commander Remmick, leering in the background) who, you may recall, came to Picard several episodes ago, warning of a conspiracy against Starfleet. Picard explains to the admirals that he has something urgent to tell them, and they seem pretty happy to hear him out. In fact, they even suggest that Picard and Riker both come down away from prying eyes, for a private little dinner where they can discuss it, and nothing bad will happen. First though, Quinn wants to come up and take a quick look at the Enterprise (because who wouldn’t), and Picard reasons that the Admiral probably wants to warn them about something.
But he would be wrong.
It turns out all three of the Admirals, including Quinn (and also that fucking weasel, Remmick), are possessed by alien-bug-creatures that burrow into the back of your neck at the base of the skull. Thankfully Picard clues in that something is wrong when Quinn back peddles hard about his previous Conspiracy woes. Since the dinner is obviously a Trap, Picard orders Riker to hang back for a bit and keep an eye on Quinn, while he heads down and hopes for the best.
Up on the Enterprise, Riker starts asking too many questions, until Quinn is forced to admit that he’s here for nefarious possession-related purposes (he brought a possession-bug onto the ship, with Dr. Crusher being the intended target in this case). But since the jig is up, Bug-Quinn starts beating the shit out of Riker, because being possessed gives the hosts super powerful bodies.
Geordie and Worf show up to find the Admiral hunched over Riker’s unconscious body, and do their best to help, but they also prove to be no match for Quinn’s super-bug-strength. Thankfully Dr. Crusher has more common sense than the chief of security and pretty handily knocks Quinn flat on his ass with a phaser (seriously Worf, way to drop the ball). With Quinn secured in sick bay, Crusher is able to determine what the heck is going on, and bring Picard up to speed. Suddenly Riker makes a miraculous recovery, and sneaks up behind Crusher, implying that he got body-snatched after Quinn shit-kicked him.
Meanwhile Picard is down on the planet surface, and the Admirals pretty much confirm that they have indeed been taking over key members of Starfleet, with the intention being to use humans as slave hosts. Right around then Riker shows up claiming to, in fact, be possessed with the bug that was intended for Crusher. But it all ends up being a ploy (yep, that whole moment in sickbay was all just a classic red-herring), and once everyone’s guard is down he starts blasting the shit out of everyone in the room. The ensuing fire fight ends with Picard and Riker following a bug into a command station where Bug-Remmick is ostensibly plotting something evil. The possessed commander espouses some obligatory villain-monologue nonsense, but Picard figures enough is enough, so he and Riker straight up phaser Remmick’s head until it explodes. But it’s not over yet, because a giant queen-bug-worm-thing emerges from Remmick’s oozing chest cavity, and you can bet this thing isn’t going down easil- oh… never mind. Yeah, so Picard just vaporizes that too.
With the mother-bug reduced to space-ash, all of the possessed peoples are released, and the reset button has formally been activated. Data does make one salient point, and informs Picard that prior to his death, Remmick had been sending a message into the far reaches of uncharted space. The contents of the message are unclear, since the bug-dialect is unknown, but Data hazards a guess that the message may have been a homing beacon to earth…
Anyways it’s probably nothing! The end.
The Verdict.
If you had shown me this episode when I was eight years old, I would have probably identified it as a perfect hour of television. A physically imposing enemy, who can’t be easily detected, and who could be your most trusted friend? Check. Creature FX, hand to hand combat, phaser fights, and corridor chase scenes? Check, check, check, and motherfucking check! It’s actually kinda fun/interesting to see a number of preliminary concepts being experimented with, that would eventually be reworked and repurposed in other (arguably stronger) stories later down the line [more on that below].
Overall I’d say there’s more good than bad here, even though quite a few moments end up being unintentionally comical by current pop-culture standards, that’s also part of the charm. An episode like this is a perfect example of classic pulp-camp television that has always been part of Star Trek’s DNA, and you have to go in with that attitude to enjoy it. The clunky fight scenes barely hide the obvious stunt-doubles, the stop-motion creature effects are obviously inhibited by some clear budgetary & technological restraints, and the resolution is a bit overly convenient for how dire the circumstances were supposedly meant to be. As much as those things could be considered limitations, I almost appreciate the show even more for being so unapologetically sincere, even when it doesn’t perfectly stick the landing.
Overall, I think the creature work is actually quite impressive, and the practical special-effects used for Remmick’s gaping chest cavity/mother-bug are largely effective. The other limitations might stop me from hailing this episode as a masterpiece, but they all work to the effect of telling an entertaining, if technically-over-ambitious story. Even where our heroes make questionable choices, I can forgive on the grounds that the villains do the same; at least there’s an internal logic (or hilarious lack thereof) that remains consistent across the board.
Although, as much fun as ‘Conspiracy’ was, it didn’t have a lot to say. Apparently at one point, there was an earlier draft of the script that was intended as a real-world allegory to the Iran-Contra affair, with the episode centering around an ordinary coup (sans body-snatch gimmicks), but was kiboshed for being too depressing/controversial. I imagine that iteration of the story might have still likely failed to hit the mark on any meaningful commentary, mainly because Star Trek historically has (especially during this still-early stage in the franchise) a very politically-liberal-colonial bias; ie, lots of good intentions, but with clear blind spots when it comes to addressing the root corruption that our core institutions are built upon, amongst other issues. All the same, I kind of wish that earlier draft had been allowed to pass, even if it was a disaster, if only to see what it was that TPTB found so distasteful (it’s not like the season 1 scripts were batting 1000 anyways).
