Ich finde ja, dass Hemmer durchaus zwei Staffeln lang Chefingenieur der Enterprise hätte sein können. Er ist einer meiner vier Lieblings-Chefingenieur:innen in Star Trek.
Wobei ich mir aber nicht sicher bin, ob ein mehr von etwas oder jemandem gut ist.

Hemmer wurde von Bruce Horak gespielt.

https://memory-alpha.fandom.com/wiki/Hemmer

https://memory-alpha.fandom.com/wiki/Bruce_Horak

#Characters #StarTrek #StrangeNewWorld #Hemmer

Hemmer

Lieutenant Hemmer was a male Aenar Starfleet officer who lived during the mid-23rd century. He served as chief engineer aboard the USS Enterprise in 2259, until he sacrificed himself to protect his crewmates from Gorn which were about to emerge from him. (SNW: "Children of the Comet", "All Those Who Wander") Before joining Starfleet, Hemmer had dreams of becoming a botanist, as he had a passion for flora. (SNW: "Memento Mori") He was a gifted engineer, though, and confident enough to call...

Memory Alpha

@arcadetoken oh no, it's not unusual and it's not toxic, just the opposite.

What you're talking about is open communication.

What you're talking about is the same thing I always try to do during interpersonal conflict.

See, I'm a computer #programmer by trade, an engineer.

And, like #Hemmer from #StarTrek: #StrangeNewWorlds, I see it as my role in life, my "calling", if you will, to "Fix that which is broken".

That applies to both myself inside and problems external to me, including other people.

The world is filled with problems to solve.

When I see a problem presented before me, I am COMPELLED to solve it, much like an #OCD person is compelled to do... whatever it is that they are compelled to do.

The problem is that while, yes, other people ARE problems to solve... we all have our own internal histories and traumas that have shaped who we are.

For many of us, and perhaps it's just a part of the #humancondition, every part of us wants to FIGHT change, to even fight improvement.

It might possibly be a part of our mental #homeostasis, it might be #identity self-preservation, but some part of us wants us to stay the same, to make no changes. Even for the better.

So, when I reach out to try to help "fix" people, the same way I try to improve myself EVERY damn day of my life, they often and usually respond with hesitance, suspicion, and sometimes outright hostility.

I've learned that people can only change when they WANT to change. So all you can do is hold out the olive branch of your unique perspective, and let them know that you are there IF they want to talk and help sort out their issues, and improve themselves.

But you can't force it on people. They have to want it for themselves.

And that's the biggest and toughest thing that I've had to learn since I was diagnosed with #aspergers twenty years ago, is that you can't "fix" everyone... most people don't WANT to be fixed.

So, you just have to show compassion, listen to them, and wait for a moment to give a tiny bit of advice here and there to try to steer in the direction that you think would benefit them the best.

And then... give them space. You can only show them the door, THEY are the ones that have to walk through it.

...is that enough hackneyed metaphors for you? 😂

@deathkitten

I’m convinced that Hemmer is alive and frozen at the bottom of the gorge.

And, that that the frozen state, which Aenar canonically can survive, killed off the developing Gorn.

More, there’s reason to believe that the EPs made an intentional decision to KEEP THAT POSSIBILITY OPEN!

In a more recent Trek Movie interview this May, Bruce Horak said that they shot an entire wire sequence that would have shown him falling from the ship and would have made it clear he didn’t survive.

Perhaps, that was deemed too graphic. However, to go through the challenge of shooting a blind actor, in prosthetics, in a harness and then choose not to use the footage suggests a higher level decision.

In any case, Horak quips that ‘Aenar bounce’, referencing the beloved ending to ‘Rudolph the Rednosed Reindeer.’

Check out the exchange that starts 39 minutes in.

https://trekmovie.com/2025/05/16/bruce-horak-and-all-access-star-trek-talk-about-being-aenar-flying-knives-singing-klingons-and-art/

@punkonbuslives @Still_Nimmy

#StarTrek #Hemmer

Bruce Horak And All Access Star Trek Talk About Being Aenar, Flying Knives, Singing Klingons, And Art

Horak also has a documentary, 'Boldly Going,' about his quest to paint resilience one portrait at a time.

TrekMovie.com

#TIL the actor behind Lt. #Hemmer, #BruceHorak, is also legally #blind

The #Aenar is my favorite #StrangeNewWorlds character, bar none.

#AvuiVaigAprendre #HoyAprendí #StarTrek

@gesternhu Ich fand die Folge grandios, aus genau den Gründen, die ihr auch genannt habt. Die Schauspielenden können auch mal aus ihren Rollen raus und Anson Mounts Figur ist einfach zum Schreien. Und auch #Hemmer (*snüff*… Hemmer… *wimmer*) als Zauberer, einfach toll. Ich liebe es, wenn #StarTrek aus dem üblichen Schema fällt und die Musicalfolge, da kommt ihr ja noch hin, und die hier sind exzellente Beispiele dafür, wie man das machen kann. 5 Sterne, für #SNW und für euch. 🙂