Subject: Yep, that's exactly Q.
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Posted on: 2013-03-12 22:36:00 UTC

I mean, sometimes there's other motivations, but it all basically traces back to him being bored. "I'm bored, I guess I'll test humanity!" is probably his motivation in the pilot episode, and then Picard intrigues him and he stops by other times.

Yes, "The Omega Glory" is pretty much the worst episode of TOS. I was reading a recap of it somewhere which I think summed it up nicely (I'm paraphrasing here): "It's typical for Star Trek aliens to represent cultures in Earth history. This is usually done subtlely. But in "The Omega Glory", subtlety was set on fire and thrown off a cliff." I mean seriously, the implausibilities! I always had the idea that Kirk was promoted because he was disobeying orders left and right, so they sent him on a mission where they thought he'd die, but he managed to survive. He kept doing that until he got to captain. Then movies, where he became Admiral. Then - my gods, I've just explained all of TOS! The reason the Enterprise keeps getting in trouble is because Starfleet keeps trying to send Kirk into missions that will kill him for disobeying orders. Only problem is, he makes friends, and is intelligent enough in his own way to get out of tough situations! *revelation*

Ahem. Picard, on the other hand, just has bad luck. Starfleet loves him because he stays enough within the rules to keep them happy, but he's still sympathetic to viewers because he breaks rules for legitimate reasons. He's much more well-rounded - if he quit Starfleet he could become an archaeologist, a professor, a musician, a radio announcer (I kid, who needs radio when you have holodecks?). He's intellectual, and listens to his crew's opinions.

Or, to quote my sister, "The only thing Kirk has over Picard is hair."

I'm probably gushing/babbling, tell me to stop if you want me to. It's just seeing a Trekkie (or Trekker if you prefer) makes me want to talk Trek.

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