It was great watching this randomly with a friend, when I start thinking she looks like Famke, but all I dare say is “she LOOKS REALLY FAMILIAR”, and when my friend was caught up I told her whom she reminded me of “like maybe she’s her mom? Or she watched this episode and was like THIS IS HOW I WANT TO ACT LATER”...
But hey. I guess she’s just a vampire who never physically ages :sob:... it was actually her.
So our conspiracy theories started.

Since both of them were in X-Men, maybe Sir Stewart said he wouldn’t join unless they get that beautiful empath from back when, and well, no one can refuse X sooooo... here we are.

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Shout by Nyx
BlockedParent2021-03-21T03:39:07Z— updated 2021-05-02T22:06:46Z

As someone familiar with arranged marriage (albeit indirectly), this episode hurt to watch. Sure some people grow to love their spouse, but the vast majority having resigned themselves to be duty bound, end up hollow and numb, going through the motions day by day... though I guess this can be said of any marriage. The difference here is choice (at the very least the appearance of it) - and that makes all the difference.
:(

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It finally came. It’s this episode - the one I remember seeing once, years ago. I hate it! I hope we see her again in Picard TV show. But if those people live 200 years, then maybe she won’t yet be a widow in time.

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Okay, when the ambassador got injured crashing on the glass table, I just had the same reaction I had in “Cause and Effect” (5x18) when Beverly broke her glass when she heard the voices in her quarters: how can they still be using breakable glass in the 24 century? Also, Star Ttek medical personnel often put humanoids in stasis: why couldn’t Beverly put Kamala back in stasis? Ugh. I hate illogical or inconsistent SciFi.

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All of Roddenberry's greatest flaws came through in this episode. It's Orion slave girls all over again.

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The "Star Trek" formula is really getting tiring at this point in the show.... its really showing its weaknesses at this point in the series.
All episodes have this annoying formula I feel.
1- The Enterprise crew works with a alien species
2- They find out a aspect of the alien society they dislike, usually effecting a specific person
3- A member of the crew's entire life purpose is now getting that person the rights that humans have on earth, even if the Alien does not care, Berating them with constant speeches about how they're living is inferior to humans lifestyle... Throwing the prime directive to the wind
5- Arguing about the prime directive ensues
6- Rinse, Repeat.

This has been this entire season lately. (almost) every episode is taking place on the ship, with this familiar and overused political drama playing itself out OVER and OVER. Its truly getting tiring at this point. No cool aliens or Sci-Fi action, just this....

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I didn't expect Picard to be such shallow minded in this situation. I thought he'd understand why she needs to stay away, at least after taking with her. Alas, I guess even Jean-Luc have to adapt for the plot.

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Shout by FinFan
BlockedParentSpoilers2020-01-26T19:12:14Z

The interesting twist here is that she probably was ultimately only able to fulfill her destiny because she bonded with Picard. At least that's how I like to think about it. Yes, it is a tad offensiv and maybe today it would get some heat. But like Picard said, that's history on Earth, too. And still happening today in some cultures. I always love seeing Picard and Beverly together.
I had forgotten that Kamala was played by the young and stunningly beautiful Famke Jansen. Like mentioned by others, in hindsight, with her involvement in X-men, you wonder if they really looked at this episode and saw the great chemistry between her and Patrick.
Some funny scenes with Worf in Ten Forward (Michael Dorn really has a talent for subtle comedy) and Riker almost drooling al over the cargo bay when he saw Kamala.

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