I’ve all the time linked to “Star Trek” as a office present at the beginning, a franchise about doing all of your job, and doing it expertly, in area. Give me the calm, measured bridge crew conferences of “The Subsequent Era,” with their incomprehensible technobabble and measured professionalism any day of the week. For me, it is nonetheless bizarre to observe the crew of “Discovery” so actively discuss their emotions, to deal with one another like finest buds at a slumber occasion, and to recurrently weep and provide shoulders to cry on. “Aren’t these folks speculated to be work colleagues?” I am going to grumble to myself, realizing that Captain Picard would completely not tolerate the informal shenanigans of Captain Michael Burnham’s touchy-feely crew.
However I have a look at Burnham’s crew and I get it. They’re probably the most various “Trek” crew in historical past, and it is not even shut. All “Trek” has folded its progressive viewpoints into the material of its storytelling (and it has been that means since 1966), however “Discovery” had the nerve to take away the obfuscation altogether. Non-white characters and homosexual characters and non-binary characters share the bridge collectively. It is clear “Discovery” feels a accountability to those characters and their identities, and by extension, the youthful followers watching their first “Trek” present within the age of streaming. Allow them to share their emotions. Allow them to cry. Allow them to be buddies who’re all the time there with a praise in a second of darkness.
The folks for whom these portrayals are meant want that sense of connection, of those various folks residing in a future the place they are often snug and pleased with their identities, greater than I would like “Star Trek” that feels just like the reveals I grew up with.