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There are many lists with recommended/must-watch episodes. But they usually just include episodes that are considered good or great.

Is there also a list with episodes that are important but not necessarily good? By important I mean episodes that introduce new concepts or new characters (or kill off important characters), or that have lasting repercussions in the overall story of the series or Star Trek as a whole, or are necessary to watch first for a pay-off way later.

For example, TNG's "Skin of Evil" shows the death of a main character but it's hardly a good episode. The same goes for DS9's "Life Support". I wouldn't exactly call ENT's "Storm Front" good either but it's important to cap off the temporal cold war. TNG's "Ménage à Troi" shows Wesley being promoted to Ensign but the rest of the episode is rather mid (except for the Picard meme) so that it wouldn't ever appear on any must-watch list. etc.

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[–] Corgana@startrek.website 1 points 1 day ago* (last edited 1 day ago) (1 children)

"Datalore" is another one that's important, but it's not very good. Most of the episode is Wesley running around trying to convince the grown-ups that Data is being weird and being ignored. It's the one where Picard tells him to "shut up".

[–] UESPA_Sputnik@lemmy.world 2 points 1 day ago

Yeah, I recently rewatched that episode and was really annoyed by it. The story only works because every crewmember behaves like a completely naive idiot.

[–] rogermccoy@startrek.website 6 points 1 day ago (1 children)

I've been doing a rewatch and making notes of things that are referenced later. Considering most classic Trek has a reputation for being episodic, you'd be surprised just how much gets referenced later, whether in a passing comment or an in-joke or something. The only episodes of TNG season 1 where I didn't spot at least a passing reference later was "Too Short a Season", "Home Soil", and "When the Bough Breaks". (The references to a few of the others are vague and/or arguable though, and admittedly "Knowing where that clip in 'Shades of Gray' is from" qualifies a few of them.)

So it kind of depends on how strictly you define "important." Most people could probably skip almost the entirety of TNG season 1 and not be that confused, but for example:

  • "All Good Things..." loses a lot without "Encounter at Farpoint"
  • "The Naked Now" is important to "The Measure of a Man"
  • "Haven" introduces Lwaxana Troi, Mr. Homn, naked Betazoid weddings, and the running gag of data being too precise. "In the Cradle of Vexilon" loses something without it too.
  • "Where No One Has Gone Before" is crucial in introducing the Traveler, and that plot continues into "Remember Me" and "Journey's End" and beyond.
  • "The Last Outpost" has first contact with the Ferengi, though you could argue that future Ferengi episodes make more sense without it? Though it's important to the game Star Trek: Resurgence.
  • "Justice" doesn't seem important, but if you skip it you won't know what Remmick's talking about in "Conspiracy".
  • "The Battle" isn't referenced often, but "Bloodlines" depends on it. Remmick mentions this one too.
  • "Hide and Q" introduces concepts like the Q Continuum, and the events of it lead to Q's status in "Q Who", which introduces the Borg.
  • "The Big Goodbye" introduces Dixon Hill and explains holodeck matter. The Jarada are mentioned again later too.
  • "Datalore" introduces Lore and the Crystalline Entity and explains Data's past, somewhat.
  • "11001001" is important to understanding "Future Imperfect"... though that episode isn't really referenced again other than that it introduces a fictionalized version of Nurse Ogawa. So is it still important if you skip both of them?
  • "Coming of Age" introduces a lot of the characters and concepts that will be in "Conspiracy". Fun fact: This is the first episode to name Murf's species from Prodigy.
  • "Heart of Glory" introduces Khitomer and gives Worf's backstory and sort-of sets up "The Neutral Zone".
  • "The Arsenal of Freedom" is the first mention of Crusher's grandmother from "Sub Rosa", but arguably more important for relationship-building between Crusher and Picard.
  • "Symbiosis" becomes very relevant in Lower Decks in the episode "Trusted Sources".
  • "Skin of Evil" features the death of Tasha Yar. Armus also returns in Lower Decks.
  • Even though the cliffhanger isn't followed up on, "Conspiracy" becomes important again in "The Drumhead".
  • "The Neutral Zone" pays off the hints that the Romulans were gone, though if you skipped "Heart of Glory" you didn't catch this in the first place, and "Angel One" arguably contradicted it. But this is the first hint of the Borg, as confirmed in "Q Who" and "The Best of Both Worlds".

