Ep 7 : Majority Rule
Posted: Fri Oct 27, 2017 7:17 pm
So, just saw episode 7.
I think I would call this a middling episode - not one of the stronger ones, nor really weak as such.
Obviously this was a commentary on the present day "like/upvote/subscribe" culture, which it parodies by showing it being taken a step too far. I found it amusing, but maybe a little too on the nose to be really good.
This is the first mention we've really had of anything like the prime directive. They didn't specify IIRC whether it was a general rule or not, or just for pre-warp - I mean, pre-quantum! - societies or this particular society or what. But it was basically don't tell them who you are and leave a "minimum footprint". Will be interested to see if that a recurring element the way it is in Trek.
I guess the Orville is less able to disguise people as alien species than Trek is via surgery. But here's the question - literally last episode they had face holo thingies that could make them look like Krill. So why couldn't Alara use one of those? And then just have it break down again to reveal her. Insert little joke about Isaac's people not being that good at tech after all since his stuff keeps breaking.
The other thing it didn't do that it should have was explain why they couldn't just hack the feed and rig the vote with their super-tech computers. Just a line about how it was protected by a tech-tech-tech device and they couldn't break in remotely would have done it. But I spent a large part of the episode wondering why they didn't just reset his count minus a million or two.
Thought it was a bit silly that their society is so absolutely identical to ours right down to the models of cars. But obviously budget limitations were at work and they did what they could to give it little differences.
Macfarlane wrote this one, thought it was interesting that he chose to just leave Mercer on the ship whilst Kelly had all the action on the planet. Nice that he didn't play himself up.
Oh, and apparently they have cloaking devices on their shuttles. Can they cloak the Orville? They didn't, but wonder if it's possible? And how good are these cloaks? We've not seen cloaks used before when they might have wanted to, so maybe not effective against modern sensors? Only good for fooling us primitives?
Maybe a 6/10.
I think I would call this a middling episode - not one of the stronger ones, nor really weak as such.
Obviously this was a commentary on the present day "like/upvote/subscribe" culture, which it parodies by showing it being taken a step too far. I found it amusing, but maybe a little too on the nose to be really good.
This is the first mention we've really had of anything like the prime directive. They didn't specify IIRC whether it was a general rule or not, or just for pre-warp - I mean, pre-quantum! - societies or this particular society or what. But it was basically don't tell them who you are and leave a "minimum footprint". Will be interested to see if that a recurring element the way it is in Trek.
I guess the Orville is less able to disguise people as alien species than Trek is via surgery. But here's the question - literally last episode they had face holo thingies that could make them look like Krill. So why couldn't Alara use one of those? And then just have it break down again to reveal her. Insert little joke about Isaac's people not being that good at tech after all since his stuff keeps breaking.
The other thing it didn't do that it should have was explain why they couldn't just hack the feed and rig the vote with their super-tech computers. Just a line about how it was protected by a tech-tech-tech device and they couldn't break in remotely would have done it. But I spent a large part of the episode wondering why they didn't just reset his count minus a million or two.
Thought it was a bit silly that their society is so absolutely identical to ours right down to the models of cars. But obviously budget limitations were at work and they did what they could to give it little differences.
Macfarlane wrote this one, thought it was interesting that he chose to just leave Mercer on the ship whilst Kelly had all the action on the planet. Nice that he didn't play himself up.
Oh, and apparently they have cloaking devices on their shuttles. Can they cloak the Orville? They didn't, but wonder if it's possible? And how good are these cloaks? We've not seen cloaks used before when they might have wanted to, so maybe not effective against modern sensors? Only good for fooling us primitives?
Maybe a 6/10.