Screw Star Trek, bring Seaquet back

By Drew Dietsch | Published
During Dangerous animals (My exam), Tucker from Jai Courtney is held on the deck of his boat and points to the night sky. He tells how humanity has always looked at the stars to describe where God lives. “God is not up there,” said Tucker, and his hand falls downwards to point out abyssal depths. “God is there.”
Tucker continues to talk about how life on this planet has started in depths. This made me think about my ever increasing disdain of real beliefs on space colonization when we continue to do our best to assassinate most of our own planet: the ocean. It also led me to feel less and less enthusiastic about spatial fantasies like Star Trek, in particular the current iteration of the franchise with which I finished.
It would be good to see the imagination in pop culture used to encourage a better relationship with our ocean and its future. Maybe Nautilus Does the show do this? I will never know because it is on a streaming service that I do not subscribe. Fortunately, I have a Peacock subscription and it led me to rediscover the series DSV SeaquetA spectacle to which I never granted tons of attention when I was a child but now feels ripe for reinvention.
The important part of DSV Seaquet

You are smart enough to find a spectacle synopsis for yourself, but I would say that the main concept of DSV Seaquet What is what I want to focus on with regard to his return. It is really an intentional inner riff on Star Trek: In the future, a united civilization works together to protect and explore an unknown border. In this case, it is the United Earth Oceans organization. The very idea of doing the Star Trek The formula but on the real planet on which we live is what I will develop later.
Most of DSV Seaquet What I saw is an element of television narration that is both charming and outdated that I don’t really feel. It is nothing incredible but rarely terrible, with characters that hover between the service and almost interesting. Frankly, it is a show aiming for an audience younger than my current me, and I was a little too young to enter it when it was originally broadcast. So, either I do not have any particular nostalgia as an intellectual property.
But I have always loved the ocean more than the stars. This is where I want the curiosity of our sharp culture and DSV Seaquet is exactly the right adjustment for this.
Explore the depths of our planet and our humanity

The idea of a united government body on earth which must work together for the whole planet is a concept that I want to see more in the popular media. Come think, Pacific Rim is a more aggressive riff on this concept, but it is this kind of revolutionary mentality that feeds the utopian vision of Star Trek.
However, DSV Seaquet Gives the potential metaphor of the unity even more juice by not focusing the concept on external expansion in space, but rather interior exploration through the depths of the ocean. Star Trek liked to postulate that humanity had understood all its societal problems, so now the only thing to do was explore the universe. DSV Seaquet As a concept has more nuances by saying: “We still have borders and nations on the surface, but we try to make the ocean a place where humanity can begin to evolve as a singular civilization.” It is an idea that can be reinforced to better use the depths of the ocean as a thematic playground for a place where we can face the darkest social problems and get out of it.
In addition, we must encourage the exploration of the depths of our planet in fiction, because we must encourage the exploration of the depths of our planet in reality. We still know so little about life and the incredible ecosystems that exist in the deepest parts of the earth. This type of science is much more important and integrated into our planet and our species than everything that flask, pieces in the sky, the Techbro elitists then cook.
A fresh idea instead of a

Star Trek as a franchise continues to extend, but no one can say that it is its peak as the attractive of pop culture. On the other hand, DSV Seaquet It is so much niche that you could probably tear down its main premise, slap different names and present it as a really fresh idea. I am certainly not against this approach. The name is possible Beach can read as too silly for a modern audience, especially since Star Trek parody Galaxy Quest helped to attach the word “quest” to another riff on Roddenberry’s opus.
I just want to see a popular element of the media capture the imagination and the interest of our culture for our oceans. The space is both played in movies and television for me at this stage, and it does not look like a real future for our kind of soon. Instead, we must pay much more attention to the waters that have been born instead of stifling them with even more pollution. Maybe if a generation could get his Star Trek About the ocean, this would inspire a greater number of people to worry about this planet instead of dreaming of a cum.
So screw any Beach Canon or characters or loyalty to source equipment. Just make a new Beach (or scam) and give me a reason to see hope for the future of humanity. Because I no longer see this hope in space.