I could add other subtler things, but those are some of the bigger ones just from that highly-episodic season.

[–] UESPA_Sputnik@lemmy.world 1 points 1 day ago (1 children)

So it kind of depends on how strictly you define “important.”

You're right. Your list makes it quite clear that when the bar for importance is too low, 90% of all episodes end up being important. From season 1 I'd include 5 episodes in the list of important episodes: Encounter at Farpoint (setting up Q and everything), Where No One Has Gone Before (introduces the Traveller), Datalore (introduces Lore), Skin of Evil (kills of Tasha), The Neutral Zone (Romulans and Borg implied). Those episodes are a good example of what I was going for: none of them is above average but they're still important. "Where No One Has Gone Before" maybe comes the closest to being good.

Sidenote: I recently rewatched TNG season 1 and found it oddly charming. There are a lot of bad episodes but almost every episode had something going for it. You could see what they were aiming for but often couldn't stick the landing. And the music was really great, unlike in the rest of the Berman era.

I would add Heart of Glory because it gives a crucial introduction to where the Klingons are as a society in the 24th century much as The Neutral Zone introduces the state of the relationship with the Romulans (and sets up the Borg threat).

[–] MurrayL@lemmy.world 3 points 2 days ago* (last edited 2 days ago) (1 children)

When I was going through TNG and DS9 for the first time with my wife, I built our watchlist based on a combination of Kethinov’s and Jammer’s reviews.

Kethinov is particularly of interest here because he gives a ‘filler rating’ for each DS9 episode, separate from its overall rating, which tells you if it’s important to the longer-term story.

[–] UESPA_Sputnik@lemmy.world 1 points 2 days ago

I've also frequented Jammer's Reviews for years because most of the time I agree with him. I also used it for the watchlist for my GF but building that list purely on good episodes gave me the idea to ask what the important episodes actually were.

I didn't know about Kethinov. Thanks for that.

[–] arjache@fedia.io 2 points 2 days ago (1 children)

I think I’d struggle to come up with such a list in a way that it’d be a rewarding viewing experience.

Something to keep in mind is that almost all of Star Trek from before the streaming era was made with the assumption that people would tune in and not necessarily have seen any previous episodes. Especially with syndicated reruns, there was no real guarantee of even seeing the episodes in order. At most you would be expected to miss some details if you caught the second half of a two-parter, and those had recaps at the start.

Star Trek only really started to do big plot arcs with DS9 and even then it was still very episodic. The earliest they had a modern BSG-style serial plot was season 3 of Enterprise. So there’s really no need to watch “must-watch” episodes. The episodes were made with the intention that you could watch each one with minimal context and still have a good time.

[–] UESPA_Sputnik@lemmy.world 2 points 2 days ago (1 children)

I see your point. What I tried to assess is: which episodes enhance the viewing experience by rewarding the viewer for sticking around. For example, watching "Datalore" before "Brothers" is definitely not required. But it gives you some good backstory on Lore. Similarly, watching the various Maquis episodes on TNG and DS9 is not necessary to understand the Maquis characters on VOY but it's a nice slow buildup that contextualizes a few things. Or TNG's "The Price" and VOY's "False Profits" – neither of them are really good episodes but it's a "oh hey, they picked up that storyline from years ago" moment that I feel is very rewarding.

And of course my all-time favorite joke when Worf hears that Keiko is having another baby and he reacts with "Now!?!?". It only really works when you've seen "Disaster" before.

[–] arjache@fedia.io 1 points 2 days ago

I do love a sequel years later out of nowhere! Ship in a Bottle is also a good one for that.