22 December 2024: The three latest written interviews of me are here, here and here.

Wednesday, August 6, 2025

Star Trek: Strange New Worlds 3.4: Lots of Laughs and Serious Business

>

Well, "The Trouble with Tribbles," an episode from the original Star Trek series, written by David Gerrold, is generally aptly recognized as the funniest episode in all of Star Trek's iterations. I'd say that honor now has another contestant in Star Trek: Strange New World's episode 3.4 on Paramount Plus.

[Spoilers ahead ... ]

The serious part of the plot involves a holodeck that could end up killing its inhabitants.  Now, as far as we knew back in the 1960s, the holodeck wasn't around in TOS -- it was introduced in TNG in the 1980s.  And now we know the reason: the holodeck in this Strange New Worlds prequel to TOS can kill if you don't treat it right.  And, before that, it can lock you inside it if you don't solve the mystery you asked it to solve, that is, the reason you wanted to walk into the holodeck in the first place.

So that was one of the three serious parts of episode 3.4.   I'll tell you the second and third, after I go over the funny parts.  These all center around the cancellation of a faux TOS -- The Last Frontier -- after only one season.  The was a send-up of TOS in more ways than one, but fundamentally because TOS was cancelled after three seasons.* But unlike TOS, which was one of the best shows ever on television, and deserved to run at least 20 or more years, TLF was idiotic, and it was literally science fiction that it wasn't cancelled after the first few episodes.

But the clips we were treated to in episode 3.4 of SNW was first-class comedy in all kinds of ways.  Here are some of my favorite:

  • "I'm an actor, not a doctor!" The actor (Ortegas) who plays a doctor on TLF says defensively, a nice nod to McCoy on TOS,
  • "My lines and my skirts have been getting shorter and shorter with every episode," (Chapel) advises.
  • "social commentary with rubber masks and buried mask -- you know, science fiction" (Uhura) skewers science fiction! 
  • And the funniest:  I don't know, but to me, (Pike)'s character Bellows looks Al Franken. Would you agree?  
Now, as to the other serious parts: that would be learning that Spock is a descendant of Arthur Conan Doyle (through Spock's mother, obviously, which explains Spock's super logical mind as not just inherited from his Vulcan father), and the tango that La'an and Spock do at the end, and the kiss that followed.  Maybe it was a very good thing after all that Chapel disappointed Spock so deeply ...

*See my essay “How Star Trek Liberated Television” in Boarding the Enterprise, ed. David Gerrold & Robert J. Sawyer (Dallas, TX: BenBella Books), pp. 185-196, for more.

See also Star Trek: Strange New Worlds 3.1-3.3: Gorn, Spock & Chapel, and The Walking Dead

No comments:

InfiniteRegress.tv