And people wonder why the Titan-A’s holodeck Ten Forward program ran when the ship was power rationed…Or, how many space anomalies does it take before Starfleet mandates failsafes?
And people wonder why the Titan-A’s holodeck Ten Forward program ran when the ship was power rationed…Or, how many space anomalies does it take before Starfleet mandates failsafes?
That’s a food synthesizer gone mad as part of the overall corruption of the ship’s main computer.
A space anomaly ™ has integrated ‘playful’ entertainment programming from a holographic simulator. We also see artificial gravity shenanigans, and Scotty directing engineering specialists to force open the door to the simulator.
The TAS screencaps (thanks to Trek Core’s fantastic library) are from the episode ‘The Practical Joker.’
In TAS, we first see a precursor of the later Holodeck technology. In ‘The Practical Joker’, we first also see the familiar Trek trope of a space anomaly affecting the crew’s holographic entertainment simulator, leading to the ship being taken over in some way.
The VR simulator is within one of the Enterprise ‘Rec Rooms’ that also serves as a mess. The malfunction of the nearby food synthesizers was one of the first symptoms of the ship’s computer (AI) pulling practical jokes.
Here’s an image of what was happening on the other side of the closed Rec Room simulator door by the time Scotty’s team was trying to break in to rescue the other officers.
TAS introduced so many great ideas to the franchise. If you haven’t seen it, it’s worth viewing all the episodes at least once. A few are classics.
Yeah TAS is the one series I haven’t seen yet, not even once. I’ll take your recommendation and (finally) give it a watch.
I’ll be curious to know what you think