This is her introduction to a group of child slaves while possessing the body of the one made from spare parts at the genetic engineering store. Maybe she just nonchalantly mentions this every time she meets someone new.
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Borg Queen: Resistance is futile
Janeway: The swamp can't stop me and neither can you
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Admiral Paris: Welcome back, Captain!
Janeway: Good to be home, hey listen, how excited are you about grandkids?
For those wondering, Netflix is far and away the best home for Star Trek: Prodigy.
Netflix has the largest market share, about 4 times as large as some others. It also has a global reach that can bring in new audiences.
Historically, Star Trek has done extraordinarily well on Netflix — in fact, outside of America, it remains the home of Star Trek in many territories.
Netflix has a great track record for YA action adventure animated shows — arguably more than any other streamer. Just look at the longevity and success of shows like Dragon Prince (7 seasons), Tales of Arcadia (7 seasons and a movie), or the Renaissance for Avatar the Last Airbender which has led to the creation of Avatar Studios.
Their current focus is animated content with a built-in audience produced by partner studios. That’s us. Netflix has licensed our show with the option for more — just like any other show.
So go fast. Spread the word to watch the series as soon as it drops on Netflix. Let’s see what’s out there.
Gotta love that Admiral Janeway is trying to drink less coffee and more tea as instructed by her doctor. That's top character development if you ask me.
In case you haven’t heard the news, Star Trek: Prodigy has been picked up by Netflix!
Star Trek fans across the galaxy — and young cadets in the making — have been granted the chance to see our series, many for the very first time. With a truly global audience, it is an extraordinary opportunity to grow our already formidable fanbase.
It is in no small part thanks to you, the fandom — who demonstrated through your extraordinary efforts that the stories of Starfleet, and the outsiders who aspire to it, will endure. We are so deeply humbled and grateful beyond words.
Many on the Prodigy team, including myself and the Hagemans, have created some exceptional television with Netflix — and we very much look forward to doing so again.
The possibilities are endless now that the world can see all 40 episodes of Prodigy’s first and second seasons in one place — which our passionate cast and crew have worked so tirelessly on — with the potential for more as we boldly go and seek out this new horizon.
If you wish to see more Dal and Gwyn and Rok-Tahk and Zero and Jankom and Murf, viewing the show on Netflix as soon as it drops — and telling others the good news, to do the same — is unequivocally the way.
Am really... hating Picard's implication that Janeway is simultaneously: A. so powerful within Starfleet that everyone thinks she, more than any other admiral, is the best path to solving the changeling conspiracy and B. is helpless and ineffective on account of all her "gatekeepers" being turned into changling dopplegangers under her nose.
She is the queen of high risk, high reward decision making and she's sharp as a tack. Does the narrative really expect me to believe she could miss that her Vulcan best friend, whom she's close enough to have mind melded with, was turned? And that she wouldnt be in the backround fighting her own battles with these sabateurs? And that she has some how not once tried to comm Seven of Nine on a back channel in seven episodes.
It feels like name dropping her for fanservice just to have the narrative rob her of all her close relationships and her agency.