Overall, a harmlessly fun hour of camp TV, that’s a welcome change of pace after the last episode.
3 stars (out of 5)
Parting Thoughts
Silly things that I find interesting: I’d honestly never heard of this episode prior to watching it, but I wasn’t as avid a fan of TNG growing up (DS9 & Voyager for me, baby), so I was left to consider the possibility that I’d somehow missed out on even hearing about a major Space-bug-bodysnatchers story arc. Because, I gotta say you guys, that is one pretty ominous cliffhanger. So yeah, I obviously felt compelled to look ahead for answers, like the slutty little gossip that I am. [My “research” primarily entailed reading subreddits and fan sites. Which means, y’know… grain of salt, subject to error, and all that.] Supposedly, the bugs were meant to return as a recurring ‘Big Bad’ for the show, but the creature effects were too costly to produce on a regular basis. Although, it seems that the borg were possibly utilized as a more cost-effective to achieving a similar hive-mind-themed existential threat. Likewise, I’ve heard it suggested that some parts of the Changeling arc in DS9 may have been inspired by this episode, but who knows. All the same, one wonders how this story might have otherwise played out if given the chance, although it may be just as well that it didn’t; I think I still prefer the borg.
Remmick’s death is pretty violent for syndicated television. I suspect that level of gore probably wouldn’t make it past most network censors today. I realize that streaming has largely circumvented those kinds of restrictions now, but exploding brain matter still isn’t exactly a common occurrence, even on the newer (and notably more graphic) Trek shows.
So, are the events of this episode a matter of public record? Just before the climax, the bug-admirals indicate that they’re not far off from achieving total control of Starfleet, implying there were many other infected officers (which would support Keel’s suspicions). Is the invasion-attempt something that’s common knowledge across Starfleet (not to mention the general public), or was this all kept hidden somehow? A conspiracy this large could reasonably be expected to set off virtually every alarm across the entire Alpha Quadrant, rousing most governing bodies/empires to a vigilant search for a compact enemy that can turn almost any humanoid into an insurgent super-soldier. I dunno man, I don’t think I’d just let this one go, personally.
#star trek the next generation#tng season 1#conspiracy#retro review#star trek review#silly things of interest#captain picard#william t riker#beverly crusher#worf#alien possession#invasion of the body snatchers#body snatchers#body snatch episode#unresolved stories#star trek tng#star trek#sci fi tv#sci fi#80s tv#80s tv series#80s television#80s tv shows#tv show review#tv review#episodic nostalgia#Tracy Tormé#Robert Sabaroff#Cliff Bole
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hey what the FUCK is this star trek episode with the worms taking over people's brains?? i have NEVER seen gore like that on star trek before???
#star trek#star trek tng#this was such a wild pivot!! was it a halloween special or what#edit: the episode title is the conspiracy
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The conspiracy theory about Wolf 359 being an inside job is absolutely, 100%, called "Worf 359" colloquially
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The Prophets were behind Wolf 359
#THINK ABOUT IT#federation conspiracy theories#ds9#tng#soon as the prophets and Q continuum team up everyone's done for#I want more federation conspiracy theories#conspire with me#don't worry I'll think of some my father watches Fox News I know how they work#that reminds me I have a voyager conspiracy meta in the ol' drafts folder gathering dust
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that thing going in and out of people's mouth in tng's conspiracy (s1 ep24) is genuinely sickening. and when they explode remmicks body and there's an even bigger slimier thing inside of him???? honestly I admire the show because those things look very plastic and it still made me want to tear my eyes out !!!
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i love tng season 1 because they tried TWICE to introduce a Big Bad and they didn't really pan out, and after that they were presumably so disheartened by their failures that they didn't try again until the end of season 3. at which point they nailed it to be fair.
#referring to the ferengi and the conspiracy bug guys (original borg concept)#blabs#*st#*tng#stwatch#tng 1.25
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#star trek#star trek tng#star trek the next generation#captain rixx#conspiracy#science fiction#retro#tv#enterprise
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spoilers for Star Trek Picard
ok I am loving this whole storyline about the mutant changelings taking over Starfleet but I have to know: were they active while the Zhat Vash stuff was going on?? how many moles were scurrying around Starfleet in the late 24th century and did they ever bump into each other. like did Fake Admiral Chang E. Ling or whoever step into the bathroom for a goo break and see Commodore Oh hacking the Mars androids? did they make eye contact and silently agree to never speak of it? did either of them walk in on “Ensign Asencia” turning her coffee table into an evil robot? please I need to know
#one of the parasites from the tng episode ''conspiracy'' walks in#''hey is this the starfleet infiltrators convention''#''no you guys are upstairs in the conference room with species 8472''#''ok thanks''#star trek#a post by me™#star trek picard#picard spoilers
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Omg data mimicking Geordi’s laugh is SENDING me asdfgh
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Least convincing argument.
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Lovely Ritz and Worm assortment
#V#V TV#V The Series#V 1984#The Hero#The Hero (episode)#Danny watches V The Series#very TNG S1 with the worms reveal in Conspiracy#(later retconned to a taste for gagh)
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