Star Trek Picard season 2 release date, cast and more

I found a site to watch the new Picard spin off from Star Trek and caught the entire first season … Gotta multi click windows for 5 minutes dodging the BS ads , bareass popups from Amy 28 and Mindy 32 tit show , but then ya finally get to see it.

You gotta sit for the whole episode ( hit the loo before ya start ! ) or ya have jump thru the same hoops to get it to play again ! …

I noticed something on the final episode right at the end … 7 of 9 ( called simply 7 in Picard ) is holding hands with another female character … I thought to myself … NO … Please tell me you are not trying to write gayness into show … MY SHOW !!! … The show that I watched when the original came out after school , two episodes of reruns weekdays !!! …

Sure enough …

Patrick Stewart as Picard, Number One, Star Trek Picard

It’s tough to predict yet how Picard will move forward from the central mysteries set up in season one, but Stewart as assured fans that they won’t be disappointed.

“There are startling events predicted in season two,” he said (via Gold Derby). “I am so excited about them because it is taking season one on from where we were. We are not going to be covering the same ground. It is going to be extraordinary. I am very excited about it.

“Of course, I can’t go into detail at all. I have a long conference planned for tomorrow where I hope for certain aspects of how season two will develop, and I’m looking forward to it very much.”

Jeri Ryan as Seven of Nine, Star Trek Picard

However the show manages to deliver those big promises, let’s hope that Star Trek’s central tenet of diversity continues to incorporate queer characters in future episodes too, just like Discovery recently did.

This was Picard’s one big mistake at first, but the season one finale rectified this by revealing Seven of Nine is queer. Let’s just hope that her character isn’t sidelined in future episodes moving forward.

Since the Sixties, Star Trek has boldly led by example, featuring diverse representation, speaking out against oppression, and painting a brighter future for humanity. However, sometimes it failed to practice what it preached — especially when it came to representing the LGBTQ+ population.

But in the Star Trek: Picard season one finale, one character who was denied her identity for years finally got the ending she deserved.

Star Trek: Picard (Jeri Ryan as Seven of Nine)

Voyager aired in the dusk of Star Trek’s golden age. The Original Series was a sensation, The Next Generation brought the franchise into a new era, and Deep Space Nine kept the fires burning while Picard and the crew took their mission from TV to the silver screen.

Everywhere you looked, there was Star Trek. But this also meant that Voyager inherited a thorny issue that Trek had been struggling with for decades.

That issue was the push for LGBTQ+ representation from fans and writers alike. Since the late ’80s, fans had been demanding that a gay character joined the crew …

Who ? … What fans ?! … Just Liberal assholes in tinsel town … TOUGH TITZ !!! … STFU !!! … They would have CURED that mental illness long before the 24th century !!! … AND THAT’S WHAT IT IS !!! … Knock off the marketing ploy of it being some sort of validated , so called , ” lifestyle choice ” horseshit !!! …

FOR CRISSAKES HOLLYWOOD !!! .. Quit pandering to every wank , woke and whiney diversity spewing moron that flits around your neck of the woods !!! …

WHY SOIL STAR TREK !!! …

Source: Star Trek Picard

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