As a hardcore DS9 fan I had no clue how much Voyager meant to me. To see her in the fleet museum and hear her music play really made me realize how important she was to Trek. Also if they showed NX01 you know it would have been wah wahhh
@@cpt.walker6273he timeline favors the federation with voyager getting home sooner, the Borg gets wiped out thanks to the pathogen and Picard, voyager gets home and the federation gets advance tech, and new information about the delta quadrant and we know Janeway still plays important role after Voyager as well
I love Seven's relationship with Jack. If Star Trek: Legacy gets off the ground, she's pretty much going to be the archetypal "cool aunt" to this firecracker.
She's probably thinking "Not another Paris." Because I feel that's something exactly what Tom would do, try and sit in the captaibs chair then proceed to fanboy over star ships.
0:57 Voyager this vessel was Seven's home all those adventures she had Janeway, Nelix, The Doctor, Torras, all of them they were her friends and family. They made Seven into the person she is today.
23 now, I used to watch Voyager with my dad on weekend mornings when I didn’t have to go to school when I was 6-10. Seeing the Voyager felt like seeing an old friend after years.
IMHO, this scene is why Jeri Ryan's Seven beat out Katie Sackhoff's Bo Katan for the Saturn Award. Mando S3 wasn't Katie's fault but the series gave her barely anything to work with. Jeri gave us more pent-up love in one scene than damn near all of Voyager as a series and she totally earned it.
*Kirk's second Enterprise (3rd if you count the original refit as a new ship, which it practically was). 1- Enterprise, 2- Enterprise refit, 3- Enterprise-A. Oh, and hey, he sat in the Enterprise B's chair for a few seconds so he technically "commanded" four Enterprise's!
If they do bring back William Shatner's Kirk (as they clearly set up in this series) his Enterprise-A is ready to greet him. Who knows... he might have one last mission for her.
I didn't see them set that up at all, and Captain Kirk definitely died in Generations, although they could have a younger version from the past or an alternate dimension Kirk, I guess.
@@ArthurS1175 I know not many people liked "Enterprise," but I did. I thought Trip and T'Pol were so sweet together. Archer learning to let go of his prejudice towards Vulcans at the start was something that needed to be seen as progression was sought in the galaxy.
@@ArthurS1175 Although I didn't like the last episode. We all thought T'Pol and Trip were going to marry and have a happy family, but Trip ended up getting killed in action. That really sucked.
It’s shown in the background. It was refit with the bottom engine part in the events following the series so it looks a little more like the later ones
You say that Picard's poetic drive-by observations are annoying, Sev, but literally seconds earlier, you just said that you were reborn on the USS Voyager and you even called the Voyager your second home (or was it your first...? Eh, I don't know...or care). So maybe poetic observations aren't all that bad.
Probably her first real home. She was only six when she was first assimilated and only knew her mother and father. She may have felt comfortable there, but six is too young to remember most of your life prior to it, so it doesn't count, imo. Voyager was her first real home. Where she learned to become human again and re-learned what that really means, gradually going from cold and distant to more accepting and compassionate and where she found her second family. A ship where every important event in her life, except for the initial assimilation, took place and everything she has now is owed to that ship. Seven in Picard is a long way from Seven on Voyager, but whoever she's become later in life, she owes it all to that ship and its crew.
I wonder how they got the bounty out of the water When the cloaking device has been re-engaged Did starfleet from the 23rd century found The bounty underwater cloak?
Just to be clear, the 1701 made it 1/2 way to the Andromeda Galaxy. The 1701-D made it beyond known space and time. Voyager by comparison made a hop across a puddle. So Seven is 100% WRONG
I was wondering about that. The difference with the 1701-D at least is that they made it back in one episode, so they maybe didn't talk about it much. Also I have a theory that Q went back in time and sent them to where the Borg was (though that's not the episode you were referring to) after he saw Voyager there, so that they would be prepared to fight them